Sep-16-2016 07:08 PM
Sep-25-2016 07:22 AM
Sep-20-2016 02:46 PM
rv2go wrote:
Long guns(legal barrels lengths) , rifles and shotguns can be registered and taken to Alaska. Pistols are forbidden.
Or...Leave them at a gun shop to be cleaned.
Sep-20-2016 10:12 AM
TxGearhead wrote:
Kinda what I'm thinking...depending on what a gun store wants to charge to "clean".
Gonna be a logistical issue..I want to hit Glacier NP on the way up or back, then through Bellingham WA and the coast in opposite direction.
Then again, I should see what hurdles Canada puts me through to bring a Remington 870 20GA Youth model.
Sep-19-2016 05:29 AM
Sep-18-2016 02:51 PM
Sep-18-2016 01:51 PM
Sep-18-2016 01:25 PM
Sep-18-2016 12:51 PM
Sep-18-2016 08:13 AM
TxGearhead wrote:
Kinda what I'm thinking...depending on what a gun store wants to charge to "clean".
Gonna be a logistical issue..I want to hit Glacier NP on the way up or back, then through Bellingham WA and the coast in opposite direction.
Then again, I should see what hurdles Canada puts me through to bring a Remington 870 20GA Youth model.
Sep-18-2016 06:10 AM
Sep-17-2016 06:52 PM
Sep-17-2016 11:32 AM
Most firearms are restricted and / or prohibited from entering Canada and/or require licensing and registration. The Canada Border Services Agency is responsible for deciding whether to let a non-resident bring a firearm into Canada. As a general rule, non-residents may bring a non-restricted rifle or shotgun into Canada for approved purposes such as hunting, target shooting, wilderness protection or in-transit movement by a reasonably direct route to another point outside Canada. Restricted firearms (mainly handguns and some semi-automatic long guns) can not generally be imported into Canada.
Sep-17-2016 10:21 AM
Sep-17-2016 08:53 AM