I completely agree with you, however the irony of the situation is when new hunters come out and ask for help/mentorship -- none seem to jump up and say come with me, let me mentor you[emoji12]
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Not to give hunters a complete pass but from what I've seen the worst offenders are sport shooters not hunters. Piles of 7.62x39 steel casings, shot up propane bottles, TVs and large kitchen appliances, broken clay target shards and shotgun hulls strewn everywhere are more typical of sports shooters. A hunter might fire a box of rounds to sight in his rifle or pattern his shotgun. Sports shooters meanwhile burn through hundreds in a single session.
Once upon a time those signs were posted in a few places I hunt. They've since been shot to oblivion or removed completely with no sign of enforcement for the most part. It seems like they deterred the people who caused the problems originally, but now newcomers are back to the same old. I guess until there's complaints. There was a recent incident near zephyr where some people were blasting away at some old boats and trees, they were reported and a news article written.
https://www.thestar.com/local-uxbrid...-uxbridge.html
To be honest instead of downer posts let’s see some post we could be proud of showing the anti’s god know we all have them near us.
Not having a place to sight in, pattern or practice is a worsening problem for hunters particularly in Southern Ontario. Most gun clubs are full with waiting lists and are far less accommodating to walk-in shooters for liability and safety reasons.
At our club before hunting season we'd see non-members who would try and shoot skeet with a 3-1/2" magnum despite signs warning that ammunition larger than #7-1/2 shot in 2-3/4" shells was not permitted or argue about wearing eye protection.
Gone too are our annual pre-season rifle range sessions where members of the public could sight in their rifles for a modest fee. I RO'd some of those sessions and while the majority of people were great there was always one or two jerks who ignored or wanted to debate safety rules that are standard at pretty much every rifle range in Ontario.
As always it is the tiny minority of jerks whose behavior hurts the responsible majority.
I think you are correct. I'll also add that through speaking with a lot of hunters and shooters, many who started later in life without any real guidance (like myself), they just don't know how to find information or they don't care to.
A lot of guys base their knowledge of regulation and safety from hearsay. It's truly amazing what some consider "law".
Because there's people in all sections of the Ganaraska Forest,including loggers,at any given time from hikers to hunters to dirt bikers,any shooting that sounds like someone has targets set up gets reported immediately. Police can be there in minutes,especially,the ATV crew. It really is a good thing because nonsense within the forest has dropped off to a trickle,especially,with poaching. OMNRF officers and Police are there. Me and the Mrs. love going on night rides with our ATV's. It's not uncommon to run into Police patrols during late evening and into the night.