MG5150 wrote:Womble's given pretty good advice but just to calrify that you can't legally sight-in or do target shooting on public land (e.g. State Forest or Crown land) in Victoria. Under the Firearms Act 1996, target shooting is only permitted at:
Approved shooting ranges (Section 6A & Schedule 3), or
Private property where you're authorised to shoot (Schedule 3 & 4).
There is a grey area where if you knock your rifle while hunting you can check your zero as part of hunting, but to set up a target and spend the afternoon going through the whole process might get you in hot water if caught. Best to check with DEECA or your local police station if you're unsure.
Target shooting on Crown land is not permitted unless part of a lawful hunting activity and you hold the correct genuine reason endorsement (e.g. hunting or pest control).
Even then, Section 6A(1)(b) restricts sport/target shooting to approved clubs and ranges. Public land is only available for hunting pest or game species in designated areas, and paper targets don’t qualify as hunting.
TL;DR: Sighting in = go to a range or private property. Crown land is strictly for actual hunting, not general rifle use.
This is very hard to understand, what version of which Act are you using? In the most recent Vic Firearms Act, v101, S 6A speaks only of offences to use unregistered firearms, Sch 3 speaks only of exemptions to hold licence, Sch 4 speaks only of Storage.
It is absolutely legal to sight in a rifle on Crown Land ie State Forest (NOT State Parks) in fact the Game Management Authority mentions it in some detail on their website about how to do exactly that.
Target shooting on public land is prohibeted (See Firearms Act 1996 v101 Sch 2 Item 1 para 5A) but sighting in is not, at all.