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#1600958 - 11/19/08 11:32 PM
Re: Why is baiting illegal here?
[Re: deerminator]
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HotSpotOutdoors Family
Registered: 12/23/04
Posts: 39
Loc: Crookston/Bemidji State Univer...
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Have you ever been on a drive?
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#1600960 - 11/19/08 11:34 PM
Re: Why is baiting illegal here?
[Re: deerminator]
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IceLeaders Family
Registered: 02/14/07
Posts: 203
Loc: Grand Rapids, MN and New Pragu...
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I had already started up a thread on this, but i figured i would throw in the results i have gotten.
First: Drop the whole disease spreading thing. It is legal to throw out a pile of corn 300 days of the year, but when hunters hit the woods it becomes illegal because this is the only time of year diseases can be spread? I think not. Just an excuse the DNR gave us. This also answers the excuse of changing deer movement. If a pile of corn is put in place the entire year, it will move the deer the same way a pile would in November.
Second: Fair Chase. Although I would never hunt over a pile, wouldn't scopes, scents, calls, raised stands, camo (for bow hunters), binoculars, trail cams, and deer drives, immediatly eliminate the whole idea of "fair chase"?
I would like to throw in my solution. What if we allowed baiting, and eliminated the bonus tag system in intensive harvest areas. 500,000 hunters hit the woods anually producing some 200,000 deer harvested. If we allow baiting, it would only seem natural that the ammount of deer registered would go up. This would bring the ratio from 500,000:200,000 up to 500,000:300,000 or so. The reason why I believe the DNR doesn't allow baiting is because they want to make their $15 per bonus tag. It seems like a scam to me, then again, I hope to be working for the DNR some day. Great organization, I just have to wonder if they always have the best things in mind.
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#1601084 - 11/20/08 07:19 AM
Re: Why is baiting illegal here?
[Re: Surface Tension]
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Sr HotSpotOutdoors Family
Registered: 01/16/06
Posts: 7839
Loc: St. Paul, MN
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I don't see baiting as being very sportsman-like. Why not just hunt cattle if you are going to bait them in. Do you wanna just get your deer the first couple hours and go home? I don't think that is what hunting is about for most of us.
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#1601087 - 11/20/08 07:32 AM
Re: Why is baiting illegal here?
[Re: jimalm]
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FishingMN Family
Registered: 04/22/08
Posts: 153
Loc: Big Sandy
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I agree 100% with JiMalm, why would you want to bait? What fun is it shooting something that comes into bait, to me that's not hunting. Thats as easy as shooting your dog when he comes to eat out of his dish. If you want to bait, go to a game farm and pick out what deer you want to shoot. It's called hunting for a reason, it should not be easy that's what makes it fun IMO. If baiting was legal, I still would not do it, to me that is cheating. Sorry for my strong opinion, just my thoughts.
Edited by upnorthbsl (11/20/08 07:32 AM)
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#1601129 - 11/20/08 08:07 AM
Re: Why is baiting illegal here?
[Re: jimalm]
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Sr FishingMN Family
Registered: 02/03/02
Posts: 1295
Loc: Belle Plaine, MN, USA
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1. If Baiting is illegal because it may spread disease then all recreational feeding should be illegal also.
2. There is no such thing as "fair chase" when it comes to deer hunting. If you want fair chase then you need to tell the chasee that he is being chased. Or give the deer guns so they can fire back. Now that would be "fair chase".
3. If baiting is illegal because it causes unnatural deer movement, Thus making it unfair for those who do not bait, then food plots should also be illegal. Deer food plots have no other purpose than to "bait" deer for hunting. They are not harvested and used for any other purpose. The only people who can use food plots are those with their own hunting land. Those who hunt public land are left out in the cold.
4. The whole idea of a state wide deer hunt is to keep the herd thin. As long as we shoot enough deer annually to accomplish this, then who cares how they are shot.
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"Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, chocolate in one hand, martini in the other, body thoroughly used up, totally worn out and screaming "WOO HOO what a ride!"
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#1601138 - 11/20/08 08:12 AM
Re: Why is baiting illegal here?
[Re: vister]
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IceLeaders Family
Registered: 04/17/08
Posts: 192
Loc: Hudson, WI
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I have been wondering why baiting is illegal here in MN. read the outdoor news, and people are getting hammered with fines and losing their weapons and more. Why? If you think about it, MN is one of the only states to open firearms season during the peak of the rut. What does about 80 percent of MNs hunting population do then? They hang a gallon of doe pee from scent wicks all around their stand, including dragging it out behind them on their way to the stand.
Don't get me wrong, i am in that 80 percent, which by the way is a made up number. But why does the MN DNR let us lure bucks in with sexual attractants during the peak of the rut, and not let us shoot a thing over a pile of corn? Seems to me like doe scents, rattling, grunting, bleat cans, baiting, you name it, are all more or less the same concept.
by hanging out a saturated wick with golden estrous, you are luring a buck to you. Isn't that the same as a pile of grain and apples, illegal, or a food plot, which is legal?
I guess I myself am for baiting. when a deer in the wild can range over thousands of acres, what harm would a bushel of corn in front of my stand do when i am hunting on the edge of a 100 acre bean field? Article from the WI Outdoor News.... In asking for hunters to make this personal decision, Frank said in a press release, "While currently legal in areas outside of the CWD zone, we are asking all hunters and citizens this year to refrain from the baiting and feeding of deer throughout the state. TB has been identified in the Minnesota deer herd, and CWD was recently discovered in Michigan deer. Eliminating the baiting and feeding of deer is a cost-effective way to substantially reduce the risks of spreading disease in Wisconsin's deer herd. "Baiting and feeding of deer threatens not only the health of our deer population, but our dairy industry and forest industry as well, increasing the risk of TB being transferred from deer to dairy cows. And an artificially high deer population threatens regeneration of our forests with the potential for negative impacts on our forest and wood products economy," Frank said. Warnke said Frank's remarks about "artificially high" deer numbers stem from the belief that baiting and feeding provide more "fuel" for deer, resulting in higher fawn birth rates and better fawn survival. "Baiting and feeding are likely supporting a higher winter survival rate and a greater recruitment of fawns in the spring. Unnaturally higher deer numbers result in negative impacts such as more deer/vehicle collisions, more crop damage for farmers, stunted forest regeneration, and more deer browsing, which hurts Wisconsin forests," Warnke said. Wisconsin's deer herd was estimated to be between 1.5 and 1.7 million animals heading into the early archery season. DNR veterinarian and land program manager Dr. Sarah Hurley said studies have concluded that CWD can be spread between deer through saliva and at contaminated sites such as baiting and feeding locations. Research conducted at Sandhill Wildlife Area concluded that even with limiting the quantity of bait placed, the potential for disease transmission continues. DNR wildlife health officials say CWD and tuberculosis are transmitted through deer-to-deer contact like that found at bait and feeding stations. CWD also is transmitted through exposure to a contaminated environment, and tuberculosis is transmissible from contaminated food and feed sites. "Baiting and feeding cause unnatural concentrations of deer and their activity increasing the risk of disease infection and spread," Hurley said. "Repeated use of feeding and baiting areas poses a long-term risk of disease transmission." Warnke said 25 states have a complete ban on baiting for deer hunting, 12 states have partial baiting restrictions (including Wisconsin), and 13 states have no restrictions.
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#1601161 - 11/20/08 08:27 AM
Re: Why is baiting illegal here?
[Re: Big Dave2]
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Sr HotSpotOutdoors Family
Registered: 01/02/01
Posts: 3422
Loc: Willmar, MN
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Deer food plots have no other purpose than to "bait" deer for hunting.
Big Dave, you're totally wrong there. Most people, myself included plant corn food plots to help animals, mainly pheasants and deer, get thru the winter. My focus has been on pheasants, without a good winter food source I'd have 1/2 the pheasants that I currently do, because cropland is scarce where I live. If I was only feeding pheasants, I could get by with 1/2 acre of corn. With the deer flocking in, I need 3-4 acres of corn just to get them thru to March/April. But I enjoy the deer too. My Sunday morning routine in Jan and Feb is to sit with a cup of coffee by the spotting scope and watch the deer in the mornings, up to 25 at a time.
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#1601163 - 11/20/08 08:29 AM
Re: Why is baiting illegal here?
[Re: Badger]
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HotSpotOutdoors Sales & Marketing Adminstrator
Registered: 12/01/05
Posts: 15472
Loc: Arlington,Mn
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If a true hunter wants a deer most every season, go out into the woods and find the trails and bedding areas and set up on those traveled routes. Thats just as good as baiting with corn. Where we hunt, if one sets up on good travel corridors, you will see deer move.
Yes, this takes some time to scout an area out but it does work. I realize that some areas have a larger herd but, for those areas with a smaller herd, deer movement can still be patterned without a bait pile.
It is not the easiest way but it is a good way to harvest a deer without a bait pile.
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#1601170 - 11/20/08 08:33 AM
Re: Why is baiting illegal here?
[Re: Badger]
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Sr FishingMN Family
Registered: 05/14/04
Posts: 1080
Loc: Plainview Mn, U.S.A
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Feeding deer should be against the law, period. It sucks, when they have a killing winter, but that is nature, and nature can be harsh. Last year, the deer were at my inlaws eating the landscaping, they were skin and bone. Even got some picks of a few that maybe didn't make it. If it came down to having some deer starve to death, or have a herd wiped out with CWD, or worse yet, have heard with BT and they spread it to the neighboring dairys. I'm going to have to say starvation. It is the harsh truth. I agree that its stupid that people can feed deer all year, but during the hunting season it has to stop so disease won't spread. More disease gets spread in the spring when the deer are looking for food and 20 to 30 are going to the recreational feeders, than the one or two deer that may stop at a bait pile to grab a bite. I am not for baiting at all, I am biased, I live in an area rich with agriculture. The deer usually have enough food to survive a long winter. If I lived in area like Northern MN, I might feel differently. Just my OP.
One last thing. I enjoy not knowing where the deer will come from, will it be above me, below me, come from behind me, around the corner? Having a bait pile would have me concentrating on that bait pile, and missing some of the other cool stuff that happens, and to me, would take some of the enjoyment and surprise, the hunt, if you wish, out of the hunt.
One more thing, food plots are not baiting. They help everythig in addition to deer. Also, food plots will not spread disease like a pile of corn .
Edited by 96trigger (11/20/08 08:36 AM)
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#1601247 - 11/20/08 09:06 AM
Re: Why is baiting illegal here?
[Re: BLACKJACK]
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Sr FishingMN Family
Registered: 02/03/02
Posts: 1295
Loc: Belle Plaine, MN, USA
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Deer food plots have no other purpose than to "bait" deer for hunting.
Big Dave, you're totally wrong there. Most people, myself included plant corn food plots to help animals, mainly pheasants and deer, get thru the winter. My focus has been on pheasants, without a good winter food source I'd have 1/2 the pheasants that I currently do, because cropland is scarce where I live. If I was only feeding pheasants, I could get by with 1/2 acre of corn. With the deer flocking in, I need 3-4 acres of corn just to get them thru to March/April. But I enjoy the deer too. My Sunday morning routine in Jan and Feb is to sit with a cup of coffee by the spotting scope and watch the deer in the mornings, up to 25 at a time. That's great that you plant and leave some crops for wildlife but it is still true that you do it to attract the deer and pheasants to your place. Those deer would still make it through the winter without your food plot only they would be more scattered. Also, for those who do not own a plot of land where one could plant these food plots, wouldn't a corn feeder also be helping these animals get through the winter? I just believe that if it is illegal for me to pile up corn in order to attract deer to my area then it should be illegal for those with food plots to hunt over that artificial food source.
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"Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, chocolate in one hand, martini in the other, body thoroughly used up, totally worn out and screaming "WOO HOO what a ride!"
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#1601270 - 11/20/08 09:23 AM
Re: Why is baiting illegal here?
[Re: harvey lee]
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Sr FishingMN Family
Registered: 02/03/02
Posts: 1295
Loc: Belle Plaine, MN, USA
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If a true hunter wants a deer most every season, go out into the woods and find the trails and bedding areas and set up on those traveled routes. Thats just as good as baiting with corn. Where we hunt, if one sets up on good travel corridors, you will see deer move.
Yes, this takes some time to scout an area out but it does work. I realize that some areas have a larger herd but, for those areas with a smaller herd, deer movement can still be patterned without a bait pile.
It is not the easiest way but it is a good way to harvest a deer without a bait pile. What is the definition of "true hunter"? Do you hunt on public land? Or do you hunt the same farm country reveine that has been hunted for decades where deer have to funnel through to get to where they want to go? Do you use a rifle or shotgun or modern compound bow to take deer? Or do you use a sharpened stick? Do you use modern scent inhibitors and doe scent, grunt calling tubes molded from chinese plastic, and elevated manufactured steel deer stands? I have a feeling that when our forefathers were trying to feed their families for the winter that many a pile of corn or grain was used to their advantage. Were they "True Hunters"?
_________________________
"Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, chocolate in one hand, martini in the other, body thoroughly used up, totally worn out and screaming "WOO HOO what a ride!"
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#1601286 - 11/20/08 09:31 AM
Re: Why is baiting illegal here?
[Re: Big Dave2]
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IceLeaders Family
Registered: 02/14/07
Posts: 203
Loc: Grand Rapids, MN and New Pragu...
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Exactly. This is a question that I have asked several times in my own thread, and nobody can give me an answer why the regs are written the way they are.
If I sit in a deer stand on opener that is 20 yards from a corn "food plot" it is legal. HOWEVER, if I cut down say 20 corn stalks and put them in a pile that is 50 yards away from my deer stand, I can now be cited for baiting.
It is a problem that the DNR NEEDS to address. Why are food plots legal in the hunting season, but not piles of food. They are sometimes used for the same purposes, and you and I know that the DNR is not to niave to recognize this.
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The best thing to come out of the Twin Cities was a road to the Iron Range!!!!!!!
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#1601326 - 11/20/08 09:54 AM
Re: Why is baiting illegal here?
[Re: Sandmannd]
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Sr FishingMN Family
Registered: 02/14/05
Posts: 908
Loc: Buffalo
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I feel that if you feed a animal it is now a pet and I for one will not shoot my pets. If you call them and they don't come, they aren't pets! I wouldn't shoot them either as the challenge element is removed. I would also hate to see baiting become legal in MN. To me, the hunt is what it's all about, not the kill. I sit on stand without seeing deer very frequently. It would be tough knowing the reason was from the neighbors altering deer movements with baiting. Fair chase is what it's all about. If you feel you have to bait since that's the only way you can fill a tag, do it in WI or MI. The difference between a cornfield and a pile of stocks is HARVEST & INTENT. You've intentionally harvested a crop and placed it a manner to lure deer. The difference is obvious. Soon as archery season is over, we'll fill the feeder with corn and pellets and help the deer through the winter. The people that claim food plots are essentially baiting have not made a food plot. I've planted them for 3 years and have yet to shoot a deer over one. I watch them eat lush greens all summer long but cash crops reign in the fall. It takes a lot of work to establish plots and I'm guessing a good majority of the participants are interested in much more than a deer harvest. Providing nutrition to the animals we love is a big part of it.
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