Whose tradition? Seriously. What country or part of the country? What time period? The older i get, the more liberal i am in accepting what other folks do. I'm pretty willing to exclude sabots,, pelleted propellants, and scopes--usually. Seems a lot of folks want to keep it to flint or percussion with a hammer that falls sidelock style and aft up to fore down. So then is a mule ear traditional? If a sideslapper is traditional, what about underhammers? Sure a long tradition there. Just visit a chunk gun shoot. Then there are the boys and girls who shoot bench guns. The big boys there are using sealed ignitions and scopes and such, but I think the NMLRA still wants rea l black powder burned in them.
Like a lot of folks it seems, my first was a TC Renegade. Moved on through some other percussion guns, mostly single and double shotguns. Had a flint fowling piece built, and then got a neat little flint halfstock with interchangeable .32 and .45 barrels. Some revolvers and a Patriot and a .36 Seneca in there somewhere. Eventually I was down to flint only, with 6 of 'em now, IIRC. Oh, there are still a few cartridge guns, long and short about the place--which seldom see any action. Inertia keeps them with me.
I thought I was likely to never buy another percussion cap. Wrong. I've recently added THREE underhammers? Traditional? Sort of. One is a RB bench rifle with no false muzzle and with sealed ignition. Stock is curly maple, but it's stainless steel, action to muzzle. A very short tradition there, but surely a part of shooting at Friendship. Next is a chunk gun. Now THERE's a tradition. Read up on the game. This one's also underhammer, #11 caps, walnut stock, open iron sights, and--ta da--stainless front to back again. Third's another underhammer again, this time a 12 bore shotgun, proper steel and brass, but I'm using a hunk of curly myrtle for the stock. Not so traditional, I reckon, but I want it, so I'm gettin' it.
I truly love shooting flinters, and always shoot from the bag, powder in a horn, roundball only, patches cut at the muzzle, almost always spit lubed. Range box? Sure, in the truck, with stuff that's there for contingencies. I even "dress the part" most of the time. But I'm "chuffed as little tea cakes," as a Brit friend says, about the new areas of muzzleloading I'm exploring. Bench, chunk, and trap seem like good things to try as my hips and knees complain more loudly.
I used to keep all my gear "primitive," and strove to be as HC as my knowledge and budget allowed. Still have most of the stuff, but it's been thinned out a lot. No longer do I have a family at home that's going along. I can't quite give it up, but I'm looking to lighten that load in a variety of ways.
So, tradition? I guess I've got several of them going at once. Am I having fun? FerSher! And I'm less and less critical of someone else's game. Mellowing like fine wine, maybe. There are totally HC/PC walk-in things for those folks and there are wide open events complete with Winnebagos and Airstreams that I can neither afford nor desire. I'm just going where the wanderlust takes me, and keep on loading from the front and sending roundballs and shot downrange. I even hit what I'm pointing at a fair bit.