Went hunting in NC at Thanksgiving on my uncle’s place. Shot a nice buck but after trailing for 4 hours, eventually lost him. Very disappointing. Had help from my cousin and uncle but they lost the trail too. Bad shot on my part - c’est la vie. I do not like losing an animal. But thats another discussion.
The idiot part. It is my habit is to reload after a shot. Helps me calm down and wait after shooting a deer. After a long morning searching, I put the loaded, dirty rifle in the truck thinking I’d shoot it or pull the ball later. I didn’t. We drove back to MS, unloaded, and for various reasons I didn’t get back to my rifle. Until this past weekend. Went hunting again, didn’t see anything, took the opportunity to shoot it to clear the load.
Dirty bore with a reload sitting on crud. Add 90% humidity, temperature swings, condensation, then shoot it. Instant baked crud, right about the top of the powder column. Very bad gunk.
Now to the crud ring. Trying to clean it the usual way, with warm water and a touch detergent, I stuck the patched jag so tight that I pulled the handle off my steel range rod. Had to use vise grips and beat it out. Several times. Switched from a .50 caliber jag (.50 cal rifle) to .45 jag. Almost stuck it. Toothpick in the touch hole and filled the barrel with water to soak several hours. Still cruddy.
After several dozen wet patches, dry patches, oil soaked patches, I went to Hoppes solvent and a copper wire brush. Soaked the brush in Hoppes and hooked up the drill to the now handle-less rod. Spun it a couple times and swabbed a dozen more solvent soaked patches down the barrel. Finally got the crud ring cleaned out. Then more wet patches, dry patches, and Ballistol soaked patches and the bore is clean.
Lesson learned. I will never, ever, leave a dirty bore more than the time it takes to get it home. If that long. And I surely won’t leave a load in a dirty bore for an extended period then shoot it out. I’m sure a host of factors contributed to the crud ring at the top of the powder column. Whatever, this experience has reminded me to clean, clean, clean.
Hope this helps some of the other new BP shooters as a case study of what not to do.
Regards,
Paul