Some Punk(s) Stole my Treestand
#11
I would never leave a stand on public ground.All your chain did was keep an honest man honest.Plus I never want someone else to know where I am hunting.A climber is a most when hunting public.I have had stands stolen on private property,right behind the landowners home.A theif is a theif.They will go through the extra work to steal it.If you put another one out they will find away to steal it or as much of your stuff as possible.Sorry they stoled your stuff but it happens every day around here.While other areas of the county have crime rates on the decline,Ohio's is on a rise.
#13
a few years ago, i had a loc-on and a ladder stolen also. I had an idea who did it but i was 100% sure.. So the next year i was out scouting the same area guess what i found my ladder and stand with in 75yards of where they stolen it. So i just took back what was mine, i left his bow holder and bow rope there because they wasnt mine.. So about 2week later i was talking to the farmer that was farming the ground and he was telling me someone stole his sons stand from the same woods i was hunting.. and it was public ground..
#14
You had to leave your safety belt behind, too? Was that too heavy to carry all the way into the woods? That must have been some hike into the forest. And what kind of modern Dan'l Boone do we have roaming the woods, that can track and locate exactly where you placed that tree stand, so deep in the forest.
Fella probably has a metal detector all ready, in case you bury and hide the next new tree stand. He seems to have your one and only location, all located real well.
Thanks for warning about them Dan'l Boone fellas.
Fella probably has a metal detector all ready, in case you bury and hide the next new tree stand. He seems to have your one and only location, all located real well.
Thanks for warning about them Dan'l Boone fellas.
#16
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 1,203
It's sad that one cannot utilize ladder stands or lock-ons for public-land use without a lot of risk. Sounds like the risk is moderate to high in some areas that the stand will be messed with or stolen. I can't get over the story of the father and son walking out with someone else's stand. It's one thing to steal, but to do it in front of your child is on a whole other level.
As far as Valentine goes, I suspect he has a vitamin B12 deficiency. I've noticed many off the wall/negative comments to people's posts as well as my own. If not a vitamin deficiency then......use your imagination.
As far as Valentine goes, I suspect he has a vitamin B12 deficiency. I've noticed many off the wall/negative comments to people's posts as well as my own. If not a vitamin deficiency then......use your imagination.
#17
I have had a few stands stolen on private property. Was not happy about that at all. but i have learned that the person who steals your stand will always be back, especially during hunting season. If he saw a stand he will most likely be back to hunt the area. If you see someone.. question them hard and don't back down. I've gotten one of my stands back that way.
#18
Fork Horn
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Wisconsin
Posts: 320
^^ This. Never leave a stand on land that has public access. Both because you want to avoid theft, but probably equally important to keep your stand location secret from others. For some reason, a known stand becomes a magnet for lazy hunters that can't/won't do their own scouting. It's mainly for this reason that I use a climber or pop-up and keep my trail hidden (use few, if any, visible trail markers...I use sticks, trees etc to mark it mentally). I prefer to avoid anyone when in the field, and take measures to ensure that I'm a ghost out there. The best trips are those where I know where most/all nearby hunters are (unless they're really good at also covering their tracks), but they have no idea that I've been there...
You're even more limited when your tree stand is missing. Or when someone uses your stand when you're not there and screws up your setup by busting deer. That's the tradeoff of public land...and the reason why it's best to go through the trouble of keeping your setups secret.
You're even more limited when your tree stand is missing. Or when someone uses your stand when you're not there and screws up your setup by busting deer. That's the tradeoff of public land...and the reason why it's best to go through the trouble of keeping your setups secret.
Last edited by UPHunter08; 09-27-2011 at 09:43 AM.
#20
Giant Nontypical
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Ohio
Posts: 7,876
Think about this. if everyone started claiming trees no one would be able to hunt who didn't squat in one. Leaving your stuff behind is stealing. Kind of like using the center of the road to park your car because it's a really good place to park. You can't leave your car parked for deer season on a public ground. Soon the dnr will start confiscating stands that will be required by law to have some kind of ownership label and holding them charging the hunter for having to haul (tow) it away.
Take your stuff in and take it out. No, it's not too bad you can't leave your stuff there all season and no I don't remove anyones crap.
There's a local public land that has one tree covering an open field and some bone head leaves his stand there.