When to give info

There is absolutely nothing wrong with sharing intel with others. How would you like to be treated?

Some folks have been very very kind to me and i feel it is good to repay the favor or pay it forward - however you want to put it.

Told 2 guys better hunting spots on diff quota hunt permits this fall. Hunter 1 went today and had a ball. Hunter No. 2 is a month or so out from his hunt. Hope he does as well.

It is okay for you to not say anything or to be vague. In my case, i dont want gps points, just some reassurance that am not wasting time there when i should be elsewhere.
 
I don’t share anything with anyone anymore. Been burned many times by people I thought I could trust. It’s a shame really but that’s where I’ve landed.
 
Sometimes a little info can be too much.

This year near my OTC spot I told a guy I had been hunting there for years, nothing else. He later followed me to my honey hole without me knowing.

He wasn't prepared to hunt there every day, but he later said he would be back next year more prepared, so he didn't have to make the climb every day.
 
i try not to hunt places where I actually have to deal with people.

Did bump into a dude dragging a couple kids around this year. Shot the shit for a few and went on my way. Normally I bump into somebody and they arent going to get much more than a head nod in their direction.

Feel guilty about not sharing info? :ROFLMAO:
 
If it was an area I frequented and didn't hunt or maybe a unit I know I wasn't coming back to I would gladly help someone. I can tell people what I saw but they still have to get out there and hunt it. Helping others should be something we all aspire to do. Now I do not mean sharing the areas you hunt. It is perfectly reasonable to not give info on your usual hunting area. I have been the recipient of some good info from friendly hunters.
 
If nobody in my camp has a deer tag on a given year and I bump into a guy who doesn’t seem like a douche I’ve been known to tell him where I saw a nice buck earlier that morning or the evening before. We always have elk hunters in camp so I give no info about them. I did give a couple of flatlanders on their first trip who seemed horribly out of their depth some pointers on where to look for a bull a few years ago, they seemed disinterested when I mentioned it would be a 6 or so mile hike to get there.

Others have done the same for me in the past.

I draw the line and get unreasonably irritated when I tell a guy, “I saw a nice buck up on that ridge yesterday afternoon” and he produces his phone wanting me to drop him a pin or he asks for a B&C score. Maybe a weird place to draw the line but for some reason it’s annoying to me.
 
For areas I’m familiar but don’t hunt or have no close friends that hunt it, I’d give some intel.

I don’t think having a conversation with a stranger disqualifies a successful hunt from being “earned”.

Going in after sun up is smart at a spot you’ve never been too before.
 
Sometimes a little info can be too much.

This year near my OTC spot I told a guy I had been hunting there for years, nothing else. He later followed me to my honey hole without me knowing.

He wasn't prepared to hunt there every day, but he later said he would be back next year more prepared, so he didn't have to make the climb every day.

Oh boy. Violence is the answer here. Lots of violence. Then some more violence after all the violence. Then blow up his truck…sorry, Prius.
 
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