Shooting Times & Country Magazine

Sharpshoot­er

Those who wish to defend the use of lead shot should not defame the alternativ­es, or they risk tarnishing the wider shooting community

-

During the battle to save hunting with hounds, some hunters alienated chunks of the shooting community by claiming that shooting was a less humane method of fox control. They even made unflatteri­ng observatio­ns about pheasant rearing. I doubt it made any difference to the progress of the ban, but they certainly upset a lot of otherwise supportive gamekeeper­s and fox shooters who resented being demonised in a diversiona­ry tactic. Foxhunting was never going to be saved by slagging off shooting.

Fast forward to today, and we see something not dissimilar in the fight against an outright legal ban on lead ammunition. Three years ago, all the main shooting organisati­ons got their act together and came up with a joint approach. A few of the smaller bodies dissented. They are perfectly entitled to do so. But they should think of the bigger picture before making ill-founded allegation­s about non-lead alternativ­es. Otherwise, they risk replicatin­g the same mistake gamekeeper­s complained about during the hunting debate.

I’ve read one organisati­on’s submission to the UK Reach consultati­on that cast various aspersions on copper bullets and steel shot. Mostly, these allegation­s were little more than anecdote and subjective opinion, or comparison­s cherry-picked from very different situations.

The problem is that unjustifie­d claims about non-lead may be lapped up by the anti-shooting brigade, and subsequent­ly used to tarnish the image of the shooting community in the future. And whether we like it or not, that future is likely to be largely lead-free at some point. So, where is the strategic vision to cope with that eventualit­y? Who, really, is making an effort to future-proof the livelihood­s of profession­al wildlife managers?

Wildfowler­s have used steel shot for more than 20 years. For deer management, copper is rapidly becoming mainstream; are all those deerstalke­rs who currently use it really being inhumane and risking human health? How is venison shot with lead to be disposed of, given that game dealers don’t want it? You can’t buck the market.

When Fred Barnes pioneered copper ammunition in 1985, he was on a mission to develop the very best bullet performanc­e. Legislatio­n wasn’t a factor at that time. Copper bullets of various makes and designs have become commercial­ly successful over the years, despite their premium pricing, for the simple reason that they work.

One of the more surreal arguments I read was based on the fact that producing

“Whether we like it or not, the future is likely to be largely lead-free at some point”

steel harms the environmen­t. Yet where does steel shot sit within the overall steel market? The UK produces seven million tonnes of steel every year. What are shotguns and rifles made from?

If the authoritie­s can be persuaded to delay a legal ban on lead, and exempt certain small calibres and target shooting, then that will be down to the calm, wellargued submission­s made by shooting organisati­ons. If and when lead is restricted, will today’s leadites brazenly switch to the very alternativ­es they so publicly slated?

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom