I met with the guy and he gave my trail cam back. I told him I was sorry and he said to be more careful of property line in the future and that was it.
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So are the 2 red lines private and the middle public? If so do you have permission on either?It was approximately where the yellow dot is
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Got it. That thin strip is private property and appears to belong to Paul A., so be sure not to put your cam in the same spot. Looks like there are other good setup options directly south or west over the same public clearing so you still have options.The piece on the left is public. I don’t understand that strip but the piece on the right and the piece that the strip is part of are both owned by the same people. Hopefully that’s not to confusing.
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That depends on what state. In some you can legally go onto private property for the purpose of retrieving game if it was shot before it entered the private property.It's Ok to hunt closer to private. That's how I got my 1st buck in 2014. But at least make sure you're like 40yds or more away from that private property line.. because if you shoot a buck and he manages to run onto their property... you're screwed out of that buck.
I highly doubt the Peepulz Republik of Kalifornistan feels that way for hunters.That depends on what state. In some you can legally go onto private property for the purpose of retrieving game if it was shot before it entered the private property.
It was as near as I can tell with onX. It would have to be surveyed to be positive. It was within a couple feet of the line.
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As a non landowner and to play devil's advocate. I'm going to be looking into that field from the property line to get the best idea of the deer that are likely bedding on public land. I strongly respect property rights, but that is a door that swings both ways. The private landowner rights stop at the property line. The same way they would end if it were a private/private property boundary. The land owner may not like that a camera is watching public wildlife on private surface, but as long as the camera is on public ground I dont think there is a lot to be done. That gap is exactly the type of gray area that can't truly determined with record research and a land survey.As a landowner here's how this seems to me:
The camera may or may not have actually been on private property. It was undoubtedly directed toward the private property (hayfield) in an effort to surveil whatever was happening out there. It wasn't 'watching' an area which could be hunted by the camera owner. The property owner was/is defensive of his land and the hunting rights there. He's almost assuredly experienced trespassers and illegal hunters there. The property owner felt the camera was on his land and that the hunter probably was going to be pushing the boundary. There's admittedly a good bit of gray area....conjecture here.
As I see it....again owning property....the issue is hunters who push the boundaries of property. They may not do a single illegal thing, but pushing the edges often causes tension with neighboring landowners. We've all heard the accounts of treestands placed on edges where a hunter could theoretically shoot either way. It's not illegal in any way, but it contributes to tensions. If you're gonna push the edge, you'd better know where it is. You can expect pushback in some cases. I think it's legit to hunt all of a given property. I also think it's ill advised to be obvious about it....ergo; stay off the edges and hunt the interior. A lot of respect for landowners is how you keep great relations and sometimes open doors.
Exactly. I've looked through onX on some routes and the areas they show the "road" are off from the satellite imagery and my location isn't 100% accurate all the time, either. It's a good reference tool, but shouldn't be relied on as ground-truth when it comes to property lines.Id be careful relying on onx accuracy down to the inch... I've seen a couple instances in multiple states with family or friends land where lines were off sometimes up to 100 feet. This is land owned by a logger than knows every square inch of property line fwiw. Its only as accurate as the data its pulling.
As a non landowner and to play devil's advocate. I'm going to be looking into that field from the property line to get the best idea of the deer that are likely bedding on public land. I strongly respect property rights, but that is a door that swings both ways. The private landowner rights stop at the property line. The same way they would end if it were a private/private property boundary. The land owner may not like that a camera is watching public wildlife on private surface, but as long as the camera is on public ground I dont think there is a lot to be done. That gap is exactly the type of gray area that can't truly determined with record research and a land survey.
I'm glad things are peaceably resolved and the best route is always mutual respect.