In Quebec, that is already in the legislation.
Section 1.4 states: “No person may knowingly hinder a person who is lawfully carrying on an activity referred to in the first paragraph of section 1.3, including an activity preparatory to such an activity”, which refers to hunting and fishing.
However, there are problems. Take Lake Saint-Pierre, for example. People practice kitesurfing there around people who are hunting migratory birds in the fall. So there are problems. I have seen some people scare off geese that were heading toward places with hunters. The same goes for waterfowl hunting in more populated regions. There are problems.
People are increasingly living in urban centres and they don't understand hunting activities. They don't understand that migration is part of the natural course of seasons and that we can kill some birds. That is part of our history and tradition. Hunting and fishing are traditional, heritage activities.
The fact that more and more people live in cities is causing perception problems. We have seen this in the different reactions of people in cities and people in the countryside at the simple sound of a firearm being used for a legal hunting activity. That can actually cause problems. It is absolutely fundamental that governments educate people about that.