Someone needs to try loading from horse back in this manner.
How you going to hold it if you need a hand for the horse, a hand for the horn etc etc when the muzzle is well below waist level while on the 56" horse? Just curious.
I see it as a wreck in the making.
Dan
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You have to remember that horses back then were used on a daily basis, making them a much more disciplined animal then the horses we ride for pleasure occasionally today. I would not want to try this on one of my trail horses due to the limited amount of time I spend on them but I have friends who ride almost daily and they could pull this off no problem.
DMR
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I used to ride horses that were ridden about 9 months of the year just about everyday several hours a day. No way in heck would I try loading a rifle this way while seated on one. I suppose its been tried and perhaps done but I would not do it.
My mother bred horses for DECADES.
Lets see now, reins in teeth, one hand to hold the gun so if the horse moves or shifts its weight is does not fall, then pour powder, then the patch and ball, sure be easier with 2 hands but I gotta hang onto the gun. All this with the muzzle below waist level so the rider is bent over to some extent. Read this as covering your body with the muzzle.
Piece of cake right?
There are several other problems with this.
For example;
Why did the plains rifle get shorter? Were they all riding even shorter horses, Shetland Ponies perhaps? Perhaps the western trappers were all riding in wagons and it never got mentioned until the Whitman party. But the journals seem to indicate otherwise.
Why were all military cavalry arms shorter than the infantry arms?
Also unless the horse has a lot of experience shooting off them its a really bad idea. This assuming the horse will stand rock solid so you can place the shot. Some horses won't stand for it anyway since they look for excuses to pitch the rider or in some other way show displeasure.
Dan