![]() |
Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
Just curiousabout your experiences... my personal worst encounter afield with a fellow " human" happened last year on state land in Michigan. I hunt a cedar swamp and pack boots in as I have to wear waders to get to my blind. I put the boots on once I get to the blind to avoid having to wear wet, cold waders during my hunt. I walked out around noon to eat lunch with my brother and left my boots in my blind, concealed behind a large log, covered with some swamp grass. When I got back to my blind a little while later, my boots were gone! I ended up meeting up with the thief later that afternoon as he came walking back through to see if there was anything else he could pilfer. He honestly seemed like he was about a half bushel shy of a half bushel.
I also had a tree stand stolen a few years back... found the lock cut at the base of the tree... only to meet up with the guy that took it a couple weeks later. Without ANY accusations, I started talking to him about how someone had taken my stand. HE ADMITTED TO TAKING IT, then proceded to tell me that it was in HIS tree (state land, mind you) and I wasn' t getting it back. |
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
well i had my stand taken this year also, but never met up with the guy, but last year while setting up on other property, a land owner next door told us to watch where we put our stands, we made sure to set up on the right land, the prick thought he' d be nice and ride his quad up and down the property line he did this for about a half hour. what would you do? i think if it happens again i' ll go talk to him and ask why he thinks he has to do that and what i' ve done wrong to him.
|
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
Quack Addict, Did you get the waders or the treestand back?
|
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
We have some ticked off farmers the farm the land we hunt but the lady who owns it is relation to the 5 of us that hunt it so they hate that we hunt it and they can' t. Well one year then spread moth balls all over the woods near our stands. Stole a ladder stand and road the 4-wheeler up and down the field lanes anytime they saw our vehicles there hunting. Well last year they decided to put 3 large I-beams across the entrance to the field lane to try to keep us from driving back there becuase they say we cut ruts in the lanes and it tear up the tractors. So we talked to the owner and she said to drive around them out in the field so we did. We' ll see what happens this year but I' m sure it will top all the others. If we could just talk the lady into canning the farmers and finding someone new we would be alot better off.
|
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
I guess I should have included that... sorry for the omission. I did end up getting the boots back. The guy had already walked the boots back to his vehicle when I met up with him in the woods - after I left the woods early with freezing feet, I found his truck and waited there with my brothers until he walked out of the woods a good hour to hour and a half after dark. He stated " I didn' t know they were yours" ; I' d never even seen this guy before... so of course he wouldn' t know they were mine. The next words out of his mouth were " You shouldn' t leave your **** in the woods." Maybe so. My reply to him was that he shouldn' t be a thief.
I never got the tree stand back (different spot, different idiot), but I did get the valves out of his valve stems the following year. Could I argue he parked in my parking space, also on state land? |
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
I don' t see how you guys put up with that crap.
titleist, If they want to play silly @$$ games then you ought to play back. 1 bottle of Karo syrup in the crank case of a couple of tractors might give them a whole new appreciation for ******* with people. |
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
Worst encounter I had was some yahoo yelling at us for hunting to close to his house. We were on another farm (with permission) and about 300 yards and across the road from his house. We were hunting doves with 8 shot and hadn' t even fired yet.
My dad had a deer taken from him at gun point. An in-bred (literally) from neighboring land said he was taking it or else while making many references to his loaded rifle. I' ve heard others saying they had similar run-ins with this fellow. I never hunted on that end of the property. I didn' t want any chance of meeting up with that guy. Nobody' s seen this guy since the early 1980s. Maybe he ran into the wrong guy. Scott Meier White Oak Lodge |
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
My most recent bad experience was last year on opening day of m/l...I was hunting on a farm where only a couple people were supposed to be hunting, and I know all the other guys that had permission, and some guy I had never seen before came and set less than 50 yds from me...I took a leak and then left lol hopefully it kept any deer away from him.
|
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
Two years ago was a hot November in central Ontario. On the last day, the temperatures finally dipped below 0 (celcius) and we were all pumped.
We were doing our first run of the day. Unfortunatley, another group got in before us and there were lots of us in a relatively small area. That' s not the bad part. As I neared the end of the run, a shot ran out. Then, two, three, then 10 and so on. Some absolute brain dead excuse for a human decides to take a cannon of his and do some target practice on the only good day of the season. He had it with a bipod sitting at a table firing at targets he put on a log pile. The worst part is that he was firing directly towards us without a proper backstop. One of our doggers came out and rightly chewed him out. He stopped for all of 5 minutes and continued firing again. My idea was to drive behind him and all of us empty our rifles in the air. Common sense prevailed and nobody but the dogger ever got to tell him off. Jerk! |
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
Silentassasin, That would be a great little prank to play. I forgot the add a little light on the whole story. The bad part of all this is the wife of the farmer of the land is my dad' s first cousin; my g-pa and her dad are brothers. Her family (4 boys, and a girl) for some reason all despise my family. When all this happened it ticked my dad off so he called his uncle (the farmers father in law) and they had it out on the phone. Well since then they haven' t really talked becuase of all that has gone on. At family get togethers like reunions and christmas they never show and it is never held at their parents house becuase no one will go. So needless to say they recked the family and are now pretty much outcasts. So recently the farmer, his wife, and her sisters all got into it. So now that family is basically all on their own. I' m sure I' ve totally confused everyone with all the name calling and everything. So let' s just say this family that farms the land is major problem causer in our community and there are only a few who can even put up with them. There are dozens of other stories on how stupid they are and the stunts they try to pull. But I' ll just leave it at this.
|
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
During October I always take two weeks off for hunting. I head up into the Cascades with everything I need, including enough wood for the whole two weeks. By mid-October it' s usually started raining and dry wood is hard to find. I only have a little dinky propane heater and it gets dang cold up there, so by the time I get back to camp each night, a hot fire is all I can think of. Well, last year I hauled my little trailer up on Wednesday night (old trailer---no lights, no heat, no fridge or stove), and stacked 2-weeks worth of wood right next to it. I even set out a couple chairs and a little table with a coffee cup on it, in an attempt to make it look lived-in. I headed home and drove back up Friday morning. When I got there, I found that some guys had taken every last bit of my wood. I honestly don' t remember ever being as angry as I was at that moment! What kind of person takes somebody' s wood in the middle of October? I' m sure they didn' t know I was a woman, but I' m sure it probably wouldn' t have made a difference. I watched for my wood for a week, everytime I came upon a camp. Alot of the pieces were easy to recognize. I finally found the guys' camp the day after elk season ended. The guys were gone, but some of the wood was still there. I think maybe God didn' t let me find them because He knew it wasn' t going to be pretty and I probably would have gotten myself into trouble.
This year I' ll be hauling all my wood up with me when I head up on Friday. But if any of it disappears, I know where I' m heading first! |
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
the Time two hunters came up to me looking friendly ,then sucker punched me and kicked me in the groin. never expected it.And threw my my chair and crossbow and two of my walking canes in to the briars . They kept on cussing about my x-bow and how much of a poor excuse for a real bow hunter I am. by the time I got my canes out of the briars and retrieved my broken crossbow they were out of the woods and cut my tires.
|
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
When I was 14 and on my first deer hunt with my father on Private Property I was still hunting and walked up on a nice Buck. Raised my gun and Bang down it went,I didn' t even feel the recoil. Cause some guy was tresspassing and shot it. Back at the house I told the Owner and rest of the hunting party what happened and they told me I should have shot him. Don' t know if they were kidding or what but back in those days, tresspassers weren' t taken so lightly in those parts of the woods.
|
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
Man you guys experiences are horrible I have been accidently shot at but I have never heard of guys being assaulted or robbed in the while hunting in the field.What a shame what this world is coming to when the scariest thing in the woods are humans not the wildlife.
|
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
I guess I didn' t have it as bad as I though.......Cardeer, your story REALLY sucks.
My story is really kinda lame by comparison. I was set up in my blind on private property. I have permission to be there, as do a " few others" whom I don' t know. It was late, getting very close to end of hunting hours. Here comes this guy walking down the trail, stops litterally 10' from my blind, drinks a cup of coffee, smokes a cigarette, talks on his cell phone, and THEN turns towards me (still 10' feet away THANK GOD) and takes a leak. [X(]I tried to stay quiet since I figured he would walk off, and any deer in the area that knew he was around, would see him leave and relax, perhaps walking by and giving me a shot. No such luck. He sits down and lights another cigarette, more cell phone talking, it turns out he is waiting for his buddies to meet him there. I figure it' s over for today and make my presence known. You should have seen his face when he asked " How long have you been there?" Bright side.....I guess my camo worked!!:D |
RE: Your worst encounter afield with a fellow " human"
I feel for you Cardeer ,
crossbows aren' t exactly welcomed by the archers here either , but they don' t assault you over one . I' ll be using one this year during our Late Archery season , and you can bet that nobody is gonna do that to me . I' m pretty good with the ol' skinnin' knife ... [>:] You mentioned walking canes , does that mean that those azzholes assaulted a disabled person ? If so , may they rot in Hell ! |
[Deleted]
[Deleted by Admins]
|
| All times are GMT -8. The time now is 01:58 AM. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.