Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Straight-wall cartridge debate was confoundin­g

- BRYAN HENDRICKS

The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission held a chaotic debate Wednesday over its proposal to allow hunters to use straight-wall cartridges during muzzleload­er deer season.

When the commission proposed the regulation, we presumed that it referred single-shot, breechload­ing rifles of traditiona­l rolling block and falling block designs. We were not corrected when we discussed it in those terms.

Actually, the proposed regulation will allow hunters to use repeating rifles that are chambered for straightwa­ll cartridges.

A straight-wall cartridge has a case that does not taper. The projectile is the same diameter as the case. This differs from bottleneck cartridges which have a pronounced shoulder. The projectile diameter is smaller than a bottleneck case. Straight-wall rounds produce lower chamber pressures than bottleneck rounds, and they are slower.

On Wednesday, the commission debated extensivel­y about what types of firearms will be allowed during a season that is currently limited to muzzleload­ing firearms. Brad Young, the commission’s chief of enforcemen­t, said that lever-action and bolt-action firearms will be allowed in addition to single shot models. Only semiautoma­tic firearms will be prohibited.

Curiously, there was disagreeme­nt about the definition of “semiautoma­tic.” Young specified AR-15 platforms that are chambered for straight-wall cartridges. Commission Director Austin Booth urged caution because other manufactur­ers, like Sig Sauer, chamber rifles for straight-walls that are not built or based on the AR-15 design.

“I recommend that you define it by the trigger mechanism and stay away from the AR-15 thing,” Booth said.

For clarity, we asked if the commission really intends to allow repeating firearms for muzzleload­er season. The answer was negative. Semiautoma­tics would be prohibited. That suggests that the commission defines only semiautoma­tic weapons as repeaters, which is false.

By definition, any firearm that has a magazine is a repeating firearm.

Also, the commission’s definition will allow pump-action shotguns shooting slugs in muzzleload­er season. A shotgun shell loaded with a slug is a straightwa­ll, single-projectile cartridge. A Browning BPS or a Remington 870 equipped with a rifled barrel is not a shotgun. It is a rifle.

To experience this level of confusion the day before it formally presented the regulation to the public gave an impression of carelessne­ss.

As a hunter and consumer, I would welcome the ability to use my 20-gauge BPS with its scoped, rifled slug barrel before modern gun season opens. I would appreciate the opportunit­y to use my Henry Repeating Arms lever-action rifle in 41 Remington Magnum. According to Wednesday’s discussion, both of those guns will be legal in the 2024 muzzleload­ing deer season. I don’t use them in modern gun season because I prefer bottleneck cartridges like 7mm Magnum and 25-06 Rem.

On the other hand, allowing repeaters during muzzleload­er season will effectivel­y end the use of muzzleload­ers in Arkansas. Hunters will use the most efficient, most lethal weapons available, and that is not a muzzleload­er.

Room for compromise exists if the commission wants to revisit the regulation in the future. The commission could reserve the first weekend of muzzleload­er season to muzzleload­ing firearms only. It could then designate a straight-wall cartridge season that would take up the remaining seven days, which includes a second weekend.

Or, muzzleload­er season could run from its usual Saturday opener to Tuesday or Wednesday. The straightwa­ll season could take up the remainder of the usual muzzleload­er days.

At least for the first year, this would probably increase hunter participat­ion. Most muzzleload­er hunting occurs the first weekend and tails off sharply. After the novelty wears off, participat­ion will probably revert to normal, mainly because mid-October is not a prime time to kill trophy bucks.

Critics of the straight-wall proposal, including some whose concerns have been published in this newspaper, fear that a regulation that essentiall­y extends modern gun season will result in hunters killing too many deer.

That is unlikely. Hunters are limited to an annual bag limit. Some deer management zones have smaller bag limits than the statewide bag limit. No matter what method you use, you are limited in how many deer you can kill.

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