Couple of thoughts I had during the day.
If steel is banned at a certain ground why (especially in skeet) wasn't this prominently advertised at the time of booking on the CPSA site? Fair enough had it been trap, nobody uses steel at that, sporting, very very few as to be negligible, but the vast majority of steel used in this country is by skeet shooters (competition shells, not wildfowl loads) and why, as reported here, if there were steel shell boxes in the bins were the refs not doing cartridge checks if steel was banned?
Surely at a major championship a representative of the CPSA should be on the jury (well versed in the rulebook and have a copy to hand) Arrive a couple of days before the start of the event to do any snagging, make sure the layouts are up to scratch and fit for a major and also check the targets before competition starts. In the case of trap and skeet, be there to hoop or check angles/distance every morning before start of play.
When I was green keeping I would meet with the chairman of the competitions committee at least 3 weeks before the club championship (biggest event in our golf year) and walk the course discussing where they wanted the rough grown out, how fast the greens should be and any areas of concern. We would then meet a couple of days before to discuss the flag and tee positions for each day of the weekend and final snagging then a walk round on the friday afternoon to catch anything else.
Is it too much to ask for a director to do something close to the above, seeing as we have regional directors so the ground hosting would be nearly on their doorstep.
I shot the world sporting hosted by Steve Lovatt last year and the ground and targets were immaculate (considering the weather) also the Express and E/O skeet at Nottingham this year, again immaculate. I am shooting the White Gold sporting at Westfield (Steve again) later this year and will bet the house that it will again be immaculate. The difference? ground owners that have pride in their product!