There was a point a couple of months ago where it got really dead down at the rifle club. Amongst us muzzleloaders we thought it was great...no annoying "AR Newbies" and their noisy sideblasting rifles. I'm retired and shoot blackpowder almost exclusively anymore, I shoot three days a week and once a month on Sunday for our monthly shoot. I spend nearly the entire day 8:00 to about 3:00 and almost always shoot my .54 rifle at least 6-5shot strings or 30 shots a day, with coffee breaks in between and lots of b.s. in the clubhouse around the stove. I'd say for the centerfire guys things are picking up a little, I'm noticing more AR's, hardly any AKs anymore. As far as expense goes I figured it out a couple months ago and came to a figure of .25 per shot on average, so it costs me about 8bucks a day to shoot. I like every aspect of shooting muzzleloaders, even cleaning after a day of shooting, casting balls and the subsiquent weighing and sorting.
Based on what I see three times a week I think recreational shooting will never be what it used to be, largly because the young kids today just aren't as interested in it as other generations. The average age of the muzzleloaders is probably mid 50's, the blackpowder cartridge guys are probably about the same. The cast bullet crowd is getting smaller as they age and interest in cast bullets seems to be dying off, I think I heard that group may give in and let it go as the younger guys don't want to participate to organize weekend shoots. Thats probably what is killing off the sport more than anything is the younger generation's lack of interest and I don't believe it has anything to do with the expense...I know from the muzzleloading group, one of the older guys wants to pass off the Treasurer's job and this past Sunday they asked if anyone was interested and not one of the younger guys raised his hand and its bound to be one of us older guys that will end up taking on the job when our friend vacates the position. If it weren't for the guys over 50 I'm sure none of the groups within the club would survive and they would probably have to open it up to non members 7 days a week to make ends meet.
Based on what I see three times a week I think recreational shooting will never be what it used to be, largly because the young kids today just aren't as interested in it as other generations. The average age of the muzzleloaders is probably mid 50's, the blackpowder cartridge guys are probably about the same. The cast bullet crowd is getting smaller as they age and interest in cast bullets seems to be dying off, I think I heard that group may give in and let it go as the younger guys don't want to participate to organize weekend shoots. Thats probably what is killing off the sport more than anything is the younger generation's lack of interest and I don't believe it has anything to do with the expense...I know from the muzzleloading group, one of the older guys wants to pass off the Treasurer's job and this past Sunday they asked if anyone was interested and not one of the younger guys raised his hand and its bound to be one of us older guys that will end up taking on the job when our friend vacates the position. If it weren't for the guys over 50 I'm sure none of the groups within the club would survive and they would probably have to open it up to non members 7 days a week to make ends meet.