Don’t think your right
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A muzzle-loading gun is a gun that is loaded through the muzzle. A percussion muzzle-loading gun is considered to be loaded if there is a charge of powder and a projectile in the barrel and a percussion cap on the nipple. A flint-lock muzzle-loading gun is considered to be loaded if there is a charge of powder and a projectile in the barrel and the vent is unplugged. An electronic ignition muzzle-loading gun is considered to be loaded if there is a projectile in the barrel and a battery connected to the primer or charge. Under federal regulations pertaining to storage and transport of firearms, a muzzle-loading gun is not unloaded unless any propellant, projectile or cartridge has been removed from the breech or firing chamber.
There is an exemption on transport restrictions when traveling between hunting sites.
Straight from the Regulations on the WEB.Fish and Wildlife act 1997.
https://www.ontario.ca/document/onta...unting%20sites.
UNLESS i interpret this on a wrong way...........I actually HOPE i am wrong:o
Not arguing with anyone though.............
It's a rule that hasn't been tested in court, which will see the foolishness of allowing a ML in a moving truck with only the primer removed to make it safe....but will not accept an ML is 'safe' when you remove the primer to store it overnight during a legal hunt season.
The rules use to have an out...it said " an ML was loaded when it had a propellant, projectile or cartridge AND a primer" . Meaning removing the primer made it safe (unloaded) ...ergo why there is the exception to being able to remove the primary to make it safe for purposes of transportation.
A good lawyer will fix that someday when a test case goes to trial. In the meantime I'll use 'common sense' and do what I have always done. :)