Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: idahohuntr on August 30, 2014, 10:34:21 PMQuote from: buglebrush on August 30, 2014, 02:38:46 PMQuote from: idahohuntr on August 26, 2014, 09:35:15 PMTimber, please do not follow the lead of KF and twist what I say into these exaggerated lies. Nowhere did I equate all landowners as "jerks"...its absurd for you to even suggest this. I presume you are a landowner? To answer your question, an access easement does not require a road. Such an easement across private land can be for foot traffic only and requires no alteration or disturbance to the private land...folks like me that see 10-15,000 acres of public land with great elk and deer hunting on it think...gee...maybe the public should have access to their land just like if a private landowner has a chunk of ground surrounded on all sides by private land. Not road/motorized/etc. access...just legal foot access would be fine with me. Big time slippery slope to mandate that a private landowner has to give access of any kind. BAD IDEA! My family owned several hundred acres backed up to NF growing up, and it was a constant battle keeping people out. I am a huge proponent of property rights. They are already screwing landowners enough with building permits, property taxes, etc.... However, if you have some property you have worked your butt off and poured your money into for the past forty years, and want to allow public access be my guest. Just don't try to force your view on those of us who have worked our butts off building what we've got. If you buy/own a chunk of private land you must have legal access to your property...that is, your neighbors can not landlock you out of your property. So in a private/private land ownership situation, a private landowner does have to give access...that is law...so there is no slippery slope...its already mandated. All I would like is for that same right to extend to publicly owned lands. IE: blaze roads through private property. (I'll let the readers decide if I'm the liar here)We should get back to talking about the sheep farmer and his wolf problem.
Quote from: buglebrush on August 30, 2014, 02:38:46 PMQuote from: idahohuntr on August 26, 2014, 09:35:15 PMTimber, please do not follow the lead of KF and twist what I say into these exaggerated lies. Nowhere did I equate all landowners as "jerks"...its absurd for you to even suggest this. I presume you are a landowner? To answer your question, an access easement does not require a road. Such an easement across private land can be for foot traffic only and requires no alteration or disturbance to the private land...folks like me that see 10-15,000 acres of public land with great elk and deer hunting on it think...gee...maybe the public should have access to their land just like if a private landowner has a chunk of ground surrounded on all sides by private land. Not road/motorized/etc. access...just legal foot access would be fine with me. Big time slippery slope to mandate that a private landowner has to give access of any kind. BAD IDEA! My family owned several hundred acres backed up to NF growing up, and it was a constant battle keeping people out. I am a huge proponent of property rights. They are already screwing landowners enough with building permits, property taxes, etc.... However, if you have some property you have worked your butt off and poured your money into for the past forty years, and want to allow public access be my guest. Just don't try to force your view on those of us who have worked our butts off building what we've got. If you buy/own a chunk of private land you must have legal access to your property...that is, your neighbors can not landlock you out of your property. So in a private/private land ownership situation, a private landowner does have to give access...that is law...so there is no slippery slope...its already mandated. All I would like is for that same right to extend to publicly owned lands.
Quote from: idahohuntr on August 26, 2014, 09:35:15 PMTimber, please do not follow the lead of KF and twist what I say into these exaggerated lies. Nowhere did I equate all landowners as "jerks"...its absurd for you to even suggest this. I presume you are a landowner? To answer your question, an access easement does not require a road. Such an easement across private land can be for foot traffic only and requires no alteration or disturbance to the private land...folks like me that see 10-15,000 acres of public land with great elk and deer hunting on it think...gee...maybe the public should have access to their land just like if a private landowner has a chunk of ground surrounded on all sides by private land. Not road/motorized/etc. access...just legal foot access would be fine with me. Big time slippery slope to mandate that a private landowner has to give access of any kind. BAD IDEA! My family owned several hundred acres backed up to NF growing up, and it was a constant battle keeping people out. I am a huge proponent of property rights. They are already screwing landowners enough with building permits, property taxes, etc.... However, if you have some property you have worked your butt off and poured your money into for the past forty years, and want to allow public access be my guest. Just don't try to force your view on those of us who have worked our butts off building what we've got.
Timber, please do not follow the lead of KF and twist what I say into these exaggerated lies. Nowhere did I equate all landowners as "jerks"...its absurd for you to even suggest this. I presume you are a landowner? To answer your question, an access easement does not require a road. Such an easement across private land can be for foot traffic only and requires no alteration or disturbance to the private land...folks like me that see 10-15,000 acres of public land with great elk and deer hunting on it think...gee...maybe the public should have access to their land just like if a private landowner has a chunk of ground surrounded on all sides by private land. Not road/motorized/etc. access...just legal foot access would be fine with me.
Wolves and Coyotes SHOULD have one thing in common! Open season year around Canada will always have enough to share. Those who want to hunt them can and those who think the lovely and cuddly can go and take pictures too.
One legally taken wolf gets more press than all of the dozens of privately owned, valuable, cattle, sheep, guard dogs, and pets combined. Timberfaller has it right, 365 and 24/7 wolf take on private land. If the feds and DNR can garner public support for different management on there land, more power to them. Grazing on millions of acres of public land is a tool that has benefit if used properly. State owned wildlife on private land is becoming more and more a risk and cost that the state talks about but does little. Ask the land owners in the Skagit Valley about elk, private land grazers in Stevens county about predators, grain farmers about deer, elk and turkey losses and the performance of the agencies involved rarely gets a passing grade. The solutions require communication and understanding of complicated systems and issues not control mentalities.
The nature conservancy etc. buy up private lands and then resell the land to the feds at huge profit
QuoteThe nature conservancy etc. buy up private lands and then resell the land to the feds at huge profit Can you provide some examples of where the Nature Conservancy has sold lands to the feds for a huge profit?
So WDFW gives a go ahead to kill 4 of the 12. What's the difference if you are diagnosed with cancer and the doctor says he will only remove one third of your cancer and see if that will stop your detoriation?Brilliant!