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Open private land


Saw557

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I caught up with Bill Penning, MN DNR Farmland Wildlife Leader regarding the landowner permit issue.

In my past dealings with DNR wildlife managers and conservation officers, I had not heard this perspective, and have been incorrect in my assumption that the DNR supports this program. It appears more that they are mandated to carry it out.

Bill informed me that DNR has testified before the legislature that they would just as soon do-away with the program because of the administrative headache it presents them. Complaints for both sides (landowner and hunter) are rampant, year after year, and a big reason that applications are due in December is to ensure that landowners applying for these permits actually own land.

He also mentioned that he would appreciate the legislature defining "qualified" lands.

In response to my positive experiences in many permit areas throughout the state, as well as positive experiences by others, Bill responded in saying that there were no current metrics to measure "success" of the program. In response to the rule requiring landowners to hunt their own land, the backlash was apparently quite large, and he even called it an "administrative nightmare."

Thank you Bill for your insight!

Joel

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Rather than superimpose my opinion on the post regarding Bill Pennings words, I wanted to delve a little deeper.

He mentioned that there's no metrics to measure the success of the program, which in my opinion, doesn't mean it's unsuccessful, it just means they have no way to assess how well it's doing.

It seems that this program is somewhat handcuffing our DNR's ability to perform their management tasks, and ultimately acheive their biological goals. At the same time, how do we achieve better access to private lands in the lease and outfitter-ridden hunting world we've come to know? Esp. in the face of $5+ corn and $10+ beans??? What incentives are we going to give to landowners to provide access? Like it or not, they get to control who enters and does-not enter their land. Maybe Brittman's (and many others) support of walk-in hunting grounds is more a viable option than I've previously considered? But at what cost?

This information gives me pause, yet I'm quite reluctant to believe that there are other proposals, programs, and ideas that yeild as much available turkey hunting land as such a small cost in terms of taxes, fees/licenses, and/or manpower.

Thoughts?

Joel

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Joel, I hunt the same zone every year and have been drawn seven years straight. Gobbler kill succes rate for me is 50%. Have two farms and a vast amount of public land to hunt. I have opportunites on Toms every year and consistently pass on Jakes in my lap.

Good share of landowner names on the list in my zone are repeats.

Each and every year:

I actually pull the landowner data ASAP and then scout each "new" one with my PLAT book in hand. Can scout via Google Earth and actually driving the area. The majority of properties that are listed in my area may hold some feeding turkeys, but property lines indicate you are tresspassing the minute you step into the adjacent woods.

In response to another one of your questions: I have called them first, but the two properties that I hunted on - I stopped by before my season and introduced myself. Both have since been split and developed eliminating any repeat visits.

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WE have killed turkeys on KS walk-in lands. All properties were woodlot / ag mixes. None that we hunted were large tracts of woods.

Interesting story. Last day at mid-day, we pulled the truck over and walked down on a small wooded creek on a KS Walk-In. Called for a little bit, decided cover too sparce. No gobbles or response. We headed out.

Drove by the area about 90 minutes later and there was a HUGE tom in full strut - right where we had been set up and were calling. KS turkeys wander.

Unfortuantely we were headed home (I had my two and my partner had one) and he had to get back to MN.

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From my expierence's in hunting in Montana, they have a walk in program. I have been told it's funded by the hunters license sales. I have no problems accessing almost any land and the non resident can hunt in many locations for many if not all species.

I personally have no issue with paying a small fee increase to access land espically when I am a non resident and I can drive out west and start hunting without asking or driving tons of miles to get permission and be told no.

From what numerous landowners have told me while hunting there, they are happy with the program and so are the hunters.

We have even be lucky enough to camp on a few landownerrs property and also use one of there freezers for our kill.

This could possibly be a wonderful program for all states that might want to end some of these issues. I'm sure they have a few issues as all programs seem too.

The other nice part of this is, one needs not pay any guides for land access. Seems to me to be a win win for all.

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I too have hunted these areas in Montana. It is called BLM (Bureau of Land Management) It is up to the landowners if it is walk-in only, or I hunted several ranches that you could drive into. It is funded by a fee put on all non-resident licenses.

The landowner gets paid for the number of days hunters were on their property. The landowner has no liability if a hunter is injured in any way and he is insured if a hunter kills a cow, or breaks a fence or whatever. The pay scale is different for each ranch depending on the number of acres open and the quality of habitat available.

Pretty good deal for all involved if you ask me.

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Brittman:

I understand what you're saying about the same landowners each time, and to a person like me or you who has hunted the same properties year after year, the program probably has only marginal benefit. However, go to a new zone, or put yourself in the shoes of a new hunter looking for land access in a new zone? Didn't you discover at least some of the land you hunt on now due to the landowner permit program? Maybe not, but I know I do.

I would likely be more supportive of abandoning the program, knowing what I know now, should the savings from ditching the program be translated into lesser license fees. More appealing yet would be to put these savings towards another landowner/partnership (call it walk-in, call it what you want) that perhaps works better?

My concern with Walk-in is our land values in turkey country. MN land prices are orders of magnitude in difference from land values in Montana, the Dakotas, and anywhere else Walk-in programs have been successful. See the DNR report on Walk-in. To provide landowners with enough incentive, we'll need a pretty penny. Is what we have so broken that it's worth scrapping in order to pay more for an unknown here that's been shown to be ineffective and costly in areas with comparable land values to our own?

Time-in, time-out, I come back to the philosophical rift between our increasingly urbanized hunting population and rural landowners (of only some of which hunt). I'm of the opinion that we need to work-with these landowners, be personable to these farmers; not provide them a social or monetary payoff so we can just come and go as we choose. The latter is more convenient to us, but is it really healthy for the dynamic between suburban and rural america? The increasingly provincial attitude of rural folks is in no small measure a result of the lack of time we all seem to have, the conveniences we "need," and the greater demand we place on hunting experiences that take rather than work-with or give-back.

These are just opinions, and who knows what's right.

Joel

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I dont believe that we will ever see the day that one can access private property without any issues without reimbursing the owner. For a small fee, I have no issues with it at all and also realize to access most private property, one will need to do so.

If it comes down to the value of land versus the fees collected then we are in a no win situation as we cannot be charged the moon and no program will ever work. This needs to be a two way street. One is not looking to purchase the land but only use it for a day or two.

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We need to make more private land public either by buying it outright or taking it through iminent domain. I have argued before for the right to hunt all ditch right of ways like the Dakotas. I have argued for all train track right of ways to be public. And I have argued for landfills to be used once as a landfill and them used as a WMA afterward as in some Colorado sites. I also argued against Potlatch leases and believe to my core that we need to have vast areas of timber land set aside for future generations. Plastic toilet paper is going to stink. Thes lands need to be for timber harvest, carbon sink, oxygen regeneration, wildlife, and most of all open to public hunting.

I have argued that it more important to preseve habitat for wildlife than it is to protect private property rights. All stream and lake shore should be open to the puplic to walk up and down the shore without creating a disturbance and every lake should have a maximum of developed feet of shoreline. Some needs to be left wild and open to the public. If you can not see this you are either selfish or have no progressive vision but you are probably very practical.

For years we incented -through tax break- timber companies to leave these lands open. Now they make more money from the leases and this leased land is off limits to the public even though their tax dollars helped the company to survive. It's a slap in the face and will ultimately lead to the European style of land use. Hans

And don't even get me started on human population control. We can hide blindly behind political correctness today and avoid these tough decisions. We won't have to set policy but our kids will have to make some vey hard choices. Nothing like passing the buck because we won't be here for the bill.

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I have killed every one of my MN gobblers on public land. My private properties often hold birds in winter, but they either dead, move along or are pressured out by the time I get to hunt. This land is a friend of a friends. No DNR influence!

We are the only ones who ask to hunt there, but I expect local uninvited visitors - verified with foot prints...

I usually hunt them to "let up & rest" my public spots for a day and/or hunt them when it may rain - since the birds tent to go out in the fields in the rain.

Still one of these days - these properties will pay off.

I agree with your comments. That is why MN needs to be very careful as they increase the number of permits in each zone! You could not hunt my public spots on weekends anymore!!!!

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To be honest, I would not want to see any MN walk-in hunting areas dedicated to turkeys.

Pheasants!!!

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How about sharing spots with the turkey guys grin.gif Half grassland/slough, half woodland mix?

I wholly agree on the permit # increase issue!!!

Joel

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I am glad our land is all private. Our lakeshore is all undeveloped and the woods and tall grasses are well taken care of. Except for an occasional need to drive a truck or tractor down the "road" in the woods, no ATVs or snowmobilers are allowed.

I will never "check" the box to open up hunting and never have. Just last weekend, we found a turkey blind in our woods (well hidden, but the snow gave it away). I just don't understand why people feel they can just "sneak in" and hunt.

We took the blind and left a note. Yesterday the guy called wanting his blind back. He claims "I was ditch hunting" even though his blind was 60 feet from the road. And, he was surprised you can't "ditch hunt" on my land anyway.

Should I give the blind back?

And, this guy did ask permission to hunt...and I said "No" as my wife and I are hunting late in the season. If we had a chance to hunt before him...we would have allowed him to hunt.

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I may be wrong, but if the blind is on your land, it's your blind. He knowingly trespassed to put it there in the first place.

Is it right to keep the blind? Maybe not. You may not know what you're dealing with and to avoid any issues later on, it may be in your best interests to give it back, but with a stern warning to stay out.

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If you are hunting a later season why not let some one hunt an early season. The birds seem to travel durning the spring anyway. What's on your land now more then likely will not be there later.

I'm hunting season E, I will be taking a nephew season A, a buddys wife season C and another nephew the last season. This is all on 70 acers.

One nice thing about Turkeys is you can call them in from a long distance. I called this one tom in from 3/4 to a mile away. He crossed a plowed field full trot, stopped 15 yards out, lifted his wing, whiped the sweat off his brow and took a full load of #4's to the noggin. grin.gif And this was after I let 4 people hunt 4 seasons befor me.

As for the blind, give it back. It's not worth the sh!t you would probably have to put up with. If it happens again call the DNR and let them bust his a$$.

Good luck on your hunt.

Dan

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My brother and is wife are hunting first season.

My wife and I are hunting a late season.

I don't want anyone in between for birds do hang out in our woods a lot and rarely leave the woods. It is my wife's first year hunting and I don't want the birds spooked so that she can get her first bird and be hooked like I am.

I told the guy that I will give his blind back, but only if he confesses to tresspassing and gets charged with it.

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Contact the DNR now and have them come out take the blind and call the guy (if you have his number). It is one thing to get mixed up and end up on private property - its another to ask and get told no... then say "screw that I am going there anyways."

It is your choice as a landowner to let people hunt your property. Its a respect and principle thing. If he does it to you he will do it to someone else. If it was me I might of spray painted the blind blaxe orange.

I had a bear guide place 3 baits on my property up north without permission. I saw a trail and walked right up to a hunter in a portable stand. After talking to him - he was a client of the guide who would drive them on an ATV on our driveway and come back at night to pick them up. The clients were told not to come out before dark

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I will probably give him his blind back...but after his turkey season is done.

That is what gets me. It wasn't a neighbor or anyone I knew and it wasn't a mistake. He was told that he couldn't hunt there, and went anyway for he knew that I don't live by the land. However, my father does and noticed the blind.

The comeback is always the same. "Well, where am I supposed to hunt then?" How and why is this my fault if he doesn't have a place to hunt?

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Wow very interesting post. I started reading and had to throw in my 2 cents. My family owns a 200 acre farm in houston county. So in my younger years I was able to enjoy the landowner benifits, but I no longer can. 2-3 years ago my father was denied a landowner permit and most set him a bit south for that year for sure. From a landowner perspective if they don't have a chance to hunt their own land why should anybody have that chance? Every year the seasons are full for hunters having permission. My dad hunts the first and I the second. Bottom line, if there is no benifit for landowners when it comes to turkey season you will have to be a good friend or family to hunt any property (or own yourself). The change I wouldn't mind seeing would be to maybe have it so that the landowners need to apply for the first three seasons so that it atleast gives others a chance if landowners are afraid people will mess up the turkeys for them. I do understand why people are upset with not finding many places or good places to hunt, but it has to be easier than deer season atleast there is more seasons.

Chris

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