Nickofthewoods
WKR
At a previous job I used to enforce the 14 day camping rule in Roosevelt and Arapahoe National Forests. To the best of my recollection, you can camp or store property in one place for a maximum of 14 days, at which point you must move it a minimum of 3 or 5 miles (can't remember) and then have yourself another stay of 14 days. After that I believe you have to move to a completely different national forest, like San Isabel, Pecos, Shoshone, etc., for a maximum stay of 60 days in one calendar year if I recall correctly.
So you might get a ticket if a Ranger, Deputy or Citizen notices your stuff from day 1 and keeps good record of it being there longer than 14 days. I believe that after 100 days the USFS can legally claim abandoned property. I didn't work for the FS, and I got tired of people abandoning their crap so it found its way to a dumpster sooner than later if I knew it was there for longer than 14 days with no sign of people around. Just don't leave anything out there you can't live without and don't be surprised who notices.
So you might get a ticket if a Ranger, Deputy or Citizen notices your stuff from day 1 and keeps good record of it being there longer than 14 days. I believe that after 100 days the USFS can legally claim abandoned property. I didn't work for the FS, and I got tired of people abandoning their crap so it found its way to a dumpster sooner than later if I knew it was there for longer than 14 days with no sign of people around. Just don't leave anything out there you can't live without and don't be surprised who notices.