As mentioned, 25 years, 100% DIY.
In all seriousness to me a DIY hunt means you aren’t paying for a service. I don’t think paying for a transporter disqualifies you from DIY. Paying a ranch fee isn’t DIY ...
There are vast amounts of native land in Alaska that you have to pay a trespass fee to hunt. There is no difference in this land vs the state/federal/DNR land surrounding it. No fences to impede game. The game doesn’t prefer this native land over the adjacent land.Huh?
Ignoring the fact that your first sentence and your second are contradictory, I'd like to focus on the idea that a ranch fee, trespass fee, or whatever you want to call it is a disqualifier for DIY.
This idea appears at least one other time earlier in the thread, and I don't see how it holds up to scrutiny.
However you managed to get on the land you hunt makes no never-mind to me.
Got it. I misread your postIt's @YukonCornelius' idea, not mine.
("ranch fee")
I was responding to his post. I disagree with him.
My editing skills are subpar.Huh?
Ignoring the fact that your first sentence and your second are contradictory, I'd like to focus on the idea that a ranch fee, trespass fee, or whatever you want to call it is a disqualifier for DIY.
This idea appears at least one other time earlier in the thread, and I don't see how it holds up to scrutiny.
However you managed to get on the land you hunt makes no never-mind to me.
Explain what you mean? A trespass fee would be similar to a hunting club fee? A ranch fee would be where you are paying a ranch that preps the land for game?Huh?
Ignoring the fact that your first sentence and your second are contradictory, I'd like to focus on the idea that a ranch fee, trespass fee, or whatever you want to call it is a disqualifier for DIY.
This idea appears at least one other time earlier in the thread, and I don't see how it holds up to scrutiny.
However you managed to get on the land you hunt makes no never-mind to me.
I agree here as long as that land your paying to access has not been prepped by the person you are paying to increase your odds. I haven’t hunted lower 48 in 13 years.Huh?
However you managed to get on the land you hunt makes no never-mind to me.
This is the point I disagree with.[...]Paying a ranch fee isn’t DIY [...]
I agree here as long as that land your paying to access has not been prepped by the person you are paying to increase your odds. I haven’t hunted lower 48 in 13 years.
And my hunting in lower48 was on our family property in GA.
I don’t think paying to access land would disqualify IMO. Ranch fees may not even be the correct term.This is the point I disagree with.
If you located the area you want to hunt, without Sacawagea, say, I I don't see how paying for access or not paying for access has anything to do with DIY.
I don’t think paying to access land would disqualify IMO. Ranch fees may not even be the correct term.
Glad we can have discussions without cussing each other out. And running to the corner to suck our thumbs as we hurl insults at each other.
One where I pull the trigger? Does that count?What is your definition of a DIY (Do It Yourself) Hunt?
DIY to me practically defines itself... Do It Yourself. Your research/scouting, your own hunt plans, generally solo but not a requirement, no outside help during the hunt. If I'm going into a new area I will frequently ask folks I know if they have any helpful tid bits of information on that hunt, I'd consider that research that wouldn't boot you from the DIY class. Basically no guides in my mind.What is your definition of a DIY (Do It Yourself) Hunt?