It was more that your autocorrect was using basic instead of BASCIt was sarcasm....
It was more that your autocorrect was using basic instead of BASCIt was sarcasm....
When do you believe this 'capitulation' began?I distinctly remember this winter a few chaps coming and buying thousands of cartridges explaining clearly in their words that no one is going to tell them what to shoot from their guns. I helped them load their vehicles and they had basic stickers in the window!
I've asked several shop owner's over recent years how the transition was going, everyone of them said it isn't happening from what they can see!
They all had basic stickers in the window!
It's a croc, any claim of basic of fighting against a lead ban is an outright lie. The truth is basic has tried to spuriously back pedal and gloat over some success in their back peddling for example to get certain proposed restrictions lifted hoping it mitigates their years of capitulation on the subject of lead ammunition before their peers, not them they claim to represent no but those in office and their pr men!
In all honesty one could easily be mislead into believing they are simply in it for their own ends!
Just another bunch of hoohars that think they can fool the masses but just keep scoring own goals.
I mean why oh why didn't they jump on the fact that it is perfectly legal to cover a roof in lead and any water run off contaminated with lead oxides that enter the water supply times by millions is perfectly okay but lead shot is wrong I'll never know! Unless of course this organisation is one that readily automatically assumes a certain position before those it truly fears!
What a croc....
yes and no , from memory it was only the water soluble type made in Spain that Eley introduced into the U.K. market possibly Bioammo also had something and the gamebore card tube type. But credit to the transition initiative, it resulted in the likes of the earth wads, green core wads, paper tube wads and Hull hydro wads and game bore making theirs in the u.k. But not all are created equal as regards to how long they take to degrade in the open u.k. countryside environment.
My autocorrect was not used, I typed basic because that is how I see them.It was more that your autocorrect was using basic instead of BASC![]()
I am not looking for a row or to antagonise you but I want to say that I think it's a pity you see BASC like that, given that the Association works hard to protect and promote shooting, and not least on the topic of this thread, that there is no lead ammunition ban despite calls for bans since the 1980s which BASC has held firm against.My autocorrect was not used, I typed basic because that is how I see them.
Never fall into the mistake of confusing "in spite of" with "because of".There is no lead ammunition ban despite calls for bans since the 1980s which BASC has held firm against

That's because they originated from the same substance.This lead argument is set to run longer than the Net Zero argument.
I genuinely don't believe that moving from lead shot will increase sales of game in supermarkets/shops. It has always had a limited market, many people simply don't know how to cook game, and a lot of badly shot game inevitably gets disposed of during processing, another expense to add on. (Personally I prefer to bite into a lead rather than steel pellet.)However I can see a benefit from banning lead shot, but only for game shooting if that then ensures a market for it that allows for it to all enter the food chain. Totally against it just being shot for sport and then dumped. To ensure compliance then all game shoots should be licensed and the operator responsible for ensuring no lead shot is used or their licence is revoked.
This. As I have always said cui bono. Who benefits?I genuinely don't believe that moving from lead shot will increase sales of game in supermarkets/shops. It has always had a limited market, many people simply don't know how to cook game, and a lot of badly shot game inevitably gets disposed of during processing, another expense to add on. (Personally I prefer to bite into a lead rather than steel pellet.)
I genuinely don't believe that moving from lead shot will increase sales of game in supermarkets/shops. It has always had a limited market, many people simply don't know how to cook game, and a lot of badly shot game inevitably gets disposed of during processing, another expense to add on. (Personally I prefer to bite into a lead rather than steel pellet.)
As regards licensing, be careful what you wish for. Just another way to government control/interference.
I do have some concerns about the total weight of lead dispersed over farmland on big shoots though. There is extensive research about lead uptake in plants.
Metal lead especially small fragments can enter the body through action of stomach acid and, it seems, bile.What an i.....
When lead was used as make up it was lead oxide.
Lead oxide unlike the metal lead easily can enter the body and blood stream. Unlike the metal lead.
If you have concerns or queries about BASC expenditure you won't achieve much posting about them in this thread - perhaps email me at conor.ogorman@basc.org.uk or raise them at the next AGM?HSE misuse concerns must be aligned to the poor performance of ‘dissolving’ wad steel cartridges (the ‘better’ or less useless the cartridge, the less the wad ‘dissolves’ into sludgey crap) and the therefore need to keep using lead shot for the foreseeable. Personally the efficacy of non lead shot not such that I consider it humane, I genuinely care about avoiding animal suffering so I will continue to use lead for as long as possible.
As for the Game Alliance, BASC sunk hundreds of thousands of MEMBERS money (looks like close to half a mil but opaque) on an interest free loan that should have been repaid 2021but has been kicked down the road a number of times, next one set for 2026.
This is a failed project which is still bleeding cash despite a cast of dozens of ‘names’ jumping in and out and rebrands, it is the absolute text book of ‘jobs for the boys’ or offspring thereof which has tanked, but is funded by BASC members to this day.
Nope, when they ban pesticides and herbicides first. They do far more harm than any metal lead. Otherwise they'd stop using it on roofs. You can add tobacco to that list too.Metal lead especially small fragments can enter the body through action of stomach acid and, it seems, bile.
And as lead in projectiles is exposed to air, each will be coated in a bit of lead oxide.
The paper quoted in the Guardian is straightforward - there has been very little move to non-lead products as part of the voluntary transition. I know some have criticised it, but having read it, it seems a reasonable study.
Lead is poisonous and it's getting into wildlife where it shouldn't. And, critically, the most significant source is due to shooting. We can accept the need to change, or have changed forced. The refusal to change means it will be the latter.
That does not make any sense though. To repeat, the fact is that there is no lead ammunition ban despite calls for bans since the 1980s which BASC has held firm against. And this is in the context of @Smellydog referring to "years of capitulation on the subject of lead ammunition" whilst not answering the question "When do you believe this 'capitulation' began?".Never fall into the mistake of confusing "in spite of" with "because of".
Thinking, believing, promoting that what YOU claim has been the reason for to something to have happened, or not happened, is because YOU actions made it so.
It's leads to self delusion, it didn't work for the Mayans, it won't work for BASC either.
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Indeed, and many of the comments in this thread seem to be a form of deflection away from the science and reasoning underpinning the voluntary transition away from lead shot for live quarry shooting.Lead is poisonous and it's getting into wildlife where it shouldn't. And, critically, the most significant source is due to shooting. We can accept the need to change, or have changed forced. The refusal to change means it will be the latter.
There are moves away from the use of all those substances.Nope, when they ban pesticides and herbicides first. They do far more harm than any metal lead. Otherwise they'd stop using it on roofs. You can add tobacco to that list too.
Untill then it's an attack on shooting, encouraged by the gluttony of large commercial shoots which is where the real issue is!
Just in answer to an above question of ‘what happened to game alliance’If you have concerns or queries about BASC expenditure you won't achieve much posting about them in this thread - perhaps email me at conor.ogorman@basc.org.uk or raise them at the next AGM?