Lastcar
Lil-Rokslider
Hello All,
We are considering a move from Vancouver, BC to Blaine, Washington. Long story short there are some great homes with facilities for animals on 5 acres or so around $450k versus $1.5M to $2M in our parts of Canada. Commute for the better half goes up 10-15 minutes even with the crossing. Using Nexus of course. She is American although has been in Canada for 16 years now. So as far as immigrating, I do have the easier of the paths. By no means a piece of cake from my early research but none the less I have a running start.
I work from home so I'll be A OK to work from there and won't have to seek out work.
But enough about the fluff...
Up here we have pretty blanket seasons. Opens this date, hunt how ever you want (bow, rifle, shotgun), here's your bag limit and closes this date (give or take).
We also have draws of course for various species and locations. But every critter has an general open season somewhere in the province. I get that won't be an option anymore. I can get over that and live with the draw system being more prevalent.
Wondering if any you guys on the ground in WA would be cool chatting for 15 minutes or so to help wrap my head around what my season would actually look like. Totally cool with it being different than what I have now, but need some help turning the regs into something tangible in my head.
This is actually a good chunk of my hesitation on fully committing. I'd be giving up being a BC resident so naturally lose my right to hunt here other than with a guide.I just want to make sure I understand what I am getting myself into.
If you don't mind sparing a short bit of time by phone to help me out, be much appreciated.
Of course with my 5 acres I plan of having a couple of llamas. For two reasons, one I want an animal as socially inept as me and willing to pack part of the load. Have no idea how practical that'd be in the more dense parts of WA forests but in the alpine should work. Not overly well thought but don't crush a guys poorly contemplated dream! Cause that is one my pros on my pros and cons list! ;-)
We are considering a move from Vancouver, BC to Blaine, Washington. Long story short there are some great homes with facilities for animals on 5 acres or so around $450k versus $1.5M to $2M in our parts of Canada. Commute for the better half goes up 10-15 minutes even with the crossing. Using Nexus of course. She is American although has been in Canada for 16 years now. So as far as immigrating, I do have the easier of the paths. By no means a piece of cake from my early research but none the less I have a running start.
I work from home so I'll be A OK to work from there and won't have to seek out work.
But enough about the fluff...
Up here we have pretty blanket seasons. Opens this date, hunt how ever you want (bow, rifle, shotgun), here's your bag limit and closes this date (give or take).
We also have draws of course for various species and locations. But every critter has an general open season somewhere in the province. I get that won't be an option anymore. I can get over that and live with the draw system being more prevalent.
Wondering if any you guys on the ground in WA would be cool chatting for 15 minutes or so to help wrap my head around what my season would actually look like. Totally cool with it being different than what I have now, but need some help turning the regs into something tangible in my head.
This is actually a good chunk of my hesitation on fully committing. I'd be giving up being a BC resident so naturally lose my right to hunt here other than with a guide.I just want to make sure I understand what I am getting myself into.
If you don't mind sparing a short bit of time by phone to help me out, be much appreciated.
Of course with my 5 acres I plan of having a couple of llamas. For two reasons, one I want an animal as socially inept as me and willing to pack part of the load. Have no idea how practical that'd be in the more dense parts of WA forests but in the alpine should work. Not overly well thought but don't crush a guys poorly contemplated dream! Cause that is one my pros on my pros and cons list! ;-)