I think the fact that guys are shooting birds five times or losing 60% of birds speaks to the fact that steel is being used improperly.......skybusting and inaccuracy would seem the two most common culprits to me but maybe you have another theory. You can't shoot steel like you did lead and if you are trying to do so, you are unethical! Pretty straightforward. You are right, a spade is a spade.
I have read a fair bit on Ducks unlimited and afew other places that compare steel and lead. Many contardict themselves. Some, I can't remember if it's Delta or DU speak of a 40 -45 yrd range and under being a rough guide.
I have rarely seen kills at this range. I have done it and killed and I have crippled at that range much more often.
Maybe this should be more in a PM, but ...
You know what you do Sheephunter, enuff said...
When I see threads start up, I am initially pleased to see your avatar. Then when I read down the message, sometimes it's good, sometimes it's quite condescending. You have much knowledge, but a difficult way of sharing it.
Perhaps it's just me holding you to higher level,(one that I admittedly don't reach all the time), I guess however this is only a forum and you certainly have as much right to get into the arguements and #### flings.
Personally, I enjoy it when you offer good suggestions, rather than ethical/not ethical, black or white, etc etc.
Have you tried patterning?
What size choke do you use?
what size shot?
What kinda birds and pass shooting or decoys?
and offer the good advice you have...rather than backhanded good advice
What do I think is the cause of the steel shot situation?
Lead. We were raised on it and it's second nature for many.
Not everyone is a skeet shooter, nor used to patterning a shotgun, selecting chokes, etc etc etc.
Dad has hunted for 50 yrs I just picked out his shells and changed out his choke. Many of us, me included were raised with a full choke gun with lead and learned to shoot that way. Where i am from there is not a skeet shooting area for 2 hours, and honestly, when steel came out, I couldn't afford to drive 2 hours to a gun club, shoot off a few boxes of good steel shells, buy different chokes etc. Later when I could, I did.
There are people out there who have been hunting 60 yrs still caught in the learning curve from steels introduction.
I think that when steel was made mandatory, the year before it should have been mandatory to complete a steel shot awareness type day course.
Even if it was a mail in test, or log in test online, but something that got the facts accross.
.02 cents american