Thanks Galamb. Have not done my hunting course yet, but we bought some land and there is a lot of turkey and deer there. Do you know if they are at least thinking about turkey hunting with air rifles in Canada?
Take care and thanks one more time for your help.
It's not "legal".
You must use a shotgun of "not less than" 20 gauge and "not greater than" 10 gauge and must use #4, 5 or 6 shot.
Why would anyone in their right mind want to risk crippling an outstanding game bird like a turkey with an air rifle. The advantage of a rifle is for distance. An air rifle doesn't fill the bill.
However, they have remained stuck on the firearms allowed.
Why would anyone in their right mind want to risk crippling an outstanding game bird like a turkey with an air rifle. The advantage of a rifle is for distance. An air rifle doesn't fill the bill.
I'm a seasoned turkey hunter and a long time small game/varmint/predator airgunner... I can assure you airguns are more than capable of cleanly harvesting turkeys.... even my .20 Sheridan rifles firing a 16 grain pellet at 650 fps can do more damage than most would believe... I have cleanly harvested dozens of racooms and foxes with them... the pellets are usually complete pass throughs on head shots... they would easily blow right through a turkeys head... and these multi-pump pneumatic rifles are in the low end of the power range for what we shoot... our PCP's have three and four times that energy and are capable of dime-sized groups at 50 yards... I would love to have the legal opportunity to take an air rifle gobbler.
Although 308 is perfectly adequate for deer, be sure to check what is legal for deer hunting in your WMU. Mine is shotgun, black powder and archery only, you can't hunt with centerfire rifles until at least Owen Sound.
Back on subject, single shot 12 gauge with screw in chokes or fixed full chokes gets you in the game for cheap. Last spring my buddy got his first jake with a $65 12 gauge Cooey, just goes to show that you don't have to spend thousands to be successful.
Hi mr. My neighbor sold me his old Stevens shotguns SxS 12 gauge in 2 3/4". Is a very solid shotgun, no rust or cracks. Do you know if a shotgun like that, made in the fifties is safe to shot modern loads?
Stevens 12 gauge SxS model 5100, belive was made in 1956.




























