Free: Contests & Raffles.
I'm gonna go with a no answer.
Like I said, you pretty much have to be on private land.
Quote from: bobcat on May 11, 2014, 04:23:32 PMLike I said, you pretty much have to be on private land.It can be done on public land as long as the RCW requirements are met.
Quote from: Bob33 on May 11, 2014, 04:28:36 PMQuote from: bobcat on May 11, 2014, 04:23:32 PMLike I said, you pretty much have to be on private land.It can be done on public land as long as the RCW requirements are met.I'm not sure how. It seems if you drove a vehicle off the maintained portion of a road, you'd be in violation of other laws. It just seems unlikely to me that you'd find a game animal in just the right spot where you could somehow drive your vehicle off the road far enough to where you'd be legal to shoot. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: MarkyMark on May 11, 2014, 01:40:25 PMSo answer this one for me fellas: I'm driving down a public road in state owned land. I spy a legal deer during the appropriate season. How far off the road must I walk before I'm no longer "road hunting"? Across the open ditch? On the other side of the fence if there is one ( like CRP land)?Road hunting by whose definition? You'd be legal to shoot from the road, as long as you weren't "negligent."
So answer this one for me fellas: I'm driving down a public road in state owned land. I spy a legal deer during the appropriate season. How far off the road must I walk before I'm no longer "road hunting"? Across the open ditch? On the other side of the fence if there is one ( like CRP land)?
Quote from: bobcat on May 11, 2014, 04:33:54 PMQuote from: Bob33 on May 11, 2014, 04:28:36 PMQuote from: bobcat on May 11, 2014, 04:23:32 PMLike I said, you pretty much have to be on private land.It can be done on public land as long as the RCW requirements are met.I'm not sure how. It seems if you drove a vehicle off the maintained portion of a road, you'd be in violation of other laws. It just seems unlikely to me that you'd find a game animal in just the right spot where you could somehow drive your vehicle off the road far enough to where you'd be legal to shoot. Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkWe're missing the point folks. Private/public land has nothing to do with this law. I know it's illegal to shoot from within your rig and I know it's a typo on the fault of the WDFW for putting it in the regs that way.It's always been legal to shoot from, along or across the maintained portion of any public highway as long as it's not done negligently.I'm just laughing at the way they finally added the word "Negligently" after all the emails and phone calls.
Quote from: sakoshooter on May 11, 2014, 09:52:02 PMQuote from: bobcat on May 11, 2014, 04:33:54 PMQuote from: Bob33 on May 11, 2014, 04:28:36 PMQuote from: bobcat on May 11, 2014, 04:23:32 PMLike I said, you pretty much have to be on private land.It can be done on public land as long as the RCW requirements are met.I'm not sure how. It seems if you drove a vehicle off the maintained portion of a road, you'd be in violation of other laws. It just seems unlikely to me that you'd find a game animal in just the right spot where you could somehow drive your vehicle off the road far enough to where you'd be legal to shoot. Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkWe're missing the point folks. Private/public land has nothing to do with this law. I know it's illegal to shoot from within your rig and I know it's a typo on the fault of the WDFW for putting it in the regs that way.It's always been legal to shoot from, along or across the maintained portion of any public highway as long as it's not done negligently.I'm just laughing at the way they finally added the word "Negligently" after all the emails and phone calls.Careful...as bt pointed out it is illegal on federal ground (i.e., FS roads). Also, I have found that some counties do not allow any shooting from the road...whether it is safe or negligent...like Walla Walla county below:"9.08.010 Shooting firearm from or near county road—Defined.permanent link to this piece of contentI'm only going by what the WDFW says in their hunting regs. Not sure how a hunter would know anything about other laws that could apply when the hunting regulations is what most of us go by. If there are over lapping laws or competing laws, the average hunter wouldn't learn about them untill ticketed or arested. As for hunting, the WA State Hunting Regs should cover thoroughly what is and isn't legal. A hunter shouldn't have to spend a week at the court house with a lawyer trying to figure out who trumps who or what law trumps what law. A person is guilty of the crime of shooting a firearm from or near a county road if that person shoots a firearm from, across or along the maintained portion of any county road"
I've never heard about the law Big Tex quoted concerning Federal lands, roads and shooting. I see a million road hunters every year and have never seen nor heard of anyone ever getting cited for shooting from a road.
Quote from: sakoshooter on May 12, 2014, 01:07:47 AM I've never heard about the law Big Tex quoted concerning Federal lands, roads and shooting. I see a million road hunters every year and have never seen nor heard of anyone ever getting cited for shooting from a road.I've mentioned it several times on this site. The following law applies to USFS roads:36 CFR 261.10The following are prohibited:(d) Discharging a firearm or any other implement capable of taking human life, causing injury, or damaging property as follows: (1) In or within 150 yards of a residence, building, campsite, developed recreation site or occupied area, or (2) Across or on a National Forest System road or a body of water adjacent thereto, or in any manner or place whereby any person or property is exposed to injury or damage as a result in such discharge.