Hello All!
pake here. I'm very new to the forum, as you can see from my (non) post count but, I've been shooting bp for awhile and have built a few guns. Actually I've started hanging around here to get some ideas for another build, but that's a different topic.
In reading this thread about historic references as to how civilians might load a smoothie with a ball, I remembered an interesting account I had read last year. Took a bit to find all the info again. You may find it interesting.
The reference can be found in Voyages of Peter Esprit Radisson 1636-1710. Being an account of his travels and experiences among the North American Indians, from 1652 to 1684. Transcribed from original manuscripts in the Bodleian Library and the British Museum.
This account, occurred in the first of his four "journeys", each lasting from two to three years. He titles it, "The Relation of my Voyage, being in Bondage in the Lands of the Irokoits, which was the next year after my coming into Canada, in the year 1651, the 24th day of May."
"Being persuaided in the morning by two of my comrades to go and recreat ourselves in fowling, I disposed myselfe to keepe them Company; wherfor I cloathed myselfe the lightest way I could possible, that I might be the nimbler and not stay behinde, as much for the prey that I hoped for, as for to escape the danger into which wee have ventured ourselves of an enemy the cruelest that ever was upon the face of the earth." (There's a lot to consider in this sentence isn't there? Hunting for recreation, dressing for conditions, awareness and preparation for trouble... I wish I could quote it all but time and space prevent it. The three set out, and in spite of knowing the apparent danger from "the ennemy, made us look to ourselves and charge two fowling peeces with great shot the one, and the other with small. Priming our pistols, we went where our fancy first lead us."
The group shot some "duks", and two of the party decided they'd had enough. Radisson jibes them, they argue, he decides to continue alone for a time, during which he shoots, "three geese, tenn ducks, and one crane, with some teales." Returning later and on the way back home, he spied more ducks, but while preparing for more good shooting finds his two companions dead, killed, "murthered", as he says. Now, with his own hair standing on end he sees twenty or thirty Indians in the grass just ahead. But they hadn't spied him yet. This long winded introduction sets up the next quote; one that addresses the question, "How did they load their gunnes?"
"Mightily surprized att the view, I must needs passe through the midst of them or tourne backe into the woode. I slipped a boullet upon the shot and beate the paper into my gunne."
So in this case he shoots shot, and a ball; but it's a wadded ball, and things didn't work out too well after that either.
Respectfully,
pake