field ranges, etc
My reading of all this is that if you have a mess of open land a field range can be set up, but only if you have an adequate 'safety-area'. Adequate means that the area is in compliance with the templates on the guidelines site. That can mean alot of land down-range. You don't have to own it all but you do have to set up usage agreements with the actual owners and you may have to post.
A no-safety-area range (NSR?) on the other hand is one where the natural features are such that ricochets and on-target shots will be safely contained with the range itself. That is: you've got a small mountain as a backdrop. This looked promising for me but if you run the numbers (a little trigonometry helps) it seems that they expect a 30 degree plus slope on that backdrop, and it has to be high enough to accommodate reasonable risk ricochets off your range 'floor' surface. That means pretty high.
My property is wooded and v hilly, but I haven't yet found the perfect spot to map out a NSR, which is my only hope. If you live in Sask on 4 sections of land, you're in a position to set up a field range.
Luckily, there are compromises between the two extremes: building baffles, bunkers or shields. As someone mentioned, could get costly. Still, if you have a partial hill and can add the right baffles you might get it approved.
I don't even have my handguns in hand yet (!) so this isn't going to happen this year. but I am intending to keep at it until I get an application together...or find myself completely shut down by some regulation. In the meantime....I'll shoot the pistols at the range. But it is wise also to acclimatize the neighbors, so the hunting rifle will get some use on the property.