What do you do?
#11
Fork Horn
Join Date: Nov 2014
Location: Maine & northern FloRida
Posts: 195
I will second this response, definitely tough to take but it was the right choice! The other response to move to a different location with more difficult access is good also.
#12
Whenever you are going in or see someone coming in after you IMO you are obligated to letting people know where you are. It's a matter of safety. Good bright flashlights are a must. You see his and he sees yours. Most times if you are in first and someone shows up and you are shining them they will be the one to relocate.
As you weren't sure of his position you made the right choice to not shoot.
As you weren't sure of his position you made the right choice to not shoot.
Last edited by uncle matt; 11-12-2015 at 06:47 AM.
#13
Here is something that I don't get. It makes perfect sense to me but it is not on the books.
In IL you cannot bow hunt within 100 yards of an inhabited dwelling without the occupants permission and it is 300 yards for gun hunting. So...................
on public land why isn't there the same guidelines for space from hunter to hunter? First guy in has right and others have to space out the required minimum yard. Of course if they are known to each other. Makes sense for safety IMO.
In IL you cannot bow hunt within 100 yards of an inhabited dwelling without the occupants permission and it is 300 yards for gun hunting. So...................
on public land why isn't there the same guidelines for space from hunter to hunter? First guy in has right and others have to space out the required minimum yard. Of course if they are known to each other. Makes sense for safety IMO.
#14
What I would have done I have did. Get out of the area if letting the other hunter know you were there and he/she still stayed in the area.
Instead of scouting public hunting areas I would start looking for places to hunt on private property. Farmer down the road from me will let any one hunt his woods and fields for deer if they first ask permission and promise to shoot at least one doe.
Get rid of cable TV only use basic cell phone IE no smart phone and the money saved will many times make payments on property of your own or a lease to hunt.
Al
Instead of scouting public hunting areas I would start looking for places to hunt on private property. Farmer down the road from me will let any one hunt his woods and fields for deer if they first ask permission and promise to shoot at least one doe.
Get rid of cable TV only use basic cell phone IE no smart phone and the money saved will many times make payments on property of your own or a lease to hunt.
Al
#15
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 1,926
Places I don't hunt
When I can see headlights from a parking lot. I'm too close. Two hundred yards from a parking lot usually means more hunters in so many acres, near that parking lot.
Pre-season for me is pre-season hiking and walking.
On an opening day I had one hunter enter the area I picked on public land. He was lost. He was so lost he was heading in the opposite direction from his vehicle; the one he was attemping to find. Of course, we were deep.
Pre-season for me is pre-season hiking and walking.
On an opening day I had one hunter enter the area I picked on public land. He was lost. He was so lost he was heading in the opposite direction from his vehicle; the one he was attemping to find. Of course, we were deep.
Last edited by Valentine; 11-12-2015 at 04:18 AM.
#16
Guys, one thing we need to be more specific about when we post about public lands is describing the land we are referring to. Some of these areas are huge, and others are small. So if we describe the area by acres responses will fit better.
As to hunting near the parking lot, well that depends on many factor. Last year I shot a 10pt 15 minutes after sitting down. I was about 3/8-1/2 mile from the parking lot. That afternoon I shot a fat A doe less than 100 yards from the parking lot. The area I shot the doe looked right to me. A dried pond bed with raised banks. I laid on the bank peering down towards a creek bed with my body mostly exposed and me considering a nap or 2 (but the thoughts of bugs crawling onto my face or into eye ears kept my head up. Shortly before dusk started falling 3 does came in and only 2 left.
It's all relative.
As to hunting near the parking lot, well that depends on many factor. Last year I shot a 10pt 15 minutes after sitting down. I was about 3/8-1/2 mile from the parking lot. That afternoon I shot a fat A doe less than 100 yards from the parking lot. The area I shot the doe looked right to me. A dried pond bed with raised banks. I laid on the bank peering down towards a creek bed with my body mostly exposed and me considering a nap or 2 (but the thoughts of bugs crawling onto my face or into eye ears kept my head up. Shortly before dusk started falling 3 does came in and only 2 left.
It's all relative.
#17
Spike
Join Date: Nov 2015
Posts: 9
You made the right call for sure. I know it sucks but have had similar things happen to me over the years that cost me deer and or hunting opportunities. When I used to hunt public and land and I was short standed I would get up and move if they refused to and I made all the noise I could while doing it and if I had to use the bathroom I'd pull it out and water a tree or a deer trail of there was one nearby. But I would move to another spot. The biggest buck of my life came into a field once as I was walking into the woods.....I put the scope on it and lowered the rifle in the same breath because I knew in the adjacent field there was a pasture with horses in it. That field and horses were well beyond my muzzleloader a range but I could not take that chance. I know guns/ballistics etc and still look back on it and it makes me SICK but I know I did the right thing. Freaky, strange, and odd things CAN happen and there just not worth it. You made the right call no doubt.
#18
I hunt public land exclusively. You made the right call. I often had other hunters coming in in the dark and if I was already in my stand I would hit them with my flashlight and let them know where I was. Most move to a different location and if the tables are turned I have to be the one to relocate. Its only hunter ethics 101. But sometimes you have a slob hunter that will deliberately park his butt right by you. That's when I go tell him to please move to another spot. If he refuses I notify him that he will not see any deer there because I will make his sit a waste of time. I might just have to take a dump right behind a tree by him and whistle while doing so...lol
#19
If someone is already in a stand that I had intentions of hunting I will keep on moving. If someone doesn't afford me that same courtesy, then we can just hunt together that day as far as I'm concerned.
Also, I won't rule out hunting any particular spot on public or private land, regardless of it's size, proximity to roads or parking areas.
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Also, I won't rule out hunting any particular spot on public or private land, regardless of it's size, proximity to roads or parking areas.
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Last edited by tndrbstr; 11-13-2015 at 04:50 AM.
#20
If it's still dark and someone is coming in on me I use my flashlight to signal them. Typically they simply head another way. You did the right thing by not taking a shot you weren't sure about. No deer is worth risking someones life.
-Jake