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blarg

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Posts posted by blarg

  1. you should try it and if you get in trouble just tell the officer you performed your due diligence and learned all you need to know about gun laws by asking questions of speculators on a fishing website. i'm sure they will let you off. :sarcasm:

     

    if you really want to know call the CFO and ask there is a 1-800 #.

     

    hey joey is there a website i can order that bike from?

     

     

    The correct answers have already been given, perfectly legal. That doesn't mean you won't get hassled, but it is legal.

  2. A few observations....don't want to be holier than thou but when I see the size of the servings at Sonic Restaurants on the U.S. television, wonder how anyone can eat all that!

     

    -Since McDonald's 'remodelled' the stores to appear to be more 'upscale?' service has slowed right down. Their coffee has improved from the days when their supplier didn't want it to be known who they were...

     

    -The only Tim Horton's to go bankrupt to be saved by the parent company (at least at the time I was there) was in Yellowknife. For some reason, during -40 celcius temperatures, customers didn't want to wait in a long line up which stretched into the parking lot, while only one cashier was working and the rest signed off at the end of a shift which occured at 7:30 am. The busiest time of day for a coffee outlet? Between 6:30 and 9 am.

     

    -The worst Tim Horton's I ever went to was the one in NOrth Bay by the tourism center at the junction of 11 and 17. Three cold cups of coffee in a row, once waiting 15 minutes while the only server finished cleaning the floor. I will never go back. I hope no one else does either.

     

    -The Starbucks cup referred to earlier is definitely worth the $20 it costs.

     

    -Be prepared for various prices for the same product....the summer help is heading back to school which means training new staff. At least this is the explanation in Gravenhurst.

     

    When did the Tims in Yellowknife go bankrupt? My wife worked there for a time and I never heard of this, though the service wasn't very good, like most places in Yellowknife tbh, they were one of the busiest franchises in the country.

  3. Playing sports is a luxury... Not a right or necessity...

     

    I lost my job with a 2 week old baby at home... Nobody is giving me toonies or loonies to buy diapers and formula for him... So why the heck should I donate to unessasary sports...

     

    The big problem is parent that are in denial about their kids skills... They all think their son is the next Crosby... They probably aren't... Put your kids in house league... They learn about teamwork... You don't travel... They get exercise... And have fun... And it's a fraction if the cost... What some people spend on their kids athletics in their lifetime would be a retirement fund for some people...

     

    Makes me sick to think the kid got to play aaa hockey for 10 years but as for university... Well sorry son... We spent all our money on hockey ...

     

     

    This is exactly right, and I feel that it is this type of attitude that has lead to kids sports becoming more and more organized and more expensive ehich ultimately only excludes the kids of parents who don't have money to burn. It was getting like this 20 years ago, I can only imagine what it is like now, my kids played soccer, now they do a lot of swimming, close to home and cheap.

  4. nothing will ever be accomplished on these issues as long as one side absolves itself of responsibility and points the finger at the other side.

     

    Those of us that buy licenses and observe the slot and don't fish with gill nets are clearly the problem. Clearly a gill net discriminates in the size and type of fish it kills, clearly gill nets are a sustainable method of fishing as has been proven in our healthy oceans. Gill nets can have no impact on the ecosystem of the lake, and being legally allowed to sell fish caught in a gill net surely would not result in increased fishing pressure, nor would government sponsored equipment and processing facilities. In fact, the experts will tell you that there should be more fish than ever. Yes that's right, commercial fishing should actually improve the fishery, and it is known the world over that commercial fishing brings much more economic benefit per fish than does sport fishing. The decline in fishing recently can only be due to sport fishing, it is after all something done by people who hate the environment and would prefer if there were no fish at all, they only take part in the sport in hopes that sooner or later all the fish will be gone. Thankfully the conservationists will be out there working hard to improve the walleye fishery with a blanketed application of gill nets, with any luck they will at the same time rid the lake of the musky and pike. The day i saw a couple dozen suckers being pulled out of one net I was extremely thankful to that fishermen, the sea gulls were hungry after all, and those fish, while seemingly harmless, were no doubt part of some nefarious plot, good riddance I say, the lake can only be the better for it.

  5. Why the hell would a spiny flea article discuss netting? That would be quite the tangent. rolleyes.gif

    I imagine the nugget is waiting for intelligent commentary.

     

    Right, because they just happen to be talking about this for no reason at all, it has nothng to do with the lakes' ecosystem and the commercial/sport fishery on the lake, you actually believe that this would be in the news at all if it weren't for the possible impact on the lakes' fisheries? Did you read the article, you might have noticed the whole last half of it was about the ecosystem of lake Nipissing, as I mentioned though, and as with the smelts articles we have seen, the article never mentions the biggest change in the ecosystem, that being the commercial fishery. It is pretty obvious that removing a large number of predators from the food chain will have an impact throughout the whole ecosystem, maybe even affecting the water flea population, that subject just never comes up in these articles.

     

    As far as your insult goes, I hope it made you feel good.

  6. The nugget doesn't seem to allow comments on these sorts of articles anymore, afraid that someone might mention the obvious I suppose. It is amusing that these articles don't even mention that gill netting a lake and harvesting 1/3-1/2 more fish from the lake than ever before might be having an effect on the lakes balance. Seemslike awfully biased or fearful reporting to me.

  7. I just bought a 6'6" avid, its a medium spinning rod, i paired it with a 2500 stradic and im pretty pleased. I found the avid a tiny bit stiffer than the crucials which were also very nice. As far as the spinning rods go the cumara have the split grip, i dont think the crucuials do. I had been using compre's which are pretty nice as well but i can definitely feel the difference steeping up to the avid.

  8. If I came at you with intent to harm you...would I have a better chance of doing so with a candlestick or an AK-47? If you had to have a fight to the death with someone, would you think it would be fair for you to have a candlestick and your opponent an AK-47? Of course not, because you know a candlestick is no where near as deadly as an AK-47.

     

    If the difference between a candlestick and an AK-47 is nothing more than "hype"...why not give up the AK and go buy a candlestick and be happy with it? Oh that's right...a candlestick is nowhere near an effective a weapon as an AK...and people who want AKs want effective weapons...not a decorative place to stick a candle.

     

    Like I said...you guys think what you want and blame "Hollywood movies" as much as you like...the fact is (and thank God) that the majority of Canadians are not going to get on board with you getting to own an AK-47. Those who have suggested other less infamous weapons are equally dangerous yet legal are certainly right and only point out the need to prohibit those items as well.

     

    You want to own an AK-47? Then go to the Rwanda and join up with a gang of warlords...here in the civilized world we don't go in for that.

     

    Just one more unthinking, uninformed liberal robot, congratulations, you're a dime a dozen in this country. Would you ban 12 ga shotguns? If not, why not? Do you have any concept of the power of 12ga in a small space? How about all Centre fire rifles, i can easily hit a man sized target at 500 yards, where do you draw the line exactly? O wait you don't, you like most other ignorant people choose to ban rifle "A" because it looks more dangerous than "B" when it simply is not, that surely sounds a rational thought process. Then you accuse completely rational people of being gun crazy simply because they are intelligent enough to know the reality, you are embarrassing yourself.

     

    For the record, i don't even own a semi auto .22, and have no interest in owning an ar or ak, but that doesn't mean i think one is more dangerous than the other, that would be completely childish and foolish.

  9. So you had your AK-47 taken away? Gee, that's too bad. How unreasonable.

     

     

    If you knew anything about firearms you would know that there are many legally available arms that are in the same class as an ak-47 you would also know that some are illegal or restricted simply because they look a certain way despite firing the same ammunition as many non restricted firearms. If you knew those things and no doubt many other things that you don't you wouldn't make such ignorant and flippant remarks. Maybe you should consider your obvious lack of knowledge before you make comments on the subject.

     

    Perhaps the most problematic part of any firearms discussion are people with opinions and little to no real knowledge.

     

    Questions, how many people have been shot with an Ak-47 in Canada? How many people have been shot with a mini-14? Which one of those is prohibited and which one is unrestricted? This is so tiresome.

  10. Pellet guns under 500 fps are not classified as firearms, unless the are used in a crime.

     

    Q4. What is considered to be a firearm for purposes of the Firearms Act and for offences related to the Firearms Act in the Criminal Code?

     

    A4. As set out in the Firearms Act, "firearm" means:

     

    a barrelled weapon from which any shot, bullet or other projectile can be discharged and that is capable of causing serious bodily injury or death to a person, and includes

    any frame or receiver of such a barrelled weapon, as well as

    anything that can be adapted for use as a firearm.

     

    Following are some weapons and devices that meet the definition of a firearm but that are deemed not to be firearms for purposes of the Firearms Act and related offences in the Criminal Code. Some of these items are exempted from the definition only if they were designed exclusively for a specific purpose and are intended to be used exclusively for that purpose by the person who possesses it. However, all of the items listed below are considered to be firearms if used in a criminal or negligent manner.

     

    Antique firearms;

    Devices designed exclusively for signalling, for notifying of distress, for firing blank cartridges or for firing stud cartridges, explosive-driven rivets or other industrial projectiles;

    Shooting devices designed exclusively forslaughtering domestic animals, tranquilizing animals, or discharging projectiles with lines attached to them;

    Air guns and other barreled weapons designed to have:

    A muzzle velocity of 152.4 meters per second or less and/or

    A muzzle energy of 5.7 joules or less.

     

    http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/cfp-pcaf/faq/index-eng.htm

     

    2. Air guns that meet the Criminal Code definition of a firearm, but that are deemed not to be firearms for certain purposes of the Firearms Act and Criminal Code.

     

    These are air guns with a maximum muzzle velocity of 152.4 meters or 500 feet per second and/or a maximum muzzle energy of 5.7 joules or 4.2 foot pounds.

     

    Such air guns are exempt from licensing, registration, and other requirements under the Firearms Act, and from penalties set out in the Criminal Code for possessing a firearm without a valid licence or registration certificate. However, they are considered to be firearms under the Criminal Code if they are used to commit a crime. Anyone who uses such an air gun to commit a crime faces the same penalties as someone who uses a regular firearm.

     

    The simple possession, acquisition and use of these air guns for lawful purposes is regulated more by provincial and municipal laws and by-laws than by federal law. For example, some provinces may have set a minimum age for acquiring such an air gun. For more information, please contact your local or provincial authorities.

    These air guns are exempt from the specific safe storage, transportation and handling requirements set out in the regulations supporting the Firearms Act. However, the Criminal Code requires that reasonable precautions be taken to use, carry, handle, store, transport, and shipped them in a safe and secure manner.

     

    http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/cfp-pcaf/fs-fd/air_gun-arme_air-eng.htm

  11. Vancouver and Montreal are the most lefty, liberal, and progressive cities in the country, do you think maybe the type of undisciplined and anarchistic type of environment fosters this sort of behavior? I do. Not only did they riot, people are bragging about it on facebook..just what kind of society are we building here and does anyone think that this would have happened the way it did a few decades ago...with people feeling free to be photographed and openly brag about it? That is what happens in a society where there are few if any consequnces.

  12. Most of the people I know would disagree with you, and we have seen a few big ones caught too, doesn't mean anything of course, overall there have been far more very small fish and far fewer decent sized fish caught so far, maybe the best is yet to come. The daily fishing report out of Greenings Bay cottages is saying the same thing that we have seen here in terms of the numbers of small fish. Small ones are good, but not if the medium sized fish have disappeared. Btw, this wasn't a post designed to bash the natives, but im not surprised to see the usual apologist responses.

  13. So, the pickerel fishing out of North Bay has been pretty spotty so far, the water is high and started out pretty cold so maybe that has had an impact. I have had a couple decent days recently, we actully caught some decent eating fish just below the slot, this was the couple days after the big wind we had last week. Yesterday and this moring were poor again, but hey that happens, what is a little more concerning is the numbers of really small fish being caught compared to decent eating sized fish, this is by far the most really small fish i have caught and the fewest good keeper size I have caught over the past 4 years. The perch numbers seem to be up, we are catching a lot more 8-10 inch perch than i have before, and the lake seems to be full of small ones, are the perch seeing less predation and therefore growing in size and numbers?

     

    While this is a taboo subject here, I have been told that there is a rather large net off shore of North Bay, I wonder if the smaller fish are passing through it while the nice keepers aren't, making for less competition for the small ones. I wonder how other people are dong on Nipissing, and if they are seeing some of the same trends as we are around North Bay so far?

  14. well said, i 100% agree with you on that

     

    And seeing as that is the nwt where the fishing is as good as you can imagine, especially for pike, i don't think its a problem. Pike that size are common place on great slave lake, it's not as though it's say lake Nipissing where the fishing isn't as advertised and only getting worse.

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