Free: Contests & Raffles.
You may want to investigate further. My sister and brother in-law are caretakers of a private duck club on the westside. They used to raise and release pheasants for the members until they were told by a Warden that all of the members (who would hunt pheasant)needed to have the westside permit and they must abide by westside seasons and regulations even on private land. So it may be ok to shoot lead on private land but you may still need the westside permit.
Is it legal for me to use lead shot on the west side for pheasants if I'm hunting private property and not a release sight ?
I'd just rather not have mixed ammo.Maybe you guys shoot more than I do also. I typically get about 1-2 shots off per trip for westside pheasant. I'm only shooting if my dog points, not if he flushes.The $10 I could save over the course of the year isn't worth the stress of making sure I'm not mixing my lead/steel shot.But that's just me.Curtis
I would never use steel if I didn't have too. Steel is responsible for crippling more birds than any other factor, it's ok on release sites where the birds are waiting to be killed and not running 20 yards before they fly. I don't know, I just don't dump ammo in my vest so I'm not worried about mixing it up. That cheap steel at Walmart also sucks, I patterned it at 30 yards and all it was was giant holes and hit the board with no velocity. Shoot that at birds and your asking for cripples.
I really feel steel is a cripple creator, but that's why you use man's great conservation tool, a bird dog, to recover them unless you have an EP.
Have not had trouble myself with .410,hevishot 4's and 6's and good solid points where I FLUSH the bird.I've chicken ticketed alot in the last 30 years and can say I've seen very very few instances of handlers flushing birds over pointing dogs.