powder burner said:
Kombi,
Do you guys have an open season on Dingo's? What are the pests in your country that you are allowed to shoot anytime?
You need a permit to shoot dingos as they're a native animal, and to be blunt, they aren't as big a problem as people would have you believe.
Roos are also protected so you need tags or a permit to cull them.
But there are LOTS of feral animals which are open season.
We have rabbits, hares, foxes, feral cats, wild dogs & goats are fairly common in the more temperate zones.
If you think coyote are cunning fox are a real challenge.
You can add pigs to that if you're hunting in the outback as well as donkeys, wild horses and camels.
If you head north to the Northern Territory and North Queensland you can add scrub bulls(
feral cattle) and Asiatic water buffalo to the list.
In pockets down the east coast and ranges and in Tasmania there are also a number of species of deer including fallow, hog deer, red deer, chital and the big sambar deer.
In Victoria, the state for which Melbourne is the capital, there are seasons for some deer species but by and large if you pick your spot you could hunt any of these species year round.
There's also a huge game ranch at Water Valley in South Australia where wapiti and black buck antelope, in addition to the other deer species I've mentioned, are available for hunting and I believe the rates are very reasonable.
Trophy fees for some deer species and particularly for water buff are beginning to rear their ugly heads depending on where and who you hunt with but if you can get contacts, particularly for hunting deer on rural properties where they're a pest, you can avoid these and bag some seriously good heads.
As far as I'm aware Victoria is the only state that has a duck season these days unfortunately, but there are some goose hunting seasons on the Bass Straight islands between mainland Australia and Tasmania.
Water fowl hunting is largely outlawed in other states apart from special culling permits on rice plantations and other rural locations.
But, yes, there is a wide variation of game but, as I said before, you need to pick you spot and you also need access to the applicable location, which as you guys would well know, is always the trick.
Plus animals like sambar and water buff either require being reasonably involved in a local scene or paying a guide for the priviledge.
Possibly the best thing about hunting in Oz is that most of our varmint, small game hunting and roo shooting is done at night over a spotlight.
Try getting away with that in Canada!
