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martha wrote:Watch where you pound those pins boys, Fred and I have some projects on the go in Sandy Cove.
That was a great post Peter!peter wrote:martha wrote:Watch where you pound those pins boys, Fred and I have some projects on the go in Sandy Cove.
I believe the current ethic in Nova Scotia is that pins can be pounded anywhere, as long as they are removed again, but non-aiders are also permitted to follow their own ethic when deciding whether or not to slip a tricam into the pin scar. I do know that the use of pneumatic jack-hammers is still "frowned upon", but not prohibited outright. I believe the use of dynamite to design new routes was recently voted down by a narrow margin, but a recount was demanded by the minority, so this may change. My advice is, if you obtain a municipal building permit and declare your route a "structure" or a "work of art", everything is legal. I am currently researching the legal implications of cross-border, interprovincial declarations of "projects", but I believe the Charter's mobility rights clause protects your right to declare whole cliffs "hands off", even while living in an adjacent province. Oh yes, and I don't think Steve was thinking of Sandy Cove
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