The obvious answer is "Eat more moose."
I was, and still am, impressed by reports that a Swedish (perhaps Finnish, my memory is showing signs of age...) moose tag comes with a marksmanship test (multiple, timed, shots on a moving life sized target) and, should you draw such a tag, you will shoot a cow or calf or go mooseless.
Probably both countries, though I don't know much about hunting in Finland, other than the fact that they don't have as many silly restrictions on how your rifle looks. Want to use a FAL to take down that moose? Why sure!
Big no-no here...damn regulations...
My .308 is an AK variant made in Russia. I suspect that'd be frowned upon.
Damn right it is. No "military style" semiautos of a post-1942 design. Means AK and everything derived from that is a no-no, same with SKS, AR-15, M1 Rifle, FAL, G3, FNC you name it. Neatest toys one can get seems to be Mini-14, M1 Carbine, M1 Garand, 10/22 and a few other. Though from what I've understood this isn't an actual law, just regulations from the gov't agency that tries to manage hunting...and they say "no military semiautos". This is probably to keep so-called unserious persons who only want a "cool" rifle away from hunting...
The Finns are more sensible. As long as the barrel length meets the regulations, they seem to care about little else. Saiga 12 Gauge? No problem. Same with using an FAL or Saiga rifle or whatever. Though I suspect even they won't allow full auto stuff, though you never know
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An interesting rumour that I heard is that these regulations were written with the help of the gun dealer representing Ruger in Sweden...think there is any bias?