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June 28th, 2011, 14:34 | #1 |
Banned
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Let me get things clear here
Alright, I have read the FAQ and I want to make things clear here, so correct me if I'm wrong. I cannot play in any airsoft games nor can I own an airsoft rifle unless I'm 18. I cannot brandish my gun outside as I want and just show it to anyone as I am going to be arrested and will pay fines or other for it. Going outside with an airsoft gun which has a red tip will not change anything to the eyes of a law officer, as there is no law about airsoft weapons who must have a red tip in Canada. If the police sees me with an airsoft rifle outside, they will assume it is a real firearm, and I will assume the consequences. And at last, shooting outside with my friend(s) at targets or at each other (with eye and face protection of course) in the backyard or at any other place can bring me some trouble with the police. If anything I said is wrong or not that right, please correct, as I want to clearly know what I can and cannot do with an airsoft rifle.
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June 28th, 2011, 14:43 | #2 | |
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Also, if you are interested in still pursuing airsoft under 18, I would go about contacting local hosts of games in the "event" section and ask them if you can participate(not as player at first) and help out. Earn your brownie points and I'm sure you will be on a field in no time. Your going to have to earn your way to play unlike everyone else, but like everyone else, be an ass/unsafe you will shown out the door you walked in. Hope that helps. Last edited by T_A_N_K; June 28th, 2011 at 14:57.. |
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June 28th, 2011, 14:44 | #3 |
pretty much hit the nail on the head with everything there
there are a few organisations across the country that are geared towards having 14-17r olds play supervised by adults, but they are few and far between bide your time, ask lots of questions, read lots, watch lots of videos, a couple of years goes by pretty fast, and the fact that you actually took the time to read the FAQs goes a long way before you know it, you will be 18, and you can head into the field with everyone else and put all your research and anticipation to use
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June 28th, 2011, 14:52 | #4 |
Banned
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Thank you for your post, this is actually what I was searching for. When I said outside, I meant a public place like the main street infront of my house. What do you mean by Municipalities? If you're talking about parcs or other, then yes, I assume it is normal we cannot shoot in those areas with a potato gun or other. I was talking again of the mainstreet infront of my house or any other place (not parcs with discharge laws, unless you meant something else by Municipalities) where I can be seen by other people that I have an airsoft gun and I am using it.
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June 28th, 2011, 14:59 | #5 | |
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Best rule of thumb, do not take it/show it anywhere that the public has access to. Not everyone has access to your house/yard. Everyone has access to a park. Im putting the bottom in bold because you seem intent that it is OK to shoot in your backyard, depending on where you live it may be, but highly unlikely. Your best bet if you want to "shoot" is to set up targets in your basement (if its big enough, and your parents let you). Just remember, two eyes are better than one so wear protection. Also unless your friend have permission from their parents, don't let them shoot your gun. If your dumbass friends run outside with your gun and gets arrested, your going to get into trouble as well, not as much, but you are responsible for him having it in the first place, get it? and for gods sake, don't shoot each other. To put it simple, go to your backyard, walk 200 meters in any direction. If someone else lives/owns property within this boundary, don't shoot there. Last edited by T_A_N_K; June 28th, 2011 at 15:13.. |
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June 28th, 2011, 15:00 | #6 | |
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June 28th, 2011, 15:08 | #7 | |||
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Waterloo, kitchener, guelph, mississauga, north east toronto
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June 28th, 2011, 15:13 | #8 | |
Banned
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Last edited by sgtskywalker; June 28th, 2011 at 15:15.. |
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June 28th, 2011, 15:17 | #9 |
By parent/adult supervision, it should be someone that actually cares about your well being and that you know. Not just some random player.
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June 28th, 2011, 15:28 | #10 | |
aka coachster
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Getting, having, providing a PAL still doesn't mean a whole lot! It could help depending on the host but not with all. |
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June 28th, 2011, 15:28 | #11 | |
Banned
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June 28th, 2011, 15:31 | #12 |
Banned
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Well my father was actually talking about me and him going to games together, so I guess it goes to the host now, and I will have to ask him personally and seek answers from him.
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June 28th, 2011, 16:03 | #13 |
I am not sure what the situation is like in Montreal but I heard somewhere that they only do 18+ events.
If you don't mind the drive, a few fields in Ottawa allow 16+ on most skirmish days if you ask nicely. |
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June 28th, 2011, 16:17 | #14 | |
aka coachster
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the problem in the past is that I've seen some parents literally drop their kids off, sign the waiver and go shopping for a few hours, treating airsoft as a childcare/babysitting service. seeing as you say your father is already involved, treat it as father son bonding time. (obviously as long as the field owner and host agree to it) but you seem to be on the right track. |
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June 28th, 2011, 16:29 | #15 | |
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They have 1 or two feilds that they play at, the few adult supervisors play with the youngsters, usually using their backup gear so its not shooting as hot, and they have planned scenarios and such. Not really run and gun, they more teach the kids tactics and chain of command and so on. Think of it almost like a training camp for future airsofters.
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