Don't worry about it... umchorn2 is the resident "special" child... he rides the shortest bus.
Bring a kid or 2 and work that angle. Most productive method. If no kid available bring a hot girlfriend. If no hot girlfriend available rent one.
After locating where the landowner lives, visually assess the property. After the assessment, dress appropriately in attire that the landowner might feel is suitable for a first impression. Walk casually up to the door and knock firmly 5 times.
When the landowner opens the door, if you know the landowners name, use it to introduce yourself. For example, landowner opens door and you say “Mr. Landowner”, I’m “Mr. Beau Hunter”. After such introduction tell the landowner you are here to show a picture of a missing person. Ask if you can show them a picture of the missing person. When the landowner acquiesces, show them the printed picture of Sir Robert L. Borden using a current $100 Canadian bill.
Once the landowner visually sees the picture on the bill, ask them if they would mind taking it as well as your contact information. If the landowner agrees, make sure you have the ability to take down the landowner’s contact info as well. Tell them you will be in contact with them sometime in August or September for further documentation. Follow up in August or September with a phone call and discuss the terms and details of how and when you will be using their property. Eventually you will need their signature confirming they have indeed granted you written permission to be on their private property.
If need be, hand out a couple more wallet sized “missing person” photos in case they lose the first one and prepare your contract with the appropriate agreed upon dates.
Agree! I help the land owner that gives me permission where ever I can. This past weekend, I brought my tools and fixed his staircase heading up into the barn. He didn't ask me to do it, but I’m sure he was pleasantly surprised the next time he went up them in the afternoon. Little things like that are what a lot of landowners appreciate
After locating where the landowner lives, visually assess the property. After the assessment, dress appropriately in attire that the landowner might feel is suitable for a first impression. Walk casually up to the door and knock firmly 5 times.
When the landowner opens the door, if you know the landowners name, use it to introduce yourself. For example, landowner opens door and you say “Mr. Landowner”, I’m “Mr. Beau Hunter”. After such introduction tell the landowner you are here to show a picture of a missing person. Ask if you can show them a picture of the missing person. When the landowner acquiesces, show them the printed picture of Sir Robert L. Borden using a current $100 Canadian bill.
Once the landowner visually sees the picture on the bill, ask them if they would mind taking it as well as your contact information. If the landowner agrees, make sure you have the ability to take down the landowner’s contact info as well. Tell them you will be in contact with them sometime in August or September for further documentation. Follow up in August or September with a phone call and discuss the terms and details of how and when you will be using their property. Eventually you will need their signature confirming they have indeed granted you written permission to be on their private property.
If need be, hand out a couple more wallet sized “missing person” photos in case they lose the first one and prepare your contract with the appropriate agreed upon dates.
You sound like a snake oil salesmen. Wanna see your face after a full day handling-stacking 60 pound square bales because a farmer friend asks you for a favour.
A few weeks back, I was tasked with shovelling about a ton of feed from a silo. While I was hurling corn into the feeder, the landowner asked if I wanted to use a bigger shovel. Too embarrassed to decline I said sure. Well, aside from the fact that I’m still picking corn dust from my nose three weeks later, my lats and lower back are still sore. Fack, that pigeon hunt was a lot of work!
Networking takes a different turn in rural property.
Networking takes a different turn in rural property.
Yep.
Go in person, ask politely, and act with good grace if you are turned down.
Once you have a contact in an area, it is usually a fair easy thing to develop that in to a network of neighbors and friends until you can pretty much pick and choose among your options. But it's best to figure that may take years, not weeks or days.
One of the properties that both Brutus and I hunted on, started out as a chance comment by the owners, to my wife, that they had far too many gophers around, which she offered my services for.
Other properties I have had access to simply for the asking, and some through other friends.
If someone I did not know showed up offering to do Volunteer Work, I would likely direct them to the nearest Church or similar organization. Someone acting like a snake oil salesman, on the other hand, would get laughed at, or soundly insulted, if not both, and told not to come back.
Manitoba landowner here. There really does seem to be a big difference between east and west hunting requests. I'm pretty open to anyone hunting on my land, as long as they are polite when they ask. Which everyone has been. I'm really not too worried if it is face to face or over the phone. I'd probably be pretty pumped if I got a snail mail request, just due to the novelty, ha. I don't need or expect any gifts/money/work in return. As long as no one else is hunting that field, the crop is off, and it isn't my home quarter, you will be good to go.
Though I will ask if you support Ducks Unlimited. If you say yes, you will get denied. If you lie, and I find out, you will never be welcome to my property again. That's really my only stipulation.
This is one of the most important pieces of advice, the owners of several properties we hunt on automatically deny everybody who shows up just before or after opening day. Some of them even put up no hunting signs the day before a season opens.Go well in advance of your hunting trip. Opening day is not the right time to ask for permission.