That's a great example Allen, if a cow wanders onto another farmer's property, it doesn't just become his.
KDM I have much respect for you so don't take this wrong
Your probably right about landowners wanting to post because we mention there are some bad landowners. However isn't that kind of touchy? We listen to stories about bad hunters and rather than dislike landowners for saying it we often agree. Why do landowners so easily take offence when it's not them personally that we are talking about? I'm guessing that you know when we complain you would be the last person we would be thinking about as we complain.
We understand that it's respect that landowners seek. That's what hunters seek also. However we don't expect you to respect every hunter no matter their behavior. Am I wrong thinking that we not need respect every landowner no matter their behavior. All I seek is mutual respect.
No issues here PG. Emotion is best left OUT of a discussion. It can be touchy, immature, childish, and far fetched, but I don't bring it up to be so. For the first time in my lifetime, there was a request of the legislature to consider making every acre of private land automatically posted, it tells me there are at least a growing number of people that think it's necessary. I DON'T think its even close to being necessary and don't want a SD style of land usage. It punishes everyone for the actions of a few and that's just WRONG. I bring this up simply as food for thought. Is that game animal worth hard feelings?? I see more and more shelter belts, sloughs, CRP, and other cover being removed for croplands. Regardless of how you feel about these actions, it doesn't bode well for having MORE wildlife on the landscape meaning more hunters will be competing for what is left. Competition usually results in price tags being applied and then the fattest wallets win and that is also WRONG. Hunters and landowners are so interconnected that every issue between them affects every other issue and IMO, looking at the big picture is better than picking at the individual issues. Thank GOD these encounters with bad landowners or hunters are the exception rather than the rule and I would like to ensure it stays that way so we as hunters or landowners can disregard those ignorant pitiful few that just want to cause conflicts as poor folks that must have a terrible life. It's just that if you added the number of hunters and the number of landowners (80 acres or more) together, we would still probably be outnumbered by the urban masses that vote by what youtube, facebook, and the TV says rather than with their own minds and THAT is what has me concerned the most. If we allow ourselves (hunters/landowners) to be an issue.......I'm afraid we will all lose.
No issues here PG. Emotion is best left OUT of a discussion. It can be touchy, immature, childish, and far fetched, but I don't bring it up to be so. For the first time in my lifetime, there was a request of the legislature to consider making every acre of private land automatically posted, it tells me there are at least a growing number of people that think it's necessary. I DON'T think its even close to being necessary and don't want a SD style of land usage. It punishes everyone for the actions of a few and that's just WRONG. I bring this up simply as food for thought. Is that game animal worth hard feelings?? I see more and more shelter belts, sloughs, CRP, and other cover being removed for croplands. Regardless of how you feel about these actions, it doesn't bode well for having MORE wildlife on the landscape meaning more hunters will be competing for what is left. Competition usually results in price tags being applied and then the fattest wallets win and that is also WRONG. Hunters and landowners are so interconnected that every issue between them affects every other issue and IMO, looking at the big picture is better than picking at the individual issues. Thank GOD these encounters with bad landowners or hunters are the exception rather than the rule and I would like to ensure it stays that way so we as hunters or landowners can disregard those ignorant pitiful few that just want to cause conflicts as poor folks that must have a terrible life. It's just that if you added the number of hunters and the number of landowners (80 acres or more) together, we would still probably be outnumbered by the urban masses that vote by what youtube, facebook, and the TV says rather than with their own minds and THAT is what has me concerned the most. If we allow ourselves (hunters/landowners) to be an issue.......I'm afraid we will all lose.
KDM I have much respect for you so don't take this wrong
Your probably right about landowners wanting to post because we mention there are some bad landowners. However isn't that kind of touchy? We listen to stories about bad hunters and rather than dislike landowners for saying it we often agree. Why do landowners so easily take offence when it's not them personally that we are talking about? I'm guessing that you know when we complain you would be the last person we would be thinking about as we complain.
We understand that it's respect that landowners seek. That's what hunters seek also. However we don't expect you to respect every hunter no matter their behavior. Am I wrong thinking that we not need respect every landowner no matter their behavior. All I seek is mutual respect.
Actually... that "asshole" farmer DID put the signs up the evening before..
Irrelevant to the post. However, if the land is posted, its posted. If it's not, then by law hunters have the right of recreational trespass. This is not a debate, just a fact.Unfortunately farmers are incredibly busy with harvest and don't always make it to a store to buy and get the signs up right away to make your lives easier.
BTW I was on the phone with him when he was supposedly just putting the signs up and he was saying "what the hell, don't they see me" thinking they would come to the pickup and he would ask them to leave, but they never did, hence the game warden showing up.
Yeah and it’s a bs law to the landowners. Hunters just stop on the road or if in the field shoot something within range on posted land and prance right in and there’s nothing the landowner can do. Unconstitutional as it’s seizing private property for special interest group without compensation regardless of brevity of their stay. Road ditches no longer have habitat in SD etc because of permission to hunt private land of right aways by state. Many farmers I know plow borders around fields to deter wildlife use. Some make sure habitat is gone because of this crazy law. I am all for retrieval of an animal if it was legally taken “ outside” of private property but with landowner permission first. It’s no wonder habitat is disappearing with such a law. Only 2 states I know have it . Change it and landowners may start developing habitat again for wildlife to flourish and go outside the land to legal hunting areas.LAHLAH and OP, what county was this in?
also, 8andcounting and martinslanding, i don't think it matters what kind of sign you use, a person can trespass onto posted property to retrieve a dead or wounded animal without a firearm. its actually an exception to the trespass law. it applies to civil, criminal, G&F trespass and it doesn't matter if its a the game warden, the sheriff or the state's attorney.
Tell that to the three chickens there is no habitat by the roads I shot tonight. No one plows borders your dumbYeah and it’s a bs law to the landowners. Hunters just stop on the road or if in the field shoot something within range on posted land and prance right in and there’s nothing the landowner can do. Unconstitutional as it’s seizing private property for special interest group without compensation regardless of brevity of their stay. Road ditches no longer have habitat in SD etc because of permission to hunt private land of right aways by state. Many farmers I know plow borders around fields to deter wildlife use. Some make sure habitat is gone because of this crazy law. I am all for retrieval of an animal if it was legally taken “ outside” of private property but with landowner permission first. It’s no wonder habitat is disappearing with such a law. Only 2 states I know have it . Change it and landowners may start developing habitat again for wildlife to flourish and go outside the land to legal hunting areas.