My Tedd Cash capper is the teardrop shaped style, not the "snail" shape, but I second the motion that they are very well made, and very useful for hunting or target shooting. Raise the lid, pour caps into it, gently shake the capper side to side horizontally, and they all turn bottom up. Works perfectly for rifle or shotgun. Mine is old, but very well made. If I lost it I'd buy another just like it.

My loads for hunting are contained in little clear plastic tubes, like the ones shown above, but shorter. They are a little smaller than a 28 ga. loaded shell. I don't carry them in my pocket to jostle around, for fear of static electricity build up on a cold, windy day. So, for quail hunting I use a brass flask for the powder, even tho' I know it's a bit slower in use. But, for dove shooting the plastic capsules of powder and shot are in a little camo 20 ga. shell carrier someone gave me many years ago. There is a block of foam inside it with pre-punched holes the perfect size for the little bottles. It will hold fifty, as I recall, plenty for a dove shoot.

One other hugely useful tool for dove shooting with a m/l shotgun is my loading rod. I built it out of hickory, put a flared brass wad rammer on the end, and an old antique solid brass doorknob on the other end. After loading it rests in a piece of 3/4" metal conduit pushed into the ground. The length of the holder is such that, when I drop the loading rod into it, the base of the doorknob catches itself on the flared, top end of the conduit. The bottom end, that is pushed into the ground, was flattened in a vise, then ground on two sides into a flat point. Since you stay in the same spot, for shooting on a dove field, the apparatus is shoved into the ground on arrival there and is always right beside you with the doorknob end at the right height for reloading. I've got pictures of it all but photobucket has me messed up, right now.

SRH


May God bless America and those who defend her.