Free: Contests & Raffles.
Make no mistake about it, corn pond hunting will eliminate free public waterfowl hunting within the very near future if the practice isn't stop. You can stack a million birds on a ten acre sanctuary lake if there's enough feed to keep them around. Corn ponds provide this feed. If not stopped, 90-95% of the mallards and geese harvested in Washington State in the future will be shot on commercial outfits or private clubs with corn ponds and sanctuary lakes. Successful, free public hunting will cease.I have actually been privately working on the corn pond issue for a couple years now. I've testified at Wildlife Commission meetings 4-5 times, and may be making some headway. Hopefully there will be a public hearing arranged for this spring or summer where hunters can have their say. I have also produced three documents detailing the corn pond issue that I also submitted to the Wildlife Commission. These documents provide a concise, articulate evaluation of the situation and are a very easy read. I can email the pdf files to anyone who wants them.
Here is my take on this. I don't own flooded ponds but have paid to hunt on Eagle Ranch once. I'm all for equal opportunity but I'm also against people taking rights away from someone else who is legally doing what they do. How would you like it if you saved up a ton of money to buy your own property to plant corn and then flood it to hunt over privately-then sportsman get something passed where you can't do it? Most guys complaining on here would love to have their own set up of a flooded corn field and would do it if given the chance. Why would you take that right from someone else just because you can't afford to do it yourself? Life sucks but there is all kinds of things I'd like to do but can't afford. I'm not asking for anyone else not to do it because I can't. Flame away but that is my two cents. I know most people on here are complaining about the huge complexes but once government starts to screw things up it will be a small pond surrounded by an acre of corn on a local farmers 20 acres that they ban. Its how it works usually. I'm just tired of losing my rights and I'm not going to ask someone else to lose theirs because I can't do it myself.
Its not my dream to own land so i can flood a corn field. Its not ethical. So stop with the "Your just jealous because you can't hunt over flooded corn" talk.The other argument, that because people worked hard to buy land that they can do whatever they want is ridiculous too. Having lots of money doesn't mean you get to do whatever you want to OUR resource.
Where does it end though? Large ranches hold a lot of deer and elk. People complain that these properties hold a lot of public game. They are but if you don't like it go buy one for yourself. I'm not sure how you legislate changes without screwing over someone in the process. They bought the property and have the right to do what they want on it legally. We already basically rent our land from the state with high property taxes and a long list of what we can and can't do on that property. I'm not going to ask to add anything more to that long list via legislation. Someone worked hard for the funds to buy these properties and many started with nothing many years ago. I'm just tired of people complaining of lost opportunities. Go make your own opportunity just like these land owners did.
By that thinking you guys must get pretty annoyed/angry over a water hole on private ground that the land owner created that draws elk and deer to it during archery season to drink. And also that orchard on private ground that feeds the deer. And those turnips planted on Billy's land that the whitetails flock to when there is snow on the ground. All scenarios bringing OUR public resource on to a private piece of property that the owner has influenced the behavior of a public resource. Where are you guys drawing the line? Serious, non confrontational question here. Where is the line of public hunter vs private land owner that does something to affect public animals that we all want to chase?
Quote from: 92xj on January 16, 2019, 10:00:08 AMBy that thinking you guys must get pretty annoyed/angry over a water hole on private ground that the land owner created that draws elk and deer to it during archery season to drink. And also that orchard on private ground that feeds the deer. And those turnips planted on Billy's land that the whitetails flock to when there is snow on the ground. All scenarios bringing OUR public resource on to a private piece of property that the owner has influenced the behavior of a public resource. Where are you guys drawing the line? Serious, non confrontational question here. Where is the line of public hunter vs private land owner that does something to affect public animals that we all want to chase?As you said it brings animals in it feeds them it helps them you learn to hunt the trails coming and going from the waterholes and orchard. Private lands help wildlife