Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: huntingfool7 on December 15, 2016, 11:57:23 AM Quote from: MR5x5 on December 15, 2016, 09:34:40 AMAgain, not trying to start an argument.... so if you feel the need to freak out and bang your head on the wall do it elsewhere. Public ground cars etc is good example, but cars on public streets need to be moved in given period or they are impounded, camps on national forest are time limited. There is a nice camera box, w/o camera ever, bolted to a tree for last 5 years. Should it be considered abandoned, can I use it, does someone own that tree now.... I know any number of guys who leave/neglect cams in the woods over the winter. Really just curious if the law at some point looks at things like the as abandoned at some point? So I'm at a Christmas party last week and we're doing introductions. Afterword a guy at the table asked an East Indian what his name meant in English He didn't get what was wrong with that either.It was a pretty simple, honest, question out of curiosity. If I could figure out away to ask it using crayons and pictures so you could understand it I would.Troll
Quote from: MR5x5 on December 15, 2016, 09:34:40 AMAgain, not trying to start an argument.... so if you feel the need to freak out and bang your head on the wall do it elsewhere. Public ground cars etc is good example, but cars on public streets need to be moved in given period or they are impounded, camps on national forest are time limited. There is a nice camera box, w/o camera ever, bolted to a tree for last 5 years. Should it be considered abandoned, can I use it, does someone own that tree now.... I know any number of guys who leave/neglect cams in the woods over the winter. Really just curious if the law at some point looks at things like the as abandoned at some point? So I'm at a Christmas party last week and we're doing introductions. Afterword a guy at the table asked an East Indian what his name meant in English He didn't get what was wrong with that either.
Again, not trying to start an argument.... so if you feel the need to freak out and bang your head on the wall do it elsewhere. Public ground cars etc is good example, but cars on public streets need to be moved in given period or they are impounded, camps on national forest are time limited. There is a nice camera box, w/o camera ever, bolted to a tree for last 5 years. Should it be considered abandoned, can I use it, does someone own that tree now.... I know any number of guys who leave/neglect cams in the woods over the winter. Really just curious if the law at some point looks at things like the as abandoned at some point?
I'd have figure the law would not protect personal property left on public ground?
You fail reading comprehension. His question was how does the law look at this on public land vs private land
LOL When is it OK to take other peoples stuff? If it's not on your privately owned property, leave other peoples crap alone.
The law doesnt care if it's on private or public lands. The law cares that they both vandalized, broke and shot my equipment. Many people have said anything left in the woods is abandoned property. I did some research on that and I wouldnt find ANY law that stated anything like that.
Quote from: jtrammell on December 17, 2016, 03:17:58 PMThe law doesnt care if it's on private or public lands. The law cares that they both vandalized, broke and shot my equipment. Many people have said anything left in the woods is abandoned property. I did some research on that and I wouldnt find ANY law that stated anything like that.I am thinking that rule is specific to wilderness areas. Obviously not private property or necessarily all public land. I can't find it in RCWs.
I remember finding really nice hunting cabins in the middle of no where. We would stay in them and while there, act like temporary care takers. We would leave them just like we found them. For the first five or so years it was nice to stay at them, there was three spread out over 20+ miles. Finally, one after another was vandalized. None exist today. Really sad to see what has become of the places we took for granted as a great escape, thinking others felt the same. Now knowing differently.