Fitzwho
WKR
Nope. Only child.Does your wife have a sister?
Nope. Only child.Does your wife have a sister?
Reading this makes me laugh out loud. I couldn’t imagine paying that much to hunt…My in-laws own a ranch in south Texas. It's a little over 3,000 acres. They lease it to a group of guys (5-6 dudes, tops). They pay $50,000 per year to lease it, plus spending thousands of dollars a month on protein, etc. They are pulling 170"+ low-fenced whitetails off the place. My wife will eventually own it and I won't be able to afford to not lease it at that rate.
There are premium leases in Mississippi that go for as much as $75/acreSomething done here in the south and eastern part of the country as most of you know is leasing hunting land. I grew up paying $4-5 a acre for a track of land that gave me year around rights to. You then get a group of guys and form a hunting club and everyone pays $800.00-$1500.00 for a full year of use of the property to do almost anything with. However now a days the average is $15.00 and as high is $35.00 a acre. A good club ranges from $5,000-$10,000.00 a year.
Duck leases seem to be even worse.
So what I keep hearing is I’m done paying X I can go elk hunting, mule deer, whitetail hunting etc for what I’m paying here to maybe kill a ok deer.
This lead to a friendly debate last week of is this causing more hunters to head west whether self guided or guided. Or is it just grip n grins posted on the ol web.
Just curious what your thoughts are.
I obviously don’t disagree with you on the lunacy of what people will pay for leases. And that’s an incredible deer you killed in every aspect. Just for reference, this deer was killed down there this year. They killed a 30” wide 201” deer a few years ago that pictures circulated around the internet saying it was from Mississippi and all sorts of other places. In all those dumb emails that get forwarded and posted all over whitetail forums.Reading this makes me laugh out loud. I couldn’t imagine paying that much to hunt…
Then again I shot this guy 70 yards from my back door this year on my 20 acres here in Ohio. No food plots, no feeders, just a good piece of property that acts like a funnel during the rut.
It was noon, on a 60 degree day and I had only been sitting there for about an hr. I counted 21 points… Still need to get him scored.View attachment 373110
Oh, did I mention it was my first sit all year, and I shot him sitting on on the ground without a blind?
Sounds like you'll be needing to work a "landowner" clause into the lease agreement.My in-laws own a ranch in south Texas. It's a little over 3,000 acres. They lease it to a group of guys (5-6 dudes, tops). They pay $50,000 per year to lease it, plus spending thousands of dollars a month on protein, etc. They are pulling 170"+ low-fenced whitetails off the place. My wife will eventually own it and I won't be able to afford to not lease it at that rate.
Ha! Small world, I hunt the other side of that ranch.I obviously don’t disagree with you on the lunacy of what people will pay for leases. And that’s an incredible deer you killed in every aspect. Just for reference, this deer was killed down there this year. They killed a 30” wide 201” deer a few years ago that pictures circulated around the internet saying it was from Mississippi and all sorts of other places. In all those dumb emails that get forwarded and posted all over whitetail forums.
View attachment 373125
10-4 I'm with you nowNo I'm saying the average man a couple generations ago just didn't have as much free time and disposable income to hunt as we do now. So back then there were more hunters that hunted less, now we have less hunters that hunt more. Speaking in terms of averages.
Out here in western Washington, most of the private timber companies started charging for access. About $375 for 100,000 acres access, along with another 600 or so permitees.
What is different in Washington is the amount of public land versus private. There is only a certain amount people are willing to pay, if there are game to hunt. Right now that's dwindling in both private and public land.You’re now in phase 2 of leasing land.
The next phase is the timber company realizing they’re only leasing that land for 2.25 dollars per acre. They’ll realize that people are willing to pay far more than that and before you know it, 15+ dollars an acre is in your future. At those prices, people get upset with the amount of traffic so they’ll block it off into smaller portions and hunt clubs will form.
The same thing happened here in the east. We’re just about 25 years ahead of you.
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What is different in Washington is the amount of public land versus private. There is only a certain amount people are willing to pay, if there are game to hunt. Right now that's dwindling in both private and public land.
Something done here in the south and eastern part of the country as most of you know is leasing hunting land. I grew up paying $4-5 a acre for a track of land that gave me year around rights to. You then get a group of guys and form a hunting club and everyone pays $800.00-$1500.00 for a full year of use of the property to do almost anything with. However now a days the average is $15.00 and as high is $35.00 a acre. A good club ranges from $5,000-$10,000.00 a year.
Duck leases seem to be even worse.
So what I keep hearing is I’m done paying X I can go elk hunting, mule deer, whitetail hunting etc for what I’m paying here to maybe kill a ok deer.
This lead to a friendly debate last week of is this causing more hunters to head west whether self guided or guided. Or is it just grip n grins posted on the ol web.
Just curious what your thoughts are.
Living in the Midwest, leases are ruining our sport. They always preach recruitment and retention are necessary for protecting our way of life. Just try knocking on a door to gain accesss in Ohio, good luck. Out of frustration, guys lease up farms. So now it’s a pay to play transaction. A new hunter, especially a kid, sure isn’t going to cough up several thousands of dollars to hunt.What is different in Washington is the amount of public land versus private. There is only a certain amount people are willing to pay, if there are game to hunt. Right now that's dwindling in both private and public land.
Momma always said if you want nice things you better get a good job. Even golf - you better get a good job (or have the lucky pass) or you gonna be playin with shitty clubs your whole life and always gonna be hittin it 230 off the tee while the guys with money have a nice driver and hittin 300 yards. All joking aside the pay for play sucks and I count my blessings daily that I live in a public land western paradise.If you morally object to the pay to play game, or can’t afford it, you’ll be stuck sharing marginal habita which is so over crowded. The quality of hunt is hardly worth the effort. You have to be pretty determined to continue to hunt public land in most of Ohio. A new guy isn’t going to stay in the sport very long before he takes up golfing. The experience on private property is generally exponentially better.
Financially, leasing makes plenty of sense. For example. Let’s say you want to buy your own land. Average price of 50 acres in my area is $300,000. You need 20% down to buy it. That’s 60k, monthly loan payment is $1900 for 20 years. Over the life of that loan you will pay $450,000 total.
Now, lease a piece of ground. Let’s say land is $25/acre. You lease 200 acres. That’s $5000/year. Split that with another friend and it’s only $2500 yr. So 1/11th of the yearly investment and you get 4x the amount of land.