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Accuracy

CanadaFever Corrections Policy

Outdoor content can become outdated when laws, fees, seasons, access points, products, or safety guidance change. This page explains how CanadaFever handles corrections.

What we prioritize

Safety and legal issues

Wildlife safety, hunting safety, fishing regulations, licence rules, closures, fees, protected areas, and emergency guidance receive the highest correction priority.

Affiliate and product issues

Broken product links, wrong retailer country, inaccurate product descriptions, image problems, or unclear disclosures should be corrected quickly.

Source and attribution issues

If a source is wrong, outdated, missing, or too vague, we may replace it, add context, or rewrite the affected section.

Editorial clarity

If wording creates confusion, overstates certainty, or hides an important caveat, we may revise the article even when the underlying facts are not wrong.

How to report an error

Use the CanadaFever contact page and include the page URL, the section or sentence in question, what appears wrong, and the official or primary source that supports the correction if you have one.

How corrections are handled

Depending on the issue, we may update the text, add a source, remove a claim, replace an affiliate link, add a disclosure, change a date-sensitive note, or rebuild a page section. For major safety or regulation updates, we prioritize clarity over preserving old wording.

Last reviewed: June 5, 2026.