Wrong ear. If you must wear one plug, wear it in the off ear. It seems odd, but the off ear is the ear that gets more noise for most shooters.
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You may agree that just by having a firearm safety ON (during a hunt) shouldn't be deemed as having rendered that as 100% safe. So many other factors form part of the equation too i.e. mechanical condition of the firearm being used, diligence in muzzle/trigger finger control at all times, being fully aware of surroundings etc etc. Having said that, with all other necessary precautions in place, technically, the safety switch is a foremost safety component that would prevent an accidental discharge.
It's a personal decision obviously, however, simply because one may hunt solo must not justify keeping the safety off. :) One example - I've observed instances in the field where an individual has leaned a loaded firearm against a tree in order to quickly relieve himself or to get rid of ants or leech inside one's clothing.......the firearm slid over from it's support falling to the ground with some force while the muzzle pointed dangerously at the person. One occasion, I encountered a Brown Cobra that suddenly slid down a vine only a few yards away......the fright caused me to jump backwards and fall on my back with the shotgun muzzle close to my face. Fortunately, in all those instances safety was on.
Ear plug use perspective, that could be well justified in hunt scenarios where high volume shooting may be involved (driven birds/duck blinds etc). For Grouse hunting, one would be considered lucky indeed to be able to fire off more than 5 shells in a given day! :)
In my army days, leaning a gun against anything was always strictly verboten for the obvious reason that it could fall or be knocked over. This is one of the most common of casual safety violations. Doesn't matter if the gun is unloaded if other people in your party can't see that it's unloaded at a glance. The only exception I make to this is briefly leaning a gun for a picture of dog and birds.
Incidentally, in my army days, the safety catch stayed on until the gun came to the shoulder ... we were trained that way.
Underpants remained unsoiled during that particular incident. :) However, it came very close to that when a cobra had decided to use the platform of our waterfowl boat to cross over to the other side. Another time, during a beat for Red Jungle Fowl, when a Leopard had emerged from the tea bush less than ten yards away.
The challenge with hunting in the tropics was/is that the nearest medical facility is usually hundreds of miles away and proper road communication is mostly terrible to non-existent.
Not all guns have a safety, I have an old single Cooey shotgun Hammer and there is no halfcock. It's either pulled back and loaded or not. No the gun isn't broken.
Many dedicated target guns don't even have one ... but on the other hand, if you make a habit of using the safety for about 5000 rounds on the range, you will instil taking it off and putting it back on as you mount / lower the gun as an ironclad habit.
But would you suggest that this somehow means you shouldn't use it if it's there?