do you need to have a lwayer with you while hunting? that is complicated and not stopping real poachers ...
Totally agree and then there’s the rookie CO that has a different interpretation of the rules and tries to ruin one’s day.
do you need to have a lwayer with you while hunting? that is complicated and not stopping real poachers ...
Sorry, chum, but this is not right either. You can carry a centerfire rifle without a tag when there is NO OPEN big game season.... however if there is an OPEN season for a big game species ie; moose, deer, bear, you must possess a tag or be a part of a party with a tag and within the restrictions for such a party. There is no restriction on carrying a rimfire or shotgun for small game while big game hunting.
Getting back to the OP’s question, I suggest using a bit of common sense while bird hunting during the moose hunt. Although moose can be shot most anywhere, there are areas of higher/lower probability where moose are apt to be seen. Limit your bird hunting to areas where you least expect to see moose, while not disturbing the higher probability areas.
I hunted moose one year with a guy who thought that he only had to be quiet when he was at his watch. He was also of the belief that moose only moved in the first hour of the morning or last hour of the day. So the minute he left his watch, he would carry on as if moose were extinct and would crash, bang, yell, etc. I tried to convince him that he should be quiet as a moose could show up at any time and to be careful to not burn his spot. He didn’t change his ways, never saw a thing, and was never invited back.
I've shot them in the middle of the afternoon from 50 yards away while we were loading up the boat to head home - music on the stereo, talking normally, no issues.
Cat
BC regs said:it is an offence to hunt with a firearm that is designed to be shot with one hand (i.e. a hand gun), regardless of the caliber.
I suggest the bottom line is this: big game is not necessarily going to be concerned about the sound of a shot going off, what they're genetically programmed to be wary of is the sound of a predator moving up on them, which is to say footsteps, branches breaking, brush rustling, that sort of thing, and most of all, scent. Scent is something we humans are almost blind to but it's all-important in the animal world. You have to be pretty darned good or just plain lucky to sneak up close to a wary animal like a deer and sounds of movement and the scent flowing off you like a silent fire alarm are what you most need to be aware of.
You can carry a centerfire rifle without a tag when there is NO OPEN big game season.... however if there is an OPEN season for a big game species ie; moose, deer, bear, you must possess a tag or be a part of a party with a tag and within the restrictions for such a party.
I’m with Hoyt, until my mid 20s I used a slingshot for grouse with steel ball bearings. That started as a young teen, it was a lot of fun and I’ll encourage my boys to take up the same.
I’m in the minority it seems who don’t shoot the non-target species with a rifle or shotgun while hunting big game. We had a wolf come through a stand with a member’s son, we passed it as likely would spook the main quarry. This is in a no pressure, essentially non hunted area. The wolf returned last light and he tagged it.
I don’t shoot small game when after big game, but sure do once the big game’s tagged. I haven’t carried an air gun with me yet and probably should get a .22 pellet pistol.
Unfortunately Air Pistols are too dangerous to use in BC.
By Federal law, pistols under 500 fps are "toys" not firearms. Has your provincial statutes prohibited "any" pistol, including those under 500 fps?
For sure, remarkable things like that can and do happen, but I suggest that events like that are outliers. I wouldn’t want to suggest playing the stereo and loading up a boat as a moose hunting tactic.
Yes, the Wildlife Act definition of Firearm is different than the Federal definition.
"FIREARM - includes a device that propels a projectile by means of an explosion, compressed gas or spring and includes a rifle, shotgun, handgun, pellet gun, "BB" gun or spring gun but does not include a bow."
And
"It is unlawful to use a firearm this is designed, altered or intended to be aimed and fired by the action of one hand OR that has a barrel less than 305mm in length."
It must be reasonable since the Govt always makes evidence based policy.
I have a 32 ACP/308 Win adapter. Works pretty slick and decently accurate.
![]()
Technically True, but unless your lucky enough to hunt where the wind never swirls, its a bit more complicated than that.Scent is a non issue .... if you know how to play the wind ...
Lets say you haven't showered or changed clothes in two weeks ... you can be 3 meters or even 50 cm downwind of a deer .... and it will not know that you are a human !!!
Scent only travels in one direction ... with the wind ...