idelkslayer
WKR
I would call your response passive aggressive at best. Generally, yes, a late arrival should defer to those who get there first.I understand that hunting public land in the west generally means you will be near other hunters but I was always taught to keep your distance and avoid ruining opportunities for other hunters who may have gotten there first. Apparently some hunters never received this teaching, or chose to ignore it tonight just to piss me off.
Tonight I hiked my ass off to get up to a ridge top by 4:30 PM so I could glass and hunt until dark. The spot I initially wanted to go to had 2 hunters posted on it glassing, so I went to an alternate ridge instead. After glassing around 30 minutes, I noticed another hunter coming towards me climbing up the same ridge, about 1000 yards away. I told myself this was no big deal, he obviously saw me and would hopefully keep his distance.
I checked on him again about 15 minutes later and he was still coming directly at me, now about 500 yards away. “Okay, he hopefully will drop off soon and give me some space but at this point he’s getting a bit close for comfort”.
15 minutes later he stopped about 200 yards short of me on the same ridge and as I stared at him, he sat down and looked to be glassing. “Okay, this is getting a bit annoying, but at least I’m higher up and have a drainage in front of me I can focus on.”
Nope, apparently that wasn’t good enough for him. 15 minutes later, now getting into prime hunting in the final hour of shooting light, HE WALKS DIRECTLY TO ME. He says, “Hey bro, would it totally screw you if I drop down this ridge to your left? That’s the best way back to where I parked”.
Trying to stay civil, I replied, “You know, I generally don’t make a habit of bothering other hunters, let alone hiking through the area they’re clearly glassing and hunting.”
Despite this and a few more brief words, he proceeded 10 feet in front of me, then dropped down into one of the two drainages I was actively hunting and proceeded to walk right through the middle of it, spoiling any potential deer hunting in that entire area.
Can you guys give me a sanity check? Is it too much to expect another hunter who arrived well after me to keep their distance, let alone not hike right next to me and then continue hiking through the middle of the area I’m actively hunting? Especially when there are multiple other routes to get to the vehicle that wouldn’t interfere with my hunting at all.
As much as you think you were completely visible it is possible to walk up on someone without seeing them, even in open country. You said you were "clearly glassing and hunting". I find it very difficult to interpret the actions of others in the field in order to know with a surety what they are doing and what their intentions are. You misinterpreted the other hunters actions during the lead up to your encounter. First you thought he would see you and drop off a different direction, then he appeared to sit and glass. You misinterpretted his actions at least twice, why should he be any better at knowing your intentions?
You should have been direct and just said what you meant; something like, "I am am planning on glassing this area and I would appreciate it if you took a different route back to your truck." Instead your answer carried an implication of stupidity and neglect on his part.
In all of the possible scenarios that I can conjure and whatever small amount of animosity he may have felt toward your words, it is still a wrong move on his part to just march through the area knowing that you are actively glassing there.