Pets and Pellets, beware!

 I shoot in my back yard and I’ll admit I make NO effort to contain the lead . I really don’t know what the risks are with respect to lead pellets and bullets in the soil . I thought that lead in it’s solid metal form was pretty inert . Maybe some one knowledgeable on the subject could educate me/us?
The original poster said the chicken died of lead poisoning? How was that determined.?
I guess the problem is not just me but millions of others that do the same.
I’m listening 
 
Lost my best hen yesterday. Cut her open and in her gizzard was 2 screws, a copper rivet and a dozen pellets. She died of lead poisoning. I now use a pellet trap, hope this helps someone.

That SUCKS! Something to be mindful of. Sorry for your loss man. I’ve never had one eat metal. Seen em eat pebbles, but that’s normal. Also noticed some peck at spray foam. Which breed are you raising?
 
I shoot in my back yard and I’ll admit I make NO effort to contain the lead . I really don’t know what the risks are with respect to lead pellets and bullets in the soil . I thought that lead in it’s solid metal form was pretty inert . Maybe some one knowledgeable on the subject could educate me/us?
The original poster said the chicken died of lead poisoning? How was that determined.?
I guess the problem is not just me but millions of others that do the same.
I’m listening




lead oxidizes or corrode relatively slow unless the water or soil is on the acidic side. However it does eventually breakdown and leach into the soil over time. Once there it isn’t possible to remove it, once in ground water then everyone will end up drinking it. The bad part about lead is once it’s in your body it will be there for a very long time and it is a known neurological toxin especially bad in developing kids, the body does not have a way to get rid of it. 


In short it is terrible, I use pellet trap for targets and collect all I can find. But once in land fill it will eventually end up in ground water so trashing it isn’t all that great but at least your yard doesn’t have a huge concentration of it. If you grow food in your yard then it having lead everywhere isnt a good idea, if you have shallow well for drinking water then definitely don’t leave lead everywhere. Yes, lead occurs naturally but not even remotely in the concentration Industrial Age has brought. 



 
I was adopted by an ex-fightin' rooster, full dub, broke spurs and bust feathers, couple months ago. Showed up my gate trying to get in. Neighbor kids toss these broken birds out the car when they drive by. He follows me around now. Takes scratch from my hand every morning. The numbers of dead centipedes I find have trebled since he arrived. He loves em like candy. I would be heartbroken if anything happened to him.