Shoot
Your Single-Shot Shotgun for Pennies on the Dollar!
My very
first gun was a Rossi break action with exchangeable barrels, one .22 and the
other 410. That was 5 years ago, and I still am shooting it. As I started
running out of the initial supply of shells my dad bought for me, I noticed how
expensive 410 shells were; $0.67 per shot! Then I came across a video by Dave
Canterbury, than an article in The Backwoodsman magazine on muzzle-loading a
single-shot shotgun with Pyrodex. I finally got around to trying it, and it
works great! In fact, I can shoot my 410 for $0.27 a pop using this method!
Read on to find out how I do it!
Tools:
·
Can
of Pyrodex RS or ffg blackpowder
·
Shotgun
primers
·
Cheap
12 gauge skeet loads
·
Spent
high-brass shotgun shells
·
Some
kind of ramrod
·
Sheep’s
wool
·
Powder
measure
·
And
a single shot shotgun!!!
Procedure:
Begin by
cutting open some of the 12 gauge shells and extracting the shot. Put this in
some kind of vial.
Now take
the spent shells, cut the plastic off at the brass, and then punch the old
primer out with a nail and replace it with a new one. That is all the prep work
needed.
When you
are ready to load the gun, open it up, and insert the cut-off shell into the
chamber.
Now close
the gun and set the butt on the ground. Measure out 30 grains of Pyrodex RS and
pour it down the barrel.
Push a
small wad of sheep’s wool down the barrel, tamping it firmly against the
powder.
Now put
40 grains of shot (measured same as powder) down the barrel.
Now tamp
another wad of sheep’s wool on top of that, and you are ready to shoot!
Here is
the pattern with 7 ½ shot:
Have fun
and be safe!
-Caleb