Talk about jinxed. One year we had just built one of those Isaac Haines rifles and had it hanging on the wall of the shop.
It was one of those years when the special flintlock season was only 4 days, the balance of a week in which the first two
days were doe season. I took the gun home on friday and sighted it in, worked great. Went out saturday morning, had
three doe run up to me about 20 yards....guess what, I couldn't get that gun to go off...no spark, couldn't get the prime
to go off....of course, the deer ran away. Another time, I had a flash in the pan....prime went off, gun did not. I eventually fired the gun and re-loaded. When I went home that evening, I merely dumped the powder out of the pan and stuck the gun in the car. When I got home, I stepped out around the house and closed the frizzen...NO priming
powder..and pulled the trigger...naturally, the gun went off. I built a neat little english sporting rifle in 60 calibre. We
went hunting, about 5 of us, and they drove a deer past me, I took a shot at it and clipped it across the brisket, at least
that is what we figured. Found a little hair, nothing else. So, we went down to our clubhouse and went out back and
were having some fun. My powder measure help up to 80 grains, so I was dumping 80 grains in, then running the measure up to the top, which held about 30 grains, and dumping this in...a total of 110 grains. Shot several shots like
this. We then decided to come back the next morning. We did, and I loaded the gun, and went on a stand, nice snow
on the ground. Two doe ran up in front of me and stopped....I shot and I could hear this strange bang that one gets
with 30 grains of powder..forgot to change the measure. Being a so called "expert" in this business, one cannot do things like this and not get heckled. I got the "bowling for doe" bit, they had a cartoon in the clubhouse of the ball bouncing toward a deer, etc., and so it goes...............Don