"...In Ontario it was legal till 1979..." Nope. Late 60's, if ever. Certainly not 1979.
The OFAH has done little or nothing for hunter's rights. No opposition to the Outdoors Card tax or ending the Spring Bear hunt.
Absolutely wrong . I did it along with many others up to and including 1978 . My last game animal was a small moose 100 miles north of Sudbury with a Ruger Blackhawk in .41 mag using hard cast , gas checked bullets . Go to your local library and pull out the Ontario Fish and Game Regs from 1978 and 1979 . In '79 that act was opened to include the line , 'the hunting with handguns , pistols and revolvers is prohibited in Ontario '. From the dawn of time up to and including 1978 it was legal .
In 1979 not only was the Fish and Game Regs changed but the wording on our ATT's also changed . Prior to 1979 our ATT's simply stated , 'for the purpose of target shooting' , but didn't specify where so we target shot at game animals because it was legal . In 1979 a new line was added to our ATT's , for the purpose of target shooting , 'at an approved range'.
The Feds with bill C-51 jumped in bed with the province and that ended handgun hunting .
In 1984/85 my club collected 17,000 hand written letters asking that handgun hunting be re-instated and i as a rep along with the OHA/CSSA met several times with the Solicitor General , Attourney General and Minister of Natural Resources in Ontario . We had a verbal agreement that the Fish and Game Act would be re-opened and the prohibition on handgun hunting would be recinded .
"Someone" heard about it and demanded a meeting with the minister of Natural Resources and the Minister decided to hold a stakeholders meeting for input . Problem was that the Minister wouldn't allow us to testify at the stakeholders meeting , i couldn't be there the OHA/CSSA couldn't be there nor could any rep from any gun club .
The only stakeholder allowed to meet with the Minister was the OFAH and they wanted no confusion between thier members who hunt with shotguns and bolt action rifles and hanguns which were designed for the criminal element . The OFAH had 75,000 members and killed it on the spot because only criminals use handguns .
I've continued to hunt with hanguns all over the USA and it's just a matter of selecting the right caliber and bullet for the job . Any 4 to 6 inched barrelled revolver in .357 mag will quickly dispatch a whitetail out to 50 yards and with a hard cast gas checked bullet , very little problem going farther . Just about any factory ammo for a .44 mag is good for deer to 100 yards . My favorite is my Ruger Super Blackhawk in .45LC using a 300 grain hard cast over 23 grains of H110 and ignited by a CCI 350 . That bullet will shoot through both shoulders of a moose or black bear or an elk at 100 yards . The energy level is just under stiffly loaded factory 45-70 ammo , except that i use a harder bullet that will penetrate and break bones all the way through . A .44 mag with a big bullet can be loaded to just about the energy of a 30-30 Winchester and millions of deer have been taken with that caliber . We can go up the scale to the .454's , .460's and .500's and there is nothing in North America that you can't take with those .
The next step up are the handguns chambered in rifle calibers . I have a TC Super 14 in .223 and a second barrel chambered in .308 . There is no problem finding the right caliber for the right job . My .45LC load with a Beartooth hard cast , gas checked bullet will shoot right through the shoulders of a 300 pound hog and through the chest of a second 150 pound hog standing beside it at 75 yards , killing them both dead .
We didn't lose the option of handgun hunting in Ontario over anything like proficiency . We lost it because the OFAH killed it as they knew that all handgunners , upon returning from a hunt would rob a corner store or murder someone which would cast the OFAH members long guns in a bad light .
Anyone who doesn't believe it is free to check the minutes of the meetings of the OHA/CSSA when Don Hinkley was President and go to the library and pull out the Ontario Fish and Game Regs from 1978 and 1979 . There were clubs all over northern and northwestern Ontario that shot in gravel pits and farmers fields because there were no approved ranges up here so our ATT's , as mentioned earlier were for the purpose of target shooting but they didn't say where . In 1979 we had to scramble to build approved ranges .