I didn't want to hijack the AZ new resident thread but @CorbLand 's reply got me wondering. How many of you (us) have any type of lifetime license? Anyone ever regretted getting one? Mine has a pretty good backstory which I may have told here before.
I wanted to buy a lifetime license for years in Minnesota. However, just out of college, without much disposable income, the wife always put the kibosh on it. She thought we were better off nickel & diming it every year. Fast-forward to when she left me. We were just a couple months into the divorce when I was at fishing camp with my dad and his buddy. We got a little too deep into our respective bottles of spirits and I asked for their "wisdom" on my wedding ring. (I still hadn't taken it off; I guess the vows meant more to me than her.) I mentioned that I should probably quit wearing it but didn't know what to do with it. Shove it in a sock drawer for my niece and nephew to sell after I'm gone? The way the marriage ended it seemed like there was a bad enough history that no one would want it.
My dad's buddy suggested I sell it. Use the money on something I would have forever. Something the ex hadn't let me get but that I would enjoy and think about getting out of a bad marriage every time I used it. I commented that, for a non-hunter, it sure sounded like he was describing a gun. When we got back to the States I took the ring to a jeweler to be melted down for it's scrap value.
When I had the check in hand I almost did buy that gun. Instead I remembered that a lifetime license was something else she had been against. I had just enough money for a Minnesota lifetime sportsman's license. Every year my fishing, small game and trapping licenses are covered. I joke that I'm waiting to see if "till death do us part" means more to the State of Minnesota than it did to her. The nice part is that, even if I move out of state, I can still get a free license any year I want to come back to MN.
My only regret is that I didn't also get her ring to melt down too. Might have scored enough to get the lifetime MN white-tail deer license as well.
I wanted to buy a lifetime license for years in Minnesota. However, just out of college, without much disposable income, the wife always put the kibosh on it. She thought we were better off nickel & diming it every year. Fast-forward to when she left me. We were just a couple months into the divorce when I was at fishing camp with my dad and his buddy. We got a little too deep into our respective bottles of spirits and I asked for their "wisdom" on my wedding ring. (I still hadn't taken it off; I guess the vows meant more to me than her.) I mentioned that I should probably quit wearing it but didn't know what to do with it. Shove it in a sock drawer for my niece and nephew to sell after I'm gone? The way the marriage ended it seemed like there was a bad enough history that no one would want it.
My dad's buddy suggested I sell it. Use the money on something I would have forever. Something the ex hadn't let me get but that I would enjoy and think about getting out of a bad marriage every time I used it. I commented that, for a non-hunter, it sure sounded like he was describing a gun. When we got back to the States I took the ring to a jeweler to be melted down for it's scrap value.
When I had the check in hand I almost did buy that gun. Instead I remembered that a lifetime license was something else she had been against. I had just enough money for a Minnesota lifetime sportsman's license. Every year my fishing, small game and trapping licenses are covered. I joke that I'm waiting to see if "till death do us part" means more to the State of Minnesota than it did to her. The nice part is that, even if I move out of state, I can still get a free license any year I want to come back to MN.
My only regret is that I didn't also get her ring to melt down too. Might have scored enough to get the lifetime MN white-tail deer license as well.