Forums
New posts
Search forums
What's new
Articles
Latest reviews
Author list
Classifieds
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles and first posts only
Search titles only
By:
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Forums
Hunting
Deer Hunting
First trip to Saskatchewan, looking for advice
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="John Klingenberg" data-source="post: 1703011" data-attributes="member: 107749"><p>One last thing about border crossing. If you're driving, clean out your truck top to bottom looking for anything that resembles a cartridge. Under your seats and cracks and crevices. They can be rough about loose ammo that wasnt declared. Even 22 rimfire cases will get slant eye looks. If you're flying make sure if you're using a bag you take to the range as a carry on that its washed well. I set off one of those auto sniffer stations with a bag I regularly used at the bench rest at home. When they started digging there was a loaded 22 round jammed down into a seam at the bottom. After several hours of questions, stern looks and invasive searching I was denied entry and sent home. I was glad to go too. I wanted to go all Jason Bourne on them but decided against that plan since the U.S. has a pretty easy extradition treaty with Oh Canada. Figgered I'd better save my Ninjy skills for someone that needed ninjying. Learn to speak Canadian by clipping your vowels short. Learn that "ya" has many uses. Ya can be yes, or it can mean you. I.E. Ya, da deer've bean aboot but ive not seeeen any shootin books. Translates to ...yes, the deer have been around but i didnt see any shooter bucks. Or...did ya havta take de udder flight cuz the wetter was bat? Trans: did you have to take the other flight because the weather was bad? Or...did ya dey goo bat from dat stan der. Trans: did your day go bad from that stand over there. They say Canada like Con a daah.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="John Klingenberg, post: 1703011, member: 107749"] One last thing about border crossing. If you're driving, clean out your truck top to bottom looking for anything that resembles a cartridge. Under your seats and cracks and crevices. They can be rough about loose ammo that wasnt declared. Even 22 rimfire cases will get slant eye looks. If you're flying make sure if you're using a bag you take to the range as a carry on that its washed well. I set off one of those auto sniffer stations with a bag I regularly used at the bench rest at home. When they started digging there was a loaded 22 round jammed down into a seam at the bottom. After several hours of questions, stern looks and invasive searching I was denied entry and sent home. I was glad to go too. I wanted to go all Jason Bourne on them but decided against that plan since the U.S. has a pretty easy extradition treaty with Oh Canada. Figgered I'd better save my Ninjy skills for someone that needed ninjying. Learn to speak Canadian by clipping your vowels short. Learn that "ya" has many uses. Ya can be yes, or it can mean you. I.E. Ya, da deer've bean aboot but ive not seeeen any shootin books. Translates to ...yes, the deer have been around but i didnt see any shooter bucks. Or...did ya havta take de udder flight cuz the wetter was bat? Trans: did you have to take the other flight because the weather was bad? Or...did ya dey goo bat from dat stan der. Trans: did your day go bad from that stand over there. They say Canada like Con a daah. [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
Forums
Hunting
Deer Hunting
First trip to Saskatchewan, looking for advice
Top