Hunting Washington Forum
Classifieds & Organizations => Where To Go - Partners - Hunt Swaps => Topic started by: police women of America on August 05, 2014, 04:01:08 PM
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Typical Hunt by Reservation shown on a property line
Lands with Reservation Hunts listed
No reservation properties available at this time. Please check back.
Hunting Access
Private Lands Access
The future of hunting depends on the ability of hunters to gain access to the land. With more than half of the state’s landmass in private ownership, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) has redoubled its efforts to secure hunter access to those lands in recent years.
Through new agreements with private landowners, WDFW has succeeded in opening up tens of thousands of acres of private farmland and timberland through programs such as “Feel Free to Hunt” and “Register to Hunt.” The latest program, “Hunt By Reservation,” allows hunters to get hunting information for specific properties and book a reservation online.
Private Lands Access is available through different types of access:
•Feel Free to Hunt
•Register to Hunt
• Hunt by Written Permission
•Hunt by Reservation
Find Property to Hunt
Listed by County, Hunt Type or GMU
GoHuntAccess multi-layered maps displaying game management unit (GMU) boundaries, deer and elk management areas, pheasant-release sites, and Private Lands Hunting Opportunities, as well as roads, topographical features and county lines. In addition, harvest statistics and hunting regulations are available by specific locale and species.
About the Reservation System •WDFW’s Quality Hunt Reservation System was released as an online application on Friday, April 12, 2013. It allows hunters to make a reservation on select sites under contract with private landowners.
•On each site, hunter numbers are limited from one to a few hunters at a time to create a higher quality experience. In most cases they do not have to contact the landowner in advance.
•Some reservation opportunities are for individuals and in others a group can register. All hunters must have an active account in order to be eligible to participate in any of the reservation hunts.
•WDFW will continue to enroll private lands in its Feel Free to Hunt, Register to Hunt and Hunt by Written Permission programs as well. The new Hunt by Reservation option gives us another tool to help landowners provide access. We believe that some of the landowners who have signed new agreements in the past year would not have done so if this option was not available.
•Landowners will have access to the names of hunters who have, or have had, reservations on their property. Only the names of hunters will be provided to landowners. WDFW law enforcement will have access to all reservation information.
•During the initial launch of the system, reservations will be on a first-come, first-served basis. By fall of 2013, we hope to add the ability to conduct drawings for reservations as we expect more hunters to be using the system.
•Hunters will be limited to three active reservations on future dates. This includes hunts where a hunter is part of a group created by someone else. Reservations on dates that have past do not count against this total. There is no annual limit to the number of reservations a hunter can make.
•Hunters must agree to all of the rules of Reservation System and those for the individual site they will be hunting on.
•General information and rules for each site are available on the WDFW website and are based, in part, on landowner preferences.
:yeah: copied from WDFW official site.
go to WDFW (Washington department of fish and wildlife) website and learn more about private land access and find somewhere to hunt near you.
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Unfortunately, there was no available private lands in the area I drew my elk tag in this year. I tried calling some land owners and struck out. :'(
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Unfortunately, there was no available private lands in the area I drew my elk tag in this year. I tried calling some land owners and struck out. :'(
Where did you draw?
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Mt. View.....There is plenty of public land but I was hoping to expand my options with some private that borders the NF.
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I was hoping to hunt on private land to but the same thing happened to me it was all reserved :bash:
but they do have "feel free to hunt" lands and logger roads.
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From my experience, the WDFW has really, really crappy private lands to hunt on, or to offer us. It's a joke as usual from the WDFW.
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From my experience, the WDFW has really, really crappy private lands to hunt on, or to offer us. It's a joke as usual from the WDFW.
I agree, sort of. I looked into the hunt by reservation land a little last year and if you're interested in upland bird hunting, I think you'd probably be happy with the selection. Anything other than that and I think you'd be let down.
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A H-W member came over last year and told me how disappointed he was with the landowner with whom he made a reservation with. Crappy owner and wouldn't leave them alone with his goofy rules.
I took him and his daughter out and she had a deer within an hour and a half after meeting him........ :tup:
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I know some of the hunt with reservations areas over here are great areas for a whitetail or mule deer and some are pretty much bird hunting ground. The way the hunt w/ reservations worked last year was that they were not available until about a week or two before the hunt begins. That's when you should log in and start looking for ground. Alot of them are limited to 2 people at a time so if you want a friend to go he will have to reserve a spot too. You are allowed 1 hunting companion to go with you and they CAN NOT carry a firearm with them. I hunted some great ground in Whitman County and saw a very nice Whitetail on one piece I accompanied my grandpa on. He didnt like howfar away it was so he didnt shoot it. Only about 120 yds! Muzzleloading late season. I would have dropped it! :chuckle: about a high 140's buck
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:yeah: Nice to know there is good hunting out there at least. :tup: