- Banned
- #161
Short answer. Yes, in Oregon.Just so I am clear you would need to give notice to all of the property owners at common corner, not just the one you are using to get access to the corner?
I agree but we're in the "have not's" category instead of the "have's" and that's what we get, regardless of the fact that we own it.Didn't think I could literally just google corner hopping, yet there it is. Pretty crappy to not be able to hop a corner public to public,
I'm amazed at how much credit some here are willing to give "the left" for being so clever and cunning. LOLjust remember the enemy of your enemy is not your friend. You enlist some leftists in the hopes of expanding hunting opportunities and you’ll end up with access for all purposes except hunting.
do not lack the imagination to see how the left can play their game within yours.
I'm amazed at how much credit some here are willing to give "the left" for being so clever and cunning. LOL
Then you are in the weeds. You need to have a land surveyor determine if the property corner was set in error unacceptable of the standards of care for the time in which it was set. Generally corners set by the BLM and GLO are held to be without error.Devil’s Advocate II - what if the monument wasn’t placed correctly in the first place?
Yeah, more pure BS...nobody is claiming hand-held GPS accuracy is sub-foot, but sure as hell is close enough to relocate pins I punched in the ground 20+ years ago that have been changed from one coordinate system to another (many after differential correction). Off by a few feet, not 20 feet, not 100's of feet...a few feet.I am not trying to be a horses rear. But to me private property rights trump any bodies right to trespass on my or anyone else's private property (no matter by how little) to access landlocked public land. BuzzH there is a difference in locating a pin and relocating a pin. And if you think your GPS is spot on, the next time you go to your favorite hunting honey hole try leaving home before daylight and drive with your lights off and just follow the road with your GPS. By the way land lines on your OnX, Hunt Stand or whatever app. are only as accurate as they are entered by the government worker at the assessors office. Many properties have not been surveyed in several generations. My property has not been surveyed since the 1950s. I walked around the fences with a real time GPS before I bought the property in 2002. The deed said 1731/2 acres, The GPS said 150, I talked to the owners and we decided to have a licensed surveyor examine the deed and plat it in his computer. We then agreed to go by his professional opinion.
I say try to prosecute the next person that steps foot on your lawn. If they judge/cops laugh at you, then you're clear to corner cross!
So do this….
Anyone can open OnX and walk outside to the nearest property line. See how close you are.
Be sure to zoom in and then ‘Mark your Location’
See what it says.
Right, what a joke.Apparently they dont even have to step on your lawn. If you see someone waving their arm over your airspace call the cops.
I cant even get the person to stop throwing that worthless newspaper thing on my property.
So….
Just went did a Beta test.
I went out to my driveway and stood for several minutes with OnX open on my phone at the control joint in the concrete.
(This would represent the intersection of ‘land corners’)
I then ‘Marked My Location’ on OnX
The location from OnX was approximately 8’ away from where I was standing.
My point is that at some point in time you probably won’t always be on public land when corner crossing using OnX.
Now, if you had a sub-meter gps in your hand, you will probably be pretty close.
But I haven’t seen many hunters carrying one of them around.
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