Rifle Safety: deer stalking certificate level 1

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  • Опубликовано: 24 май 2021
  • This video is to show what might be expected of a candidate who is taking the Deer Stalking Certificate Level 1 during the safety assessment.
    It is one of three videos made by the NGO alongside Browning, covering different practical aspects of the deer stalking certificate level 1 safety assessment.
    For more information on the course please visit our website:
    www.nationalgamekeepers.org.u...
    Remember if you liked this video please like, subscribe & consider becoming a member of our organisation to help save the countryside you love.
    Now is the time to become an NGO member. Just £45 per year with £10m of third party liability insurance and more great benefits

Комментарии • 13

  • @BSA-AirRifle-Plinking
    @BSA-AirRifle-Plinking 10 месяцев назад +1

    Very useful video, lots of top tier advice 👍👍

  • @tikkathreebarrels
    @tikkathreebarrels 2 года назад +3

    Very thorough indeed. One possible future addition (isn't there always something else?): having shot the deer and arrived at the body on the ground make the rifle safe just as if climbing a fence or indeed crossing an open ditch.

  • @adl2005
    @adl2005 3 года назад +5

    i always put the bolt in last but that's just me.

  • @MajorT0m
    @MajorT0m 3 года назад +3

    Most interesting, thanks for the upload. I love a bit of venison - just finished cooking a rabbit and mutton stew. Bring on the vegan revolution I say - lots more game for the likes of me!

  • @danp6755
    @danp6755 3 года назад +2

    Thanks for this, will prove very useful

  • @ranchodeluxe1
    @ranchodeluxe1 Год назад

    My gun hangs in the rear window rack. If you want it, all you have to do is deal with a really nasty dog.

  • @herby9998
    @herby9998 2 года назад

    6:47

  • @ranchodeluxe1
    @ranchodeluxe1 Год назад

    Sissy sticks, scopes and " moderators " all ad up to a very clumsy piece of kit. Pre 64 Model 70, open sights, canvas M1 sling, that's a hunting kit. With all the great craftsman in the UK, why live with a plastic rifle?

    • @nationalgamekeepersorganis9866
      @nationalgamekeepersorganis9866  Год назад +4

      We favour accuracy, a humane kill and meat production over many of our international cousins

    • @ranchodeluxe1
      @ranchodeluxe1 Год назад

      @@nationalgamekeepersorganis9866 And what about your kit leads you to believe that it outperforms a classic American rifle? Your rifles are vastly overscoped, causing poor field of vision and poorly balanced, The sissy sticks, the big can all add up to a clumsy rifle. If you came here with that kit, I'd hike you into the ground at 7500 feet elevation. By the time you drag all that uneccessary apparatus up the mountain youd be too fagged to shoot. You dont even use a proper sling that can be used as a stabilizer and apparently don't even teach it.I'm a 5th generation ranch kid and Western hunter. I strongly
      suspect that my freezer is loaded with a lot more lean protein than yours. None of it is shot up. You guys who think open sight rifles are " inaccurate" are hilarious. My scoped " long range" .270 Win rifle has a 1.5-4 Leupold. I shoot out to 375 yards with no holdover, done deal. I have the same respect for my Wild game as you. I think you are talking about the tactical crew who think an AR 15 is a deer rifle. That ain't this guy.

    • @ranchodeluxe1
      @ranchodeluxe1 Год назад +1

      @@nationalgamekeepersorganis9866 I greatly respect your willingness to pursue hunting with all the regulations clearly designed to dissuade folks from it. The anti hunters and climate loonies here have taken over our game management. They've fought delisting the grizzly, introduced non-native wolves into our environment and severely restricted mountain lion hunting. This works to destroy our game populations and it drives remaining game out of the mountains and onto private ranches and into cities. They took over 300 whitetails and mulies from the town 7 miles away, while denying me a license to pursue one on public land. Now, they have given those landowners depredation tags that they sell for big money.

    • @Jay-Niner
      @Jay-Niner 3 месяца назад +1

      Why stop there? Clearly “real men” hunt with a home-made bow and arrows or even better, just a pointy stick. And if you can’t catch a deer with your bare hands, you’re clearly not fit enough to be a “real hunter”. Just stay home and eat your Big Mac instead.