Free: Contests & Raffles.
I spend several days scouting elk on the westside this past week. Found a couple of nice herds with bulls in them and was pretty stoked. This was on Rayonier and Green Crow properties, which were all gated. My hunting buddy and I spend hours riding and pushing bikes all over the hills scouting for elk to find the ones we did. On the day before the season opened an Gabe Regard and a crony of his started using his keys to get behind the gates and drove all over the country side scouting for elk. He wasn't working in the area, just scouting. Well I was sitting on a elk herd watching them for the day and waiting for them to bed for the evening. Well low in behold Mr. Regard came driving in on the herd that I was watching. At first they just stopped the truck and glassed them for a while. So I stepped out of my hiding spot and let them know I was there watching the elk. They drove past me without acknowledging I was there and drove right into the herd of elk spooking them out of the area. This crap pisses me off. So now a perfectly laid plan is wasted. Then to top it off my buddy radios me telling me that there is another truck driving around scouting for elk as well. He is an employee of one of the timber companies and he has permission to hunt using his truck. How is a guy to compete with that bullsnot. These two timber companies disgust me with their lack of enforcement and key management. I have seen in other forums where Tribes are considered poachers for not hunting by the same rules, well if this same argument applies, then these fat lazy jerks are poachers as well.If the gates are closed forvehicle access, then they are closed for everyone. No privileges. I don't care who you are or who you work for. If this ever happens to me again and I catch up to the truck parked somewhere, they will be buying a new set of tires for sure. You have to be a pretty sorry sort of person to feel like you are owed the right to drive around shooting up all of the elk herds while others are abiding by the rules and working there asses off to do it. Anyone else run into this type of crap?
I don't care who you are or who you work for. If this ever happens to me again and I catch up to the truck parked somewhere, they will be buying a new set of tires for sure.
Talk to the game warden, it may be worth 10 bonus points!
the state gives big timber companies like weyco, port blakely and others tax breaks for allowing hunting in our state. if you apply for damages from the wdfw and you dont allow hunting the state goes after the money they paid you for said damages. i have a list of all properties that applied for damage control and the companies listed are all on them, so if they close there land to you,just call a warden and show him the list and watch how fast that company opens its land. i do it every year and they let me hunt anytime i want, just to shut me up.
Well, I have to chime in on this one. I've been on both sides of this one, and hunting by foot or by truck, it's still hunting. Some just go about it differently than others. I too have hiked in past everyone else and had a truck come by me and spook the elk I was going to hunt. Like others have said; if you want to get away from that, then go hunt a wilderness area. I've done that several times as well. On the flip side, I have been just as frustrated as anyone out there when I've watched "my" bull every damn day for months while logging and then some city dude drives up in his brand new Eddie Bauer Edition Ford and pops the bull I've been watching since he started growing velvet stumps last spring. Yeah, I used to be one of the guys with the keys. I'm not anymore, but I still believe that if anyone has more right to be there in a vehicle, it should be the poor soul that barely makes a living working his ass of in every kind of weather all year long. Never done it? Then you have absolutely no concept, and I'll just leave it at that. Oh and Tonto just a word of advice; you (or anyone else for that matter) would NOT want to be caught by a rigging, or cutting crew while you are messing up a lock. Ever been "stump broke"? These days I'm the guy on the mountain bike huffing and puffing. I do make sure I talk to every rigging crew, and cutting crew that wants to talk to me. It was mentioned earlier, but it's worth mentioning again. Loggers and others that work in the woods and are there working every day, know where most of the animals are. Make friends with them and they will most likely help you out any way they can. Make enemies of them, and well, it's just better to get along with them. Been there.