When I'm not in the UK and Europe working I live in rural southern Ontario on a hundred acres, half cultivated and half mixed wood and wetland. I don't hunt on our land, respecting my elderly mother's wishes (my parents bought the place as a wildlife haven), but if I did I would have a field day: large whitetail population (see them almost every day), plenty of rabbits, squirrels, etc. Also foxes, mink, ermine, skunk, opossum, occasional beavers, groundhogs, all manner of small rodents, snakes, snapping turtles, game birds etc. But we also have a 'varmint' population of super-sized racoons, occasional porcupines and a roving pack of wolf-sized coyotes (called Brush Wolves here), all of which are fair game esp as they are a real threat to our two English Shepherds - the racoons especially if cornered in the barn, but also the coyotes which will maul even mid-size dogs or kidnap them. We hear them yipping and howling almost every night, sometimes audaciously close when the dogs are inside as if taunting them. They often have mange and are a scourge on surrounding chicken farms. One day one of them will be in my sights. But at the moment I'm content with walking on our trails, hoping for varmint, and with my 80 yd range in our back woods, far enough away from neighbours for noise not to be an issue -luckily all the neighbouring properties shoot anyway.
As far as the law goes, I only shoot a flintlock longarm, so, according to Canadian law, neither own nor shoot a firearm. (Though because the bang sounds like a firearm, I could be visited by a Township official if it was Sunday or after dusk, when only varmint shooting is allowed - at which point I would show him it was a flintlock, and he would be forced to agree that I was not, in legal terms, shooting). The less said about that the better - supposedly it was to allow student re-enactors to continue carrying muskets in their summer jobs at historic sites, and can only have come from some legislator with only the haziest knowledge of what constitutes a gun. We can only applaud! Too bad the same sense didn't apply to the monstrous Canadian gun registry, a billion dollar scandal that has failed to have any impact on the main problem with Canadian gun crime, handgun use by inner city gangs, many of them recent immigrants (who don't acquire their guns legally or register them. Even nice dull Canadian criminals aren't that law-abiding. Duh).