While I agree with you in principal, Anyone who touches a ML without first pulling the ramrod, running it down the barrel to feel and hear what it might be hitting, then marking the rod, pulling it out, and laying the ramrod along the outside of the barrel to see where then end of the rod stops , HAS NO BUSINESS HANDLING A ML. PERIOD. It is the basic savety rule for muzzle loaders.Always check to see that the ML you are handling is empty. Now after years of doing this, I can feel and hear the difference when my rod strikes a lead ball or OS card, rather than the metallic ' clink " i get when it strikes the breechplug face. I rarely have to lay the rod down along the outside of the barrel to know the gun is loaded or empty. I do teach this method to all new shooters. I use to teach marking the rod, and checking the mark, until I found that I wanted to change my load, and therefore had to put a new set of marks on the rod. It got to the point after several changes that I didn't know which mark meant what. So, if someone does use a mark on his rod to tell him a gun is loaded or unloaded, that is fine to me. However, I no longer rely on it. I don't think its wrong to do so, provided there is only one mark indicating that the gun is empty!