1) A Falkland Islands Firearms Licence (yes, Licence is correct down here) covers shotguns and rifles, costs just £39.10 (!), is a single double-sided piece of A4 paper and is valid for life

2) Ammunition sales are not recorded as the automatic allowance is 3000 rds of which up to 1000 can be the main calibre you shoot with,
3) Reloading is by the authority of the Royal Falkland Islands Police (RFIP) and from my experiance, not common,
4) 10 Firearms is usually the maximum granted consisting of 2 each of the firearm categories - see picture below
The law (technically an Ordinance) relating to firearms is relatively straightforward (unlike the UK) but like the Falklands nothing is quite as it seems. Essentially everything, except full auto, is legal but there are two big deciding factors that impact on the importation and availablity of firearms - UK law and the RFIP.
Because the Falkland Islands Company import via the UK, UK law means that semi auto CF rifles (Section 5) are expensive and difficult to obtain. Additionally, the RFIP have an inordinate amount of power as they aprove the importation of any firearm. This all adds up to semi auto CF rifles being somewhat rare...legal ones that is. Reading between the lines, it appears that there are a sizeable number of captured FN's about and as long as no-one draws attention to themselves, the RFIP are quite content to have the odd amnesty and not look too hard because if they are wrong the locals are quite prepared to sue and they more often than not, win.
As an example of some of the RFIP strangeness, I am a Contract worker and I'm trying to import a T/C Contender in 223 and there is currently much sucking of teeth and tut tutting from the RFIP because of the potiential use of military ammunition - if I was a local, I don't think it would be that much of an issue, certainly from what locals have said. However, during the application process I cannot fault the RFIP...they bent over backwards to help me and were extremely apologetic when the process took longer than expected, about 10 weeks! When I got permission to shoot on one of the farms, I put in a variation (£7.60) for the two remaining firearm types and that took only 3 weeks and that was longer than usual. Oh, and because of the RFIP pump action shotguns are a no-no but unrestricted S/A shotguns are as common as penguins...
There is more I could say but I'll leave it for any questions you might have. The bottom line is even with the various issues and peculiarities of the Falklands, being here is worth it...
