If you were hunting with a bow or crossbow and wanted to have a shotgun along for "protection" you could take out the plug and fill the magazine.
I reckon if you are actually hunting with the shotgun you have to follow the law on mag capacity while huntingwith a shotgun.
If you were hunting with a bow or crossbow and wanted to have a shotgun along for "protection" you could take out the plug and fill the magazine.
What is you setup? Type of gun, barrel, ammo, sights? And how well does it group at what distance?
I reckon if you are actually hunting with the shotgun you have to follow the law on mag capacity while huntingwith a shotgun.
If you were hunting with a bow or crossbow and wanted to have a shotgun along for "protection" you could take out the plug and fill the magazine.
What is you setup? Type of gun, barrel, ammo, sights? And how well does it group at what distance?
what happens if you have shorter shells like the 1 3/4" slug? lol
There is nothing in the Federal Firearm rules about shotgun magazine capacity, unless it is a semi-automatic and then it is restricted to 5 in the magazine like an AR or other semi.
Rules limiting to 2+1 are in the Federal Migratory and Upland Game Hunting Regulations (or adopted into all of the provincial ones, either way the same), as I believe, and thus where the limitation comes into play. This is why if you shoot deer or other non-migratory animals you can have whatever fits in a non-semi-automatic firearm.
Ontario may have this 2+1 ruling in it Provincial regulations, however, so you need to check that. And I would check it too: there are a lot of people who think anything more than 3 rounds in a shotgun is completely illegal from a Federal stand point or law, and this is not true. I know when using a pump shotgun for back packing in Alberta, not for any hunting, I have had COs tell me it was perfectly legal as they seen it to have 8 rounds in it.
There is nothing in the Federal Firearm rules about shotgun magazine capacity, unless it is a semi-automatic and then it is restricted to 5 in the magazine like an AR or other semi.
Rules limiting to 2+1 are in the Federal Migratory and Upland Game Hunting Regulations (or adopted into all of the provincial ones, either way the same), as I believe, and thus where the limitation comes into play. This is why if you shoot deer or other non-migratory animals you can have whatever fits in a non-semi-automatic firearm.
Ontario may have this 2+1 ruling in it Provincial regulations, however, so you need to check that. And I would check it too: there are a lot of people who think anything more than 3 rounds in a shotgun is completely illegal from a Federal stand point or law, and this is not true. I know when using a pump shotgun for back packing in Alberta, not for any hunting, I have had COs tell me it was perfectly legal as they seen it to have 8 rounds in it.
Don't get caught with them in the gun. However ghost loading is an option in the Grey area
I've had COs ask how many bullets I had in a sxs 10ga. They often aren't the brightest skittle in the package




























