forget it, i'm out.Another fact is that you have to do an annual test to be able to hunt big game, this is just to document a minimum skill level. 5 shots @100 meters prone unsupported all 5 must be in the vitals
just kidding.
forget it, i'm out.Another fact is that you have to do an annual test to be able to hunt big game, this is just to document a minimum skill level. 5 shots @100 meters prone unsupported all 5 must be in the vitals
Sure canHey man im looking into coming to do some DIY stuff in Norway because my dad is from there would you able to answer some question on laws?
Would there be any way of an international coming over there and doing a DIY type hunt?Sure can
Yes there is, what would you like to hunt?Would there be any way of an international coming over there and doing a DIY type hunt?
Well i heard you could hunt muskox, so im interested in muskox, reindeer and moose. Like do you need to apply to hunt? what is the system like.Yes there is, what would you like to hunt?
a
Being saami i rock saami knives, although mora and helle is well known.
i also use fallkniven wm1 in 3 g steel.
i tried to join the interchangable blade crowd, but i was not convinced.
Hunting is my primary source of meat, by Choice not necessity, yes i live in a rural part of arctic NorwayVery interesting thread. Thanks for sharing. So do you live in a rural area out there? Im guessing since you dont like city politics, you dont live in the city. Do you hunt to simply supplement your food supply throughout the year, or as a primary source?
Alesund is about 1000kilometres south of me, compared to us they have mild but wet winters, but to compensate they do have red stag in the southwestern parts . whre i live, we now have daylight about two and a half hours a day, then again by april it wil be daylight around the clock. i sure will let you know if i come to north America, i envy your divercity of species, and i often dream about hunting in north America, here up north we have much less species.Welcome to the slide Viking.
I was fortunate to have spent 10 weeks working near Alesund, Norway in 2007, from January until March. The locals that we worked with told us that winter was the harshest in 10 years. When I arrived there it got daylight at 9:30 am and was dark by 3:30 pm. We worked through a lot of rain, sleet and snow. It was quite the cultural experience and I thoroughly enjoyed it. I met some great people and made some lifelong friends, some of whom I continued to work with over the next 10 years.
Of all the guys that made the trip with us, I seemed to be the one who felt the most at home there...
After I returned home to the states, a relative told me that he had participated in some dna research that traced us back to having begun in Norway. Go figure.
The first thing I researched when I accepted the job assignment was hunting opportunities, but I failed to find anything that seemed to be doable, especially within my time frame.
Definitely let us know if you get to our side of the world. I am sure that some of us will be able to put you onto something interesting.
Jeff