Nope, don't have them and don't need them. If you don't know who owns the property you're hunting on you have no business being there. The RM office sells maps for $1 or $2...splurge or go play "big game hunter" at the local bar.
well i did some searching between everything i could find on google and reading the 2010 hunters guide there is nothing about
"Used to be that way before July 1, 2008 but no longer. You can and will be charged if you hunt my land without permission, strangely enough, if you bother to ask, you'll probably get permission..."
i did find that "regardless of how land is posted (ie: no hunting or no trespassing), persons may hunt on that land provided they have permission from the land owner or lessee"
taken from 2010 guide page 3
and this "Access to private land often makes the difference in a successful hunt," Environment Minister John Nilson said. "Even if the land is not posted, hunters
should request the permission of landowners. Landowners still have the common-law right to tell people to leave. It would benefit all hunters to show good ethics and ask for permission before hunting on private land."
from h ttp://www.gov.sk.ca/news?newsId=564b929e-5a51-4563-8e83-780b
08b735e4
so what i take from that is if there is no signs up it's open to hunt there, if you post it then they need your permission and if you have such a problem with people hunting it or you want to regulate how many or which hunters are there then maybe you should splurge and buy some signs.
it's your land and you can choose if you want people to hunt it, but without any signs up you should not be expecting no one to hunt on it. personally if i saw land with no fence, no signs, with decent deer in the field i would hunt it.
i do understand where your coming from my family has land in zone 40, we rent the land out and the lesser has it posted. This year i asked for permission to hunt it and i got the permision plus permision to hunt the land across the road that he owns......the difference being that he bothered to post it