DSC1 used to do a safe backstop test. Do they not do that any more? Was many years ago that I did it.An interesting starting comment that exposes the fact that DSC1 proves merely, in relation to gun handling,that the candidate has passed an elementary accuracy test and nothing more. No evaluation of appreciation of safe backstop, shoot through, ricochet or anything else. But yet folk still pay money to DSC Certificate "schools" like they do to "visa agents" here in Nigeria thinking it somehow a guaranteed route to the goal of an FAC for stalking or, here, to a visa.
No evaluation of appreciation of safe backstop, shoot through, ricochet ...
Join a club,[emoji736]
serve in the military, [emoji736]
go stalking with a mentor, [emoji736]
read books, [emoji736]
practice with your rifle[emoji736]
Yep, mine was just the same, 12months ago. With the simulated stalk around a field, with cutouts in various places. And having to explain if and why you would/not shoot.
The police were not interested in the DSC1, or my accompanied stalk bookings, at all. They only wanted a written permission to shoot over land.
And refused to even consider an open ticket till the next renewal. Unless I could provide overwhelming evidence.
(Well, they mentioned 5years, but my field use was only added mid term. So hopefully I will get it open next year.)
Indeed a quick way .......DSC 1 still involves a field safety test - It is a basic test - like the shooting test
As with any course it has a value
Of course it doesn't replace experience, but it is a part of a journey
A quick way to acquire some knowledge and to demonstrate a little understanding of stalking issues
Join a club, serve in the military, go stalking with a mentor, read books, practice with your rifle
All ways to acquire knowledge
I wouldn't knock any of them
Indeed a quick way .......
There’s a lot of them about ........And possibly the only way to becoming an instant ‘deer manager’.![]()
I had the same experience when a friend moved to Scotland. As I've stated before on SD, I thought it very sensible.I do feel the Jocks use the referee process more aggressively (no value-judgment) than they do in England & Wales (don't know about NI). When I referee for my Scottish friends, I generally get a call and quite a bit of investigative questioning about them. In E&W, I rarely even get a call.
Kind regards,
Carl
At 13.26 the Guidance states that it is "Desirable that new applicants should have some experience of the safe use of firearms before using such rifles" and at 13.32 "applicants should generally have some experience of firearms" it goes onto say that "experience is neither cartridge nor ammunition type exclusive". It offers no guidance on how that experience is acquired or to the level required, so I am sure the OP can evidence his abilities in the safe handling and use of firearms from his previous experience. However the attached may be of value when speaking with his FEO
Hopefully the FEO will be a decent chap on the day.