If you were to hunt Australia!

I hear they welcome rabbit hunters, but the thrill is limited due to the large numbers of bunnies. What they need to do is to develop a rabbit and cane toad eating kangaroo, but they continue to ignore my suggestion.
 
I hear they welcome rabbit hunters, but the thrill is limited due to the large numbers of bunnies. What they need to do is to develop a rabbit and cane toad eating kangaroo, but they continue to ignore my suggestion.

we had antelope meat from Australia many decades ago. i think it was roo and was travelling well at the time ....
 
:confused::confused:
Whelan Lad,
Since I've never had the pleasure of hunting many of the species mentioned here, I find myself at a loss. I need to ask you to rate the game by which you prefer to eat.
What are the top three or four game animals in order of taste?
 
Camels, donkeys, water buffalos, brumbies, goats, and pigs.

It's all open slather.

But a reminder, if you think the Cdn guns laws suck, Australia's are far worse, and goes from tight to draconian, depending on the state you live in.

Sad but true, least restrictive are the NT and QLD.
 
My advice? DON'T. There are so many rules down under it's insane. I thought WE had it bad up here with our regs. You do NOT want to end up getting in trouble in Aussie. You think some of the police and bureaucrats HERE are harsh when it comes to firearms? I never thought I'd say it but we've got it easy compared to them. Poor buggers down there.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_laws_in_Australia

http://www.loc.gov/law/help/firearms-control/australia.php

restrictions on the quantity of ammunition that may be purchased in a given period and a requirement that dealers only sell ammunition for firearms for which the purchaser is licensed;[28]

ensuring that “personal protection” would not be regarded as a “genuine reason” for owning, possessing, or using a firearm under the laws of the states and territories;[29]

standardized classifications to define a “genuine reason” that an applicant must show for owning, possessing, or using a firearm, including reasons relating to sport shooting, recreational shooting/hunting, collecting, and occupational requirements (additional requirements of showing a genuine need for the particular type of firearm and securing related approvals would be added for firearms in categories B, C, D, and H);[30]

in addition to the demonstration of a “genuine reason,” other basic requirements would apply for the issuing of firearms licenses, specifically that the applicant must be aged eighteen years or over, be a “fit and proper person,” be able to prove his or her identity, and undertake adequate safety training[31]

(safety training courses would be subject to accreditation and be “comprehensive and standardised across Australia for all licence categories”);[32]

firearms licenses would be required to bear a photograph of the licensee, be endorsed with a category of firearm, include the holder’s address, be issued after a waiting period of not less than twenty-eight days, be issued for a period of no more than five years, and contain a reminder of safe storage responsibilities;[33]

And perhaps the most appalling:

a federal ban on the importation of “all semi-automatic self-loading and pump action longarms, and all parts, including magazines, for such firearms, included in Licence Category D, and control of the importation of those firearms included in Licence Category C.” The sale, resale, transfer, ownership, manufacture, and use of such firearms would also be banned by the states and territories, other than in exceptional circumstances (relating to military or law enforcement purposes and occupational categories, depending on the category of the firearm);[23]

Sorry but pretty much everything I have would get me in all kinds of trouble down in Aussie! They'd lock my ass up and throw away the key!
 
I've never had any trouble getting my guns into Australia. The big one is to book with a licensed outfitter, or be signed up for registered competition. Do that, in advance and it is easy. Skip a step and it isn't going to happen at all. From what I've seen there is a enthusiastic gun culture, but that could just be the company I keep. There's differences like three gun with a pump .223 and a lever shotgun, but they have adapted. Many have jumped through the hoops to get professional exemptions for semi-autos. F-Class and practical rifle are popular.

One thing that I get a grin out of is how you can turn many green with envy by mentioning cheap SKSs and 200 and some bucks a case 7.62 X 39 ammo. That's the stuff of dreams. ;)
 
I've never had any trouble getting my guns into Australia. The big one is to book with a licensed outfitter, or be signed up for registered competition. Do that, in advance and it is easy. Skip a step and it isn't going to happen at all. From what I've seen there is a enthusiastic gun culture, but that could just be the company I keep. There's differences like three gun with a pump .223 and a lever shotgun, but they have adapted. Many have jumped through the hoops to get professional exemptions for semi-autos. F-Class and practical rifle are popular.

One thing that I get a grin out of is how you can turn many green with envy by mentioning cheap SKSs and 200 and some bucks a case 7.62 X 39 ammo. That's the stuff of dreams. ;)

Well that's the company you keep. What few gunnies there are in Aussie? Are pretty dedicated. That said? Tragically? Too many of them rolled over and now they don't have the clout they need to gain back some of the ground lost. Sigh.

Too right Tyler.

As an Australian, I've lived it all. :)

I know this is going to come across as one of those "stories". I really wish I had video of this. A friend of mine who works for the US Secret Service even got hassled down there, while though he was providing an essential service on a detail and WAS in fact exempt because he was there for OFFICIAL GOVERNMENT DUTIES. He had to deal with the cops and didn't like it one bit. Again? I really wish I had access to the video but sadly? I don't :(

Hell, talking from my own personal experience? a cell phone pouch was enough to get someone to call 911 on my ass HERE IN CANADA! I really cannot wait for an opportunity to move to the US. Which makes me kinda sad because I shouldn't have to feel this way. People live in constant fear, today.
 
You get what you give with an Aussie. Go there and tell them that you're right, they're wrong and you have rights and you're going to be Hating life.

Grin and say you're sorry you're making extra work for them, and he'll laugh and say that he probably shouldn't ##### about doing his job and that there's ten times as much paper as there needs to be, and next thing you know you're laughing and telling hunting stories. Ended up meeting a firearms officer at the Darwin range and checked out his classic and minty Griffin and Howe in Springfield in .400 Whelen. :)
 
You know I like guns and all, but more and more I care about the experiences you can have behind them than the chunks of metal, wood, and plastic. Australia has a lot of experiences I wouldn't give up on because of political objections, guns will come under increasing pressure here too and life and adventures will continue on. As will hunting.

And as Dogleg points out without expressly saying so it's all relative. American clients of mine come here and are aghast at our firearm laws and lack of "freedom". I point to fresh grizzly tracks in camp and shrug, we've got our things too they don't at home (don't get many Alaskans here)- as do Aussies. Life gets a lot easier when you stop worrying about the politics and just start enjoying every experience you can, you'll get a lot more out of life than hugging a safe full of HKs, Glocks, and Benellis.

Isn't a whole lot of fulfillment and life experience in that. Not that I want to follow Australia's firearms path one bit... Or the UK's... But it also isn't going to stop me from hunting or enjoying hunting in those places. Zimbabwe ain't exactly firearm owner friendly and to give up on the surreal hunting experiences there to object to that... Well that's a bit like not sleeping with a supermodel in the Vatican because she's not allowed to wear a short dress. The fun's still there, there's just some crap in the way you quickly forget about.
 
Sometimes we have to experience places as they are, and not how we wish they were, or like our favorite place, or how we would have designed them. That's the nature of adventure. If things are predictable, or go more or less according to plan, or you don't accidently get stranded alone on the other side of the world it might not have been much of an adventure at all. :)
 
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