Toronto Range Setup + Safety Regulations

Email Question

I am looking for information regarding the rules and regulations regarding how the range is set up.  I am working to get a range set up for our club in Sparwood, BC which will be within city limits.  Any and all information you can provide would be appreciated, including target set up, back stops, controls in place to keep stray arrows with in the range, etc.
Thank you very much for any help you can provide

Vince Kropodra
Archery Club Director,
Sparwood Fish and Wildlife Association





Hello Vince!
These are some more unusual questions, but I shall try to answer it as best as I can.
Target Butts

The Toronto Archery Range uses target butts are composed of Natural Tentest (a wood pulp material we get from a paper mill in Ajax, Ontario). The 4 feet long Tentest is stacked 4 feet high, and is 1 foot thick. The Tentest is then held in place using wooden frames, shown in the photo below.



Back Stops
Ha. I wish. If we miss the target butts completely then our arrows end up in the field, which means beginners often lose arrows in the grass as they slide in under the grass and can be only detected by the keenest eyes and/or accidentally stepping on them while searching for them.

I wish we had a hill backstop, perhaps something made of sand, which would allow the arrows to simply hit the sandy hill and make retrieving arrows very easy. If you don't have a sand pit nearby you would need to be trucking in tonnes of sand to construct such a hill, so that would be expensive, but once there a sand backstop would be ideal in my opinion. To save on the amount of sand required I recommend building a wall and then piling the sand up on a 45 degree angle up to the top of the wall.
Keeping Arrows within the Range
Our safety rules and a large field with a wooded hill behind it are the primary reasons arrows stay within the archery range area. People are only allowed (or supposed to) shoot from the shooting line, and aiming at the sky is likewise prohibited.

In theory a strong compound bow (or a similar strong bow) aimed upwards on a 40 to 45 degree angle could reach the street above and behind the wooded hill, as it is only about 200 yards away on an upward angle. So if people were ignoring the safety rules there would be the potential for danger - but most people don't like losing arrows in the woods and would not bother to do such a thing anyway. If people stand closer to the further targets and shoot from there (not using the official shooting line) they would be creating a greater risk of shooting an arrow up into the street level.
People using the "crooked shoulder" method of drawing back a compound bow, which involves aiming at the sky (or ground) on a 45 degree angle and then pulling it back before readjusting their shoulder/aim towards their target, is also discouraged. Not only is it bad for the shoulder muscles and ligaments, but if they misfired while aiming at the sky they could send an arrow pretty far into the distance and potentially hit someone up near the road behind the hill.
Supervision, Safety and Laws
The Toronto Archery Range is open 24/7 every day of the year. There is no supervision to make sure people are following the range safety rules and instead people are bound by Toronto by-laws and visits of by-law officers who are checking to see if people are following the safety by-laws and passing out $4,000 fines if people ignore the by-laws. Part of the by-laws makes clear that any injuries or illegal actions by users of the archery range are the fault of the users and that they are held legally responsible for their actions.
For legal / insurance reasons it would make more sense if you make an effort to monitor and supervise your new archery range during official open hours, have hours of operation posted, and a "no trespassing between certain hours" sign. Make it clear that trespassers enter the range at their own risk, that users of the range during normal open hours likewise agree to use the range at their own risk, and that you have abundant liability insurance for the archery range.
You will also need to check with Sparwood what by-laws effect the operation of your archery range, as being inside the city limits will require your range comply with any local by-laws.

Other Ranges
I recommend you also check with the Burnaby Archery Range and the Montreal Archery Range, two other archery ranges in Canada which also operate within city limits. They may have additional ideas for how to ensure the safety of your range. eg. The Burnaby Range requires a membership, a safety/accuracy test (which according to rumour, is so easy a blind archer could pass it), and an annual fee.
I have heard of someone who is currently opening a private 3D archery range (3D targets of deer, bears, etc) north of Toronto, but he has chosen to make the location of his new range secret so that only a small number of members / friends will even know the location, as opposed to opening up the range to the public and letting everyone know where it is. This way only people he trusts can use the range, and this in turns saves him money on liability insurance.
There are other private archery ranges near Toronto, using a variety of different setups - usually with monthly or annual membership fees, and setups geared towards making a profit by having a restaurant, pro shop and other facilities located at the private range.
One of the nicest setups I have ever seen is a warehouse, so everything is indoors and considerably safer, and they have designed it to be like a golf course with rooms and hallways that twist and turn, lots of 3D targets and walls covered in black foam. Users go from room to room, waiting for the previous users to be done their turn, take their turn, collect their arrows and then move on to the next room. A buzzer system indicates a time limit for each room so that people collect their arrows when they hear the buzzer and move to the next room.

Toronto has an abundance of "archery tag" locations that are indoors, also in warehouses. Those places are, in my opinion, a liability lawsuit waiting to happen. There are also so many of them now that they have become over-saturated and eventually their popularity will wane, so I expect a few of them to run out of money sometime in the future. I recommend AVOIDING anything resembling an archery tag facility, as they mostly target people who have never done archery before, and fall into the same category as axe throwing leagues and knife throwing leagues.
Best of luck with your archery range!

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