Move to the Yukon, ... OP you are obviously a young man, do what I did and follow the good hunting.........................
Made me LOL
I would LOVE to move to the Yukon. The wife, though, not so much.
Move to the Yukon, ... OP you are obviously a young man, do what I did and follow the good hunting.........................
Next time you go out bring along gizmos that leave a bear paw(with claws) print on the snow.
After 100 yards or so of your own footprints, start imprinting the bearpaws on the snow in
a haphazard manner, sprinkle some tomato juice and erase your own footprints.
Don't forget the trailcam to capture their expressions.
If you keep doing what you're doing, you'll keep getting what you're getting. This eventually soaks in to some people who change their behavior, location, occupation or whatever it takes to get what they want. Most won't.
This right here.Not my human nature. We were atv'ing/hunting/etc a few weekends ago in a heavily trafficked public hunting area. We spent a lot of time finding the odd trail we could go down that didn't have fresh tracks. Why would I go down a trail in hunting season that's got fresh tracks? Clearly I'm going to interfere in someone's hunt. Yes, I can go down the trail. Should I go down the trail is another matter entirely.
Same thing with putting an atv at the trail head. I would probably avoid that trail if I can.

If you keep doing what you're doing, you'll keep getting what you're getting. This eventually soaks in to some people who change their behavior, location, occupation or whatever it takes to get what they want. Most won't.
LMAO, yup...nothing worse than being perched against a tree with stick in hand trying to get poop off your boots lolI was thinking a better deterrent would be some mud and toilet paper. Who would follow your tracks in then?
If you'd ever hunted with my dad you wouldn't. His favorite trick was to take a dump in the trail then throw the paper off to the side about 5 feet. While you were looking at the paper you stepped in it. I learned at a young age to freeze when I saw toilet paper near a trail.
There's nothing you can do about it. Like it or not, putting tracks on a trail doesn't make it yours. Hanging a tree-stand doesn't make it yours, parking a truck across the road doesn't make it yours, and putting up a sign saying its yours doesn't make it yours. You've got a fighting chance if you walk in so far that only an equally crazy guy will see you, but if he does it still isn't yours.
There's more; you can book a guided hunt in remote area and think you are alone until a local flies in to "your" lake and all of a sudden it isn't yours anymore. Guided hunters are often upset when the considerable fee they are paying doesn't buy them exclusivity to anything.
Unless there's some way I'm unaware of the only way to get the rights to a spot is to buy it, lease it where legal or pay for exclusive use in areas or countries where that's possible. None of these methods are cheap, and aren't a guarantee of being alone but you would have a valid grievance if you got unwanted company.
Making a track in the snow doesn't make it yours either.
You know it isn't yours, but you are mad at six people for walking on a trail on public land?
If you keep doing what you're doing, you'll keep getting what you're getting. This eventually soaks in to some people who change their behavior, location, occupation or whatever it takes to get what they want. Most won't.
holding people to the standards that you hold yourself is a recipe for disappointment.
One thing you probbably running into is guys that are scared to go into the bush and they figure your following a trail. There's lots of them out there that would get lost in a phone booth.
You know, I've been reading these forums for a long time and I've read a lot of Dogleg's posts in that time on the hunting board. He has a no-nonsense view on public land. Really with all of his posts I've seen on the public land, stolen treestand, yada yada topic its more of a "thats how people are, you're going to have to get used to it someday" view and it makes sense to me.
I quoted him again for you so you can re read it and hopefully you can take something from it. For your situation it might actually be some good advice. I'd start by changing my location, otherwise nothings going to solve the problem.
Or I can join Dogleg and go f**k myself too.
You know, I've been reading these forums for a long time and I've read a lot of Dogleg's posts in that time on the hunting board. He has a no-nonsense view on public land. Really with all of his posts I've seen on the public land, stolen treestand, yada yada topic its more of a "thats how people are, you're going to have to get used to it someday" view and it makes sense to me.
I quoted him again for you so you can re read it and hopefully you can take something from it. For your situation it might actually be some good advice. I'd start by changing my location, otherwise nothings going to solve the problem.
Or I can join Dogleg and go f**k myself too.
Yup
Some of us change locations frequently and don't have the connections to gain access to private land, which is mostly already uhh.. spoken for by like-minded individuals. I'm wedged between Algonquin Park, Quebec, and the base. Having a full time job doesn't allow me much time to travel, so hunting nearby crown land is my only option.
My problem with Dogleg et al is their lack of reading skills and condescending attitides. I never said it was "mine" nor do I expect others to believe that it is. I'm upset that some other hunters are not as courteous as I am (and most other hunters)
Bottom line is, when hunting crown land, if somebody beat you to the spot, the right thing to do is to move on and not bother them.
Clearly, you and Dogleg are the minority opinion by a wide margin. Take from that what you will



























