Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: Stein on February 18, 2019, 08:11:52 PMIt 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.I don't think that would be much of a concern here in Washington with everything blocked up so well. There are certainly places around foreign ownerships that private industry a lot of times has to build a long road up and around to get access to, but it can be done. Of course not as easy as just buying access through a neighbor with the road in the bottom, but it's an option most of the time. If the USFS would sell even 1% of their timber they'd have top of the line road systems and could tie road systems together to get around any previous access points that didn't allow the public through. The problem is the USFS is beholden to all of the environmentalist groups who sue them into oblivion if they try and do anything. They literally have to go through years of analysis to build a permanent spur road. The USFS is so far from competent anymore that I don't know if there is any getting back to being a working forest. Most of the actual foresters at the USFS (pre-spotted owl foresters) have moved on or retired, and we're left with a bunch of folks who think a logging shovel is literally a hand shovel used for logging somehow. . . It's soooooo frustrating that all of these problems can be solved with money, and the USFS is sitting on billions and billions of dollars they won't tap into. Never mind the jobs and dollars it would bring to rural communities. I could be wrong, but I don't think there is any land trading going on between private and USFS, or for that matter the DNR and private. I know the DNR buys occasionally, but I don't know about trading. Anyways, swaps to block up ownerships better happens all the time with private industry, there is no reason it shouldn't be able to happen elsewhere too. Both parties are better off. I would bet that land trades could alleviate a lot of this tension, particularly if the USFS was proactive about it rather than waiting until the pot boils over between the public and landowners who dig in their heels.Private property rights are private property rights. We have to figure out ways to get around those blocking access, and generally speaking it's not that hard, just takes the dollars to build a new road. And unfortunately private lands are being closed to the public (free of charge anyway) more and more, and that trend isn't going to slow down any time soon. That's what makes fighting for our public lands to be managed in a way that maintains or EXPANDS access so important. Active management will generate habitat to support the animals we pursue as well. Private timberlands may as well be written off for access free of charge in the next 5-10 years, so the masses will need somewhere to go. That's also what makes wilderness expansion so frustrating. Close millions of acres so that less than 1% of the public heck less than 1% of hunters, nevermind the general public will enjoy. We should be pushing the USFS to sell some timber so they can afford to maintain and build road into these areas so that the public can enjoy them. On the one side we're losing access to hundreds of thousands of acres of private timberlands, and on the other we're losing hundreds of thousands of acres of public lands (millions in some cases, mentioned in another thread) to road less areas and wilderness.
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.
I guess I should have qualified my post in that it's Washington I was talking about since you mentioned Rainier/Baker! There in Montana though, that is the sort of situation a land swap could work in! Trade this landowner the land for some of his fringe property with county road frontage? Sure it's not those exact acres that are currently public, but trading land locked land for some that isn't shouldn't be out of the question. If this guy in particular told them to pound sand, they could swap with a different private landowner, and the new owner could sell hunting etc. on what this jerk believed was his extension to his private lands. All the sudden the inholding is an annoyance to him and he no longer has access to any of it. That's an idea to keep the pie of public land acres the same size, even if those acres aren't the same ones that they are today.
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.
“With no public access and the lack of hunting in recent years, Bull Mountain Ranch is easily one of the better elk hunting ranches on the market in Montana. In the past, there have been many trophy quality elk harvested including one year there were three bulls with approximate scores of 350, 364, and 375. Additionally, the ranch boasts other wildlife including mule deer, whitetail deer, turkey, antelope and much more. The largest mule deer taken scored 194 while taking a few 180 class mule deer and a 152 whitetail.”
KF, I do think the Block Management program is one solution, they allow landowners to provide access for a modest fee (paid for by the state from license sales) and the state runs the program and provides insurance against the pitfalls of today's society. There is some pretty good ground under that program and people tend to behave pretty well as Wardens tend to keep a close eye on it.
The map shown regarding the Wlkes is probably by the Snow Mountains, they have bought up a lot of ground in that area and shut it off to public hunting. But the map shown is not a good example of landlocked public land, there is still access through the state land to the BLM and there appears to be no roads into the BLM that were blocked. I know that access has gotten much tougher with the Wilkes buying up land. However, if the lawsuit is about people coming in and buying up land I think it's wrong to take action against other ranchers in general. BHA is pitting hunters against ranchers!
Quote from: KFhunter on February 15, 2019, 10:54:46 PMAgain with this public easement thing There's a lot of different kinds of easements, the one's we're talking about here are prospective easements For those that actually have familiarity with easements, we are discussing prescriptive easements, not 'prospective' easements...whatever those are supposed to be.
Again with this public easement thing There's a lot of different kinds of easements, the one's we're talking about here are prospective easements