Can i shoot Crows PLEASE

black sunshine

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im just curious to know if i have a small game licence and so on an so forth ,
can i go out and blast the hell out of as many crows as i can ,
just for the sake of, OH !!! say having fun ,target practice ,sharpening my skills,or say making the world a place with fewer cases of west nile or any other reason you can think of including pest-control.

or do i actually have to do something with it like keep it .
and if i can just blast the dirty little bastards how many can i grease a day .
because i alwase see the loud mouth sonofa#####es when im out hunting small game, and id reilly like to just blast the f@#$ers ,but im alwase worried that im gunna get in #### for it.
 
If shooting crows this time of year be careful. Hen Ravens are on nests right now. Anyone who lives in the north knows that a raven has some class and is in no way to be associated with a common crow!

cheers Darryl
 
yes i know i can shoot them and it also say in the regs that i can shoot them .
but what i want to know is how many can i shoot and do i have to keep them ,or can i shoot them, kill them, just for thrills or for sport or pest control and not even bother trying to find them (let them fall were they may).
much like the prarie dogs in the west.
 
black sunshine said:
or do i actually have to do something with it like keep it .and if i can just blast the dirty little bastards how many can i grease a day .
because i alwase see the loud mouth sonofa#####es when im out hunting small game, and id reilly like to just blast the f@#$ers ,but im alwase worried that im gunna get in s**t for it.
Wow, someones got a real hate on for crows! Did a crow do "something" to you when you were young? :p :D
 
Crows or Bears???

I think they'd prefer it if a bunch of Black Bears were live-trapped and released right at Queens Park. You could always throw in a bunch of crows for fun.

Camo-up well for crow shooting and don't let 'em see your gun - 'cause they'll split - PDQ. Try blasting them with a .410 - it's awesome to call them in and fold them up with this little scatter-gun. Decoys work well too (both crow and owl). Once you get one on the ground they will really scream at the dead one and that's your oportunity to shoot more. Once they get wise to the scene they'll take off and tell their buddies. Move and shoot more.....

No season - no limits - have fun!!!!! :sniper:
 
undertaker said:
open all year around in Ontario
NO THEY ARE NOT!

Page 79 of your 2006-2007 Regs "Residents license tag to hunt small game"

"A small game license aslo permits you to hunt American crow, brown-headed cowbird....or starlings. This license is not valid in northern Ontario and part of central Ontario from June 16 to to August 31. (see Map 2 pages 8 and 9 fro more details)"

I asked a couple of CO's last summer why the season is closed for a few months, they didn't know.
 
ok thaxs a bunch guys .
i dont think ill go on a crow massacre mission but its nice to know that i can blast one or two or three with out getting my guns taken away and a fine .
i have been also doing a little bit of reserch on the net about the differences of crows and ravens on (enature.com) and other sites just to be sure of my target .
my original question kinda makes me sound like a blood thirsty crow killin maniac and sometimes i feel like id like to be one .
I just dont want to start shooting and then be expected to keep the damb thing or eat it or somthing .
or get in #### for shooting over the limit.
in my copy of the ontario hunting regulations all it says is that i can hunt them with a small game licence but there are know particulars about bag limit or anything else if im caught in posession of any. so i thought id ask you guys heer .
i have read a few pretty good and long threads on CGN about crow hunting,just didnt know the legality of it .
thanx again for the replys
 
There's an easy way to tell a crow from a raven, in flight. Look at the outstretched wing-tip feathers that kinda look like fingers at the end of the wing. They are called "pinion feathers". You will note that crows, while often smaller in size, have 5 pinion feathers, while ravens have only 4.

So the fact is that the difference between crows and ravens is just a matter of a pinion!!:D
 
It might not be so "easy" to tell Crows & Ravens apart these days! Check out this new study!

Genetics reveal 15 new N.American bird species

By Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent
Mon Feb 19, 5:41 AM ET



Genetic tests of North American birds show what may be 15 new species including ravens and owls -- look alikes that do not interbreed and have wrongly had the same name for centuries, scientists said on Sunday.

If the findings from a study of birds' DNA genetic "barcodes" in the United States and Canada hold true around the world, there might be more than 1,000 new species of birds on top of 10,000 identified so far, they said.
A parallel study of South American bats in Guyana also showed six new species among 87 surveyed, hinting that human studies of the defining characteristics of species may have been too superficial to tell almost identical types apart.

"This is the leading tip of a process that will see the genetic registration of life on the planet," said Paul Hebert of the Biodiversity Institute of Ontario, a co-author of the report in the British Journal Molecular Ecology Notes.

"You can't protect biodiversity if you can't recognize it."

The scientists found 15 potential new species among 643 types of bird studied from the Arctic to Florida. The sample covers almost all 690 known breeding species in North America.

"North American birds are among the best studied in the world," said co-author Mark Stoeckle of the Rockefeller University in New York. "Even in a group where people have been looking very carefully there are genetically different forms that appear to be new species."

CURVE BILLED THRASHER

Look alike species were of the Northern Fulmar, Solitary Sandpiper, Western Screech Owl, Warbling Vireo, Mexican Jay, Western Scrub-Jay, Common Raven, Mountain Chickadee, Bushtit, Winter Wren, Marsh Wren, Bewick's Wren, Hermit Thrush, Curve Billed Thrasher and Eastern Meadowlark.

"It would be a reasonable guess that there are likely to be at least 1,000 genetically distinct forms of birds (worldwide) that will be recognised as new species," Stoeckle said.

The genetic tests, for instance of a feather, give a readout of a "barcode" for each creature similar to the black and white parallel lines on packages at supermarkets.

They said DNA diverged by at least 2.5 percent -- enough, they said, to define a species despite almost identical shape, plumage and song. A one percent difference typically indicated a million years without interbreeding, they said.

The study also found 14 pairs of birds with separate identities that were almost genetic "twins," two trios of birds were DNA triplets and eight gull species were almost identical.

"Some of these on close inspection may really be better considered as a single species," said Stoeckle. "Others are probably very young species at the borderline."

The Snow Goose and Ross's Goose, for instance, shared 99.8 percent of DNA and the black-billed magpie and the yellow-billed magpie 99.6 percent. Gulls such as the Glaucous and Iceland Gulls were 99.8 percent the same.

The scientists said there was no clear scientific definition of a species -- inability to interbreed was often favored.

"But that's difficult -- we're not watching bats mate in caves, we're not often watching small life forms," Hebert said.

The scientists are hoping to raise $100 million to compile a barcode of life -- 10 million DNA records of 500,000 animal species by 2014.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070219/sc_nm/environment_species_dc&printer=1;_ylt=Av.2yda6jaMQvS_y_ZTVtL0iANEA
 
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