doric_prince
Well-Known Member
This.it gives guidance on what quarry constitutes ‘good reason’ for various calibres.
This.it gives guidance on what quarry constitutes ‘good reason’ for various calibres.
I’d love to know how they came by these “categories”
I agree with you - unfortunately in reality the ‘guide‘ is being taken too seriously by some forces. The point that can be made to such forces is that the table is only a guide & the supporting text in the document it comes from states just that.Agreed. But from what I have gathered - some forces are using it as a firm guideline- and the bar of requirement to show "good reason" is higher as a result :s
I actually think the categories are a fairly sensible place to start. One has to draw lines somewhere. It must save a lot of time for 9/10 applications.
It is absolutely not a privilege - if you have good reason and nothing in your past or present that precludes you from possessing firearms, you should be granted a certificate!You need good reason for every firearm in your cabinet , make your case . The fact is .243 up will do the job on any UK deer so we are dealing with why you need something more than the Normal .
It helps a lot if you have lots of verifiable experience and your not starting to look like a gun collector. The fact is in the UK keeping firearms is ultimately a privilege in law and there is no get around to that so tread carefully and get your evidence and reason for more sound
if the limit is 3000fp`s then most 7mm RM rounds are over that, with some reaching 3400 plus. (Rem TTX)and the rem mag is on the limit.
Read the Home Office guidelines and the Firearms Acts and deer acts.
There are no maximums, only minimums.
You need to demonstrate good reason. A good reason is big bodied red deer being shot in open country. Together with use overseas.That's certainly an interesting interpretation of the table. But for them to be a "big game" category- with that specifically stated as unsuitable for UK deer- would that not be considered a maximum?
I have a couple of mates granted .375 for deer in the U.K., and they hold it with an open condition.

It doesn’t state it’s unsuitable for UK deer!!That's certainly an interesting interpretation of the table. But for them to be a "big game" category- with that specifically stated as unsuitable for UK deer- would that not be considered a maximum?
You need to demonstrate good reason. A good reason is big bodied red deer being shot in open country. Together with use overseas.
300 mag, 375 and 416 all good double duty and have sufficient velocity to be flat enough for open ground.
Traditionally bigger bores were too slow to meet min velocity requirements for UK deer,
But then you can get could enough velocities in a 458 win mag to make them a 250 yard point blank deer and antelope cartridge.