When does 'no' mean 'no' ?
The said property was posted with the owners intention for the property. Is that not good enough for you?
As a property owner (well posted) ... I've had trash dumped on my place, quad/dirtbike trails made across it, have found gut piles and more trash on it, found a 'grow-op' that was on my and my neighbor's property, had a moron who was hunting on my posted land tell me he was the owner, and had another moron on my land try to assault me .... I kicked his sorry ass for him, and was charged with assault (aquitted) ...
I own my land outright, pay my taxes, and post it in the prescribed manner and am subjected to all of the above.
To the OP .... you read the sign, or do you know how to read? ....
Again, why are you whinning about what was posted on the owners property?
Sadly, angry responses like the above are understandable. It may give the OP some understanding of what might have caused the landowner to respond like that. I am 4000 k away and my neighbors have identical stories to tell. OP did nothing wrong and deserved better. But he probably paid for other people's bad deeds. Unfortunately, these troublemakers are not a small minority anymore, and that is in part our fault. I myself have crossed path with jerks like that but did not report them. I should have.
Nothing drove the point home to me personally, than hearing an elderly woman telling me and my friends in tears, how she and her husband had to sell their beloved acreage rural home (three generations in the family) and move to an apartment in the city. Their property had been targeted by a group of ATV riding trespassers/poachers year after year. They where too old and frail to stop it. OPP basically told them to hire private security guards, which they couldn't afford. When law abiding citizens loose lawful enjoyment of their own property to trespassers and poachers, you know something is very wrong.


















































