i guess thats the true answer. It depends on how much you shoot and how much time you want to spend loading to do that shooting. Me? The first part LOTS the second part LITTLE.
I get that lloyd. Your experience is significantly different from mine. I would have loved depredation hunting, I think. I certainly enjoy venison (and the bounty in my woods has been pork), though I do not shoot with others at the range.
I am satisfied with how much I shoot versus how long I spend making ammo. I am used to sitting in a tree stand for long periods waiting for game to participate and then shooting a rifle one time. I am neither in a hurry nor a rush.
I practice the same way. My equipment, ammunition, and I perform to practiced expectations. I am highly confidence in the outcome when hunting.
I shoot handguns similarly, deliberately, and with purpose. I maintain the mindset to be the victor and not a victim. I am confident in my equipment, ammo, and capability. Ordinarily I shoot alone...
Occasionally my boys and their friends, or adult acquaintances want to "blow holes in the sky", so I oblige them in their pursuit of recreation with a side of serious intent. All safety rules are openly discussed, especially "1.) every gun is loaded until you personally verify it is not, 2.) point every muzzle in a safe direction, and 3.) never point a gun at something unless you intend to obliterate it", followed by obliterating a melon, or water filled milk jug, or liter bottle of soda. For most, the auditory and visual effect is sobering and not soon forgotten.
Then I ask them to "4.) think about the deadliest animal in the woods right now - (pause for effect) - which is YOU with a loaded gun. Shootings do not 'just happen'. There are NO ACCIDENTS. Someone pulled a trigger. Shooting has serious and DEADLY implications, which are YOUR personal responsibility. Do not let your head check out for one second in your exuberance to shoot. Once YOU pull the trigger there is no recall, no 'do over', no respawn, no additional life, where the bullet goes is YOUR responsibility, up to and INCLUDING DEATH, so, 5.) keep your finger off of the trigger."
With young adults, I wait about 5 minutes (4 minutes longer than their attention span). Then we have the safety talk a 2nd time.