AusTac wrote:Sorry to thread hijack but it's made me remember some stuff, to anyone whos been actually stopped out bush whats to go?
And how do you actually prove that your just going for pests? I have that peice of " hunting for pests " paper but its about a year out of date..
tom604 wrote:innocent until proven guilty not the other way around
AusTac wrote:Sometimes i wonder these days...
AusTac wrote:And how do you actually prove that your just going for pests? I have that peice of " hunting for pests " paper but its about a year out of date..
bladeracer wrote:I wrote to DELWP asking them to clarify the constant fallacy about carrying less-than-deer-legal calibers when hunting pests in state forests that comes up in every discussion.
I asked:
"Could you please clarify something for me which has been a bone of contention for years now in almost any discussion about hunting state forests?
1. Are you allowed to hunt pest animals in state forest with a firearm not approved for deer hunting (ie anything under .243)?
2. Are you allowed to hunt the smaller species of deer in state forest with a firearm not approved for the larger deer species (ie .243)?"
"...there are no legal minimum rifle calibres for use on pest animals, however, the calibre must be sufficient to ensure a quick and humane death for the pest animal being hunted otherwise the hunter could be in breach of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act 1986. You are allowed to carry firearms in recognised deer habitat that are below legal deer hunting calibres if you are hunting pest animals during daylight and you have the relevant firearms licence/authority. You can not carry any firearm and spotlight in recognised deer habitat at night."
Please feel free to direct people to this if they continue to propagate the crap about "shooting pests with a .22 in deer habitat is illegal"
ThePlinkster wrote:bladeracer wrote:I wrote to DELWP asking them to clarify the constant fallacy about carrying less-than-deer-legal calibers when hunting pests in state forests that comes up in every discussion.
I asked:
"Could you please clarify something for me which has been a bone of contention for years now in almost any discussion about hunting state forests?
1. Are you allowed to hunt pest animals in state forest with a firearm not approved for deer hunting (ie anything under .243)?
2. Are you allowed to hunt the smaller species of deer in state forest with a firearm not approved for the larger deer species (ie .243)?"
"...there are no legal minimum rifle calibres for use on pest animals, however, the calibre must be sufficient to ensure a quick and humane death for the pest animal being hunted otherwise the hunter could be in breach of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act 1986. You are allowed to carry firearms in recognised deer habitat that are below legal deer hunting calibres if you are hunting pest animals during daylight and you have the relevant firearms licence/authority. You can not carry any firearm and spotlight in recognised deer habitat at night."
Please feel free to direct people to this if they continue to propagate the crap about "shooting pests with a .22 in deer habitat is illegal"
Thanks for clarifying that BladeRacer.....
I went to a firearm store on the week end.....
And the sales rep there told me that I would lose my firearms license and that my rifles would be seized if I got caught walking in a State Forest with a 22LR if it's a deer habitat there....................
Oldbloke wrote:ThePlinkster wrote:bladeracer wrote:I wrote to DELWP asking them to clarify the constant fallacy about carrying less-than-deer-legal calibers when hunting pests in state forests that comes up in every discussion.
I asked:
"Could you please clarify something for me which has been a bone of contention for years now in almost any discussion about hunting state forests?
1. Are you allowed to hunt pest animals in state forest with a firearm not approved for deer hunting (ie anything under .243)?
2. Are you allowed to hunt the smaller species of deer in state forest with a firearm not approved for the larger deer species (ie .243)?"
"...there are no legal minimum rifle calibres for use on pest animals, however, the calibre must be sufficient to ensure a quick and humane death for the pest animal being hunted otherwise the hunter could be in breach of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act 1986. You are allowed to carry firearms in recognised deer habitat that are below legal deer hunting calibres if you are hunting pest animals during daylight and you have the relevant firearms licence/authority. You can not carry any firearm and spotlight in recognised deer habitat at night."
Please feel free to direct people to this if they continue to propagate the crap about "shooting pests with a .22 in deer habitat is illegal"
Thanks for clarifying that BladeRacer.....
I went to a firearm store on the week end.....
And the sales rep there told me that I would lose my firearms license and that my rifles would be seized if I got caught walking in a State Forest with a 22LR if it's a deer habitat there....................
Yep, its fine. I chase foxes in SF all the time.Just not at night with a spotlight. Even some torches are considered spotlights.
Majority of SF in Vic is now considered "deer habitat".
ThePlinkster wrote:I wonder where this rumour/myth originated from OldBloke
Where people thought that it was illegal to carry a 22LR into a state forest that's considered a deer habitat
womble wrote:https://www.gma.vic.gov.au/hunting/pest-animals
That needs to renewed annually and VIC relevant only. NSW is R licence.
As for caliber depends where you’re going and the terrain. For me anyway. Most places i go i won’t use a high powered rifle.
I don’t like to make much noise if i can help it.
Also of note, feral cats and deer in vic still not listed as pest animals. And yes i know they are. But “legally” that’s a no. Go figure.
Also also of note. Supressors are illegal in vic. Don’t ask. No-one knows why
New to hunting in Victoria ? Laws seem a bit weird here ?
You’d be correct in that assertion they are weird because they were written by weirdos.
Grandadbushy wrote:You blokes are lucky down there we're not even allowed to carry a gun in a SF up here they're only used for breeding ferals, as was said rules by weirdos
womble wrote:It’s not a permit or a licence and it’s not mandatory. It costs about 10 bucks a year.
It’s just registration to hunt pest animals on crown land in vic.
So it’s documentation you can provide if queried why you carry a small caliber rifle in “deer habitat”
Quotations because apparently nobody updates the deer themselves where their habitat is. Because from what I’ve seen they go wherever the f*** they want.
And until some weirdo vegan legislator passes some laws that deer must abide by, technically they can.
womble wrote:Correct, you don’t need it. I still have it and carry it on me.
One day, the button man might ask me a lot of questions. He wants to know if I’m supposed to be there or not.
I don’t want him concluding that I’m not.
NTSOG wrote:womble: "It’s not a permit or a licence and it’s not mandatory. It costs about 10 bucks a year.
It’s just registration to hunt pest animals on crown land in vic.
So it’s documentation you can provide if queried why you carry a small caliber rifle in “deer habitat”"
I rang the DEWLP late last year about obtaining such a permit from them after my licence was renewed. [My farm is large enough that I am registered on the basis of my property being suitable for shooting.] I was told that, as I already had a current licence, I did not need a $10.00 permit from DEWLP as the permit from DEWLP was instituted so that shooters who had no where else to shoot could demonstrate to the Registry that they would have a place to hunt and thus obtain a licence. Further, being a registered shooter I could shoot pests in state forests on the basis of my shooting licence issued by the Registry.
As for 'recognised deer habitat' - my area south of Ballarat is not a recognised deer habitat last I asked DEWLP, though there are mobs of red and sambar all around.
Jim