Saw no .22 last time I drove across the border. Anything of the large calibers was there, but not a deal. Cheaper in Canada, and no US export permit required.
On the island, when it comes it disappears off the shelf quickly. Was at Cabela's for the employee day pre-opening, and got some of the (guessing) 60,000 + rounds on display. Came back a few days after it officially opened for another brick and only .22 shorts were left.
hello here in canada they want us all to register our fire arms especially in Quebec,, thus if you want to buy a fire arm you have the full paper work ahead of you just to buy and then register more and more money for the govs .. thing is if something happens and if they instaure martial law they have your name adresse and know exactly the weapons you own so they can come at your door and seize all... do criminals register their weapons .... what about the millions of weapons sold on the black market...we preppers are not criminals we believe in justice, freedom and the right to defend our lives our families , our homes and survival equipment . and like I say our governments are playing Russian roulette with each other some others watching who will pull the triger first , it takes only one Nobel prize winner as i call them to push a button and all hell will brakes loose . the us, china, Russia, north Korea, Isis and others who will it be. I rather be prepared than sorry mi gear is not registered and wont be . I just dont have any confidence in our governments thanks mike
I work as a millwright mechanic in a recycling facility and have just found 850 rounds of .22 long riffle ammo in their boxes like new not to mention all the other stuff people trow away that is a preppers dream,, to date I found 2 x .22 rifles, hunting knives, black powder, scopes , compas l.e.d lights, solar panels that work great not a scratch, bundles of para cord, axes and lots more . like they say ''ONE MANS JUNK, ANOTHER MANS TREASURE''

