There are two, separate, issues being discussed here, IMO.
The right of free passage, by watercraft, along any navigable waterway. With 15 feet of dry land from the high water mark, either side, to be used if nessessary for the purpose of overcoming any obstacle to one's progress.
Then there is that separate issue, hunting, the discharging of a firearm, from within the corridor of free passage.
I am a canoe guy, who maybe, has chosen to have a gun along on any particular trip, for other, non-hunting reasons ... and therefore I have nothing to say about about the hunting legality angle of this debate.
Was I the landowner though, finding some stranger on my creek, who never even bothered to approach me for permission, blasting away, and citing some " the creek and fifteen feet either side" mumbo-jumbo .... lets just say that, unlike the ducks ..... that wouldn't fly.
It's about respect.
The right of free passage, by watercraft, along any navigable waterway. With 15 feet of dry land from the high water mark, either side, to be used if nessessary for the purpose of overcoming any obstacle to one's progress.
Then there is that separate issue, hunting, the discharging of a firearm, from within the corridor of free passage.
I am a canoe guy, who maybe, has chosen to have a gun along on any particular trip, for other, non-hunting reasons ... and therefore I have nothing to say about about the hunting legality angle of this debate.
Was I the landowner though, finding some stranger on my creek, who never even bothered to approach me for permission, blasting away, and citing some " the creek and fifteen feet either side" mumbo-jumbo .... lets just say that, unlike the ducks ..... that wouldn't fly.
It's about respect.