| A customs broker or some other person very familiar with the rules could speak authoritatively on that question -- that's not me by any stretch. But, working it through on my own based on experience and logic, I'd have to say I think you're gonna pay GST on all three bows. The whole process is initiated by the shipper filling out a form declaring the retail value of the goods; Canada assesses tax & duty (no duty likely in your case) based on the information in that form. Do they have a means for assessing items as anything other than goods bought at a certain price? IOW, do they have a special stream of processing for the guy that says "I didn't really buy these items, I'm just borrowing them to check them out for a little while, then I'll send them back, I promise"? I doubt it, but that's what your pro would know.
As I say, it all starts with the shipper declaring the value of the goods. I wouldn't want to advise somebody to declare anything other than the truth on that form, but that part of the process might be your handhold for avoiding paying tax on all three items. The pros earn their money knowing the answer to stuff like this but it makes more sense to use them when you're buying boxcar-loads of bows, not onesies and twosies...
Depending on the value of the bows that tax you're trying to avoid can be a lot of bread. Hundreds of dollars. That much money might fund a bow-hunting trip, where you could try many more than three bows....
__________________ There's a joker in every deck... |