Free: Contests & Raffles.
You always need to consider what the reaction will be on the other side. If I was a landowner in Montana or anywhere who is currently allowing access across my property to hunters or anyone for that matter I would seriously consider refusing access to anyone except people I personally know for the express reason that allowing continued access may cause you to lose some of your property rights and be forced into having a public easement across your property. Thank you BHA for reinforcing this point to every rancher in the west who will read about this in their ranching magazines and discuss it with other concerned ranchers!
Quote from: bearpaw on February 16, 2019, 12:15:00 PMYou always need to consider what the reaction will be on the other side. If I was a landowner in Montana or anywhere who is currently allowing access across my property to hunters or anyone for that matter I would seriously consider refusing access to anyone except people I personally know for the express reason that allowing continued access may cause you to lose some of your property rights and be forced into having a public easement across your property. Thank you BHA for reinforcing this point to every rancher in the west who will read about this in their ranching magazines and discuss it with other concerned ranchers! Your premise is incorrect here...ranchers granting permission have nothing to worry about. Hunters seeking and landowners granting permission would invalidate any potential prescriptive easement claim. And this is true of any sort of adverse possession claim/issue.To your broader point - will this result in a counteraction that reduces hunting access in Montana or elsewhere? I don't believe it will. The days of politely knocking on a door to pass through a ranch so you can access a large block of public lands simply do not exist in any significant way anymore. Outfitters leasing up all the ground, diy guys paying trespass fees, states using funds for access programs, and family/friends of landowners all ensure the demand far outweighs the supply and makes it a pay to play game. So - I don't really see anything to lose and fully support BHA using litigation if necessary to ensure a public agency does not give away legal public access.
Quote from: idahohuntr on February 16, 2019, 09:49:15 PMQuote from: bearpaw on February 16, 2019, 12:15:00 PMYou always need to consider what the reaction will be on the other side. If I was a landowner in Montana or anywhere who is currently allowing access across my property to hunters or anyone for that matter I would seriously consider refusing access to anyone except people I personally know for the express reason that allowing continued access may cause you to lose some of your property rights and be forced into having a public easement across your property. Thank you BHA for reinforcing this point to every rancher in the west who will read about this in their ranching magazines and discuss it with other concerned ranchers! Your premise is incorrect here...ranchers granting permission have nothing to worry about. Hunters seeking and landowners granting permission would invalidate any potential prescriptive easement claim. And this is true of any sort of adverse possession claim/issue.To your broader point - will this result in a counteraction that reduces hunting access in Montana or elsewhere? I don't believe it will. The days of politely knocking on a door to pass through a ranch so you can access a large block of public lands simply do not exist in any significant way anymore. Outfitters leasing up all the ground, diy guys paying trespass fees, states using funds for access programs, and family/friends of landowners all ensure the demand far outweighs the supply and makes it a pay to play game. So - I don't really see anything to lose and fully support BHA using litigation if necessary to ensure a public agency does not give away legal public access.You may not have had any access or perhaps that was simply your way of trying to cover BHA for their blunder? I'm really not sure what to believe. I have had plenty of access just by asking if i could hunt and some of it has been in the last year and some of it has been in Montana. A lot of getting access has to do with how you approach landowners. But I guarantee you this, filing lawsuits trying to force permanent easements based on historically giving free access will be the nail in the coffin when landowners discuss what is happening. Almost no landowner wants to give free permanent easements for strangers through their property! That's one of the first questions I ask before I will even consider buying a property, what easements are there?
Quote from: idahohuntr on February 16, 2019, 09:49:15 PMQuote from: bearpaw on February 16, 2019, 12:15:00 PMYou always need to consider what the reaction will be on the other side. If I was a landowner in Montana or anywhere who is currently allowing access across my property to hunters or anyone for that matter I would seriously consider refusing access to anyone except people I personally know for the express reason that allowing continued access may cause you to lose some of your property rights and be forced into having a public easement across your property. Thank you BHA for reinforcing this point to every rancher in the west who will read about this in their ranching magazines and discuss it with other concerned ranchers! Your premise is incorrect here...ranchers granting permission have nothing to worry about. Hunters seeking and landowners granting permission would invalidate any potential prescriptive easement claim. And this is true of any sort of adverse possession claim/issue.To your broader point - will this result in a counteraction that reduces hunting access in Montana or elsewhere? I don't believe it will. The days of politely knocking on a door to pass through a ranch so you can access a large block of public lands simply do not exist in any significant way anymore. Outfitters leasing up all the ground, diy guys paying trespass fees, states using funds for access programs, and family/friends of landowners all ensure the demand far outweighs the supply and makes it a pay to play game. So - I don't really see anything to lose and fully support BHA using litigation if necessary to ensure a public agency does not give away legal public access.I feel like I am repeating myself here, oh wait I am. I have family that ranches this exact part of Montana. The conversations and reactions Bearpaw describes is EXACTLY what is occurring. Again all for gaining and preserving access but this appears to be wrong approach here.
step 1: identify any old trails, typically made years ago for mining purposes (its ironic huh) step 2: promote usage of old trails, post signs telling people to NOT ask for permissionstep 3: sue landowners for prescriptive easements after documented trespassing has occurred over a time periodstep 4: remove all motorized access to the area as a wholestep 5: petition for wilderness designation
I could show you a pic of not one but 6 huge mules all taken off a door knock access request. That's just one example, I have many other examples as well. Getting permission is alive and well in MT, so I reject the notion that: "it's a lost cause already so why bother working with land owners?" you'd rather trample them underfoot, I can't get on that bandwagon. but you are correct, MT is sliding down hill as land owners get attacked from all sides and worse, sell out to a rich out of state people looking for a slice of heaven and wish to keep everyone else out!
The other thing to consider is magnitude. There are places that allow a few people access to relatively modest access, friends, neighbors, people with MT plates. There are other places that are gating access that block thousands of acres. What I'm saying is there are hills we should be prepared to die on and some that don't really matter.Montana hunting is big business. If you have exclusive land with bulls on it you can get $7,500 a week. A guide can run two guys a week and the season is 11 weeks long. That is the potential of $100-150k a year if you are running the business well with only two hunters. I have a college buddy who ranches on family land. They book 15 people a week at $5k and probably have 85% occupancy and no problems filling tags because they own the winter grounds for a huge herd.It very well may be that the battle ends up loosing some ground, but the big picture is that if something doesn't happen, huge portions or entire mountain ranges could get locked out. If you haven't been to Montana, imagine someone buying all the land around Rainier or Baker and then shutting access. This is exactly what is happening out there.Another tactic is for timber companies to sell small parcels for huge money. Think of 1 acre going for $1.5M, but that 1 acre happens to circle the gate that accesses 200k acres of timber and NF. They sell it off with a timber easement and the new owner slaps a lock and leases it out to outfitters. Guys around here are rightly going crazy about having to pay for timber access, imagine if that just went completely away overnight with no warning. I hunted a place last year where 6/8 gates became private in the year since the last hunting season. Probably 100k acres or more are now off limits in one unit alone.We're not talking about mom and pop ranches here, we're talking about losing amazing amounts of public land access to the highest bidder. If you think a guy from Texas rolling in with a billion bucks to spend is going to answer the door when you come knocking for access, we have good examples over the last decade that tell the story.I wish it were different, but I truly fear the day where I look back and wish we were more aggressive and did more to protect what we have.
It very well may be that the battle ends up loosing some ground, but the big picture is that if something doesn't happen, huge portions or entire mountain ranges could get locked out. If you haven't been to Montana, imagine someone buying all the land around Rainier or Baker and then shutting access. This is exactly what is happening out there.Another tactic is for timber companies to sell small parcels for huge money. Think of 1 acre going for $1.5M, but that 1 acre happens to circle the gate that accesses 200k acres of timber and NF. They sell it off with a timber easement and the new owner slaps a lock and leases it out to outfitters. Guys around here are rightly going crazy about having to pay for timber access, imagine if that just went completely away overnight with no warning. I hunted a place last year where 6/8 gates became private in the year since the last hunting season. Probably 100k acres or more are now off limits in one unit alone.