Ahhh, Governor Moon Beam....... What a rocket scientist he is. I think he has been too busy as of late, staring at the little turn table in the microwave, while wearing his tinfoil hat.
I for one will not use steel shot. While I mostly agree with the lead debate, I do not agree with the blanket, one size fits all, reactions. I still use lead shot, and there was for awhile a lot of companies using coated lead shot, but then the bans went nuts. As for ducks, it mainly is the diving ducks that ingest the lead. I always cut out a large portion of meat around the wound channel, and that is buried, or bagged, and put in the garbage. The steel shot will damage your barrel, and it just doesn't have the velocity retaining ability of lead, and nor does it have the same impact, or shock qualities of lead. It does not expand, on impact. There are a whole lot more injured, and maimed birds from steel shot, than ever from lead shot. I will agree with a lead ban in management areas, but again, it is mostly the diving ducks that are affected with eating lead. There are coatings that are available for lead shot. We all have our passions with hunting, and non hunting in the outdoors. I just don't think a state wide ban is necessary. Put it where the condors, and other raptors are prevalent, not the entire state. I don't hunt management areas that have a lead ban. I will not shoot steel in my guns. The shells are prohibitive in costs, and no near as effective as lead. Just my personal opinion. I think a bigger problem would be Mexico's use of DDT on their crops. DDT doesn't go away. You can still find lumps of it in the Mississippi river. Funny we can't use it here, but we can import crops soaked in it. The animals,and other pests that eat the crops, have it, and the predators that eat those animals have it. Lead is a toxic product no doubt, but there are ways around that other than steel, or outright bans.
Wayne