Hunting Washington Forum
Other Hunting => Waterfowl => Topic started by: branter on April 04, 2021, 12:24:15 PM
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these were picked up on a small stretch of land just out side LaConner,i hunt there and walk and work my dog. Hunters please pick up your shells
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How exactly do yo know it was hunters.
Lots of people like to target shoot.
Just asking ,don't get too worked up.
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Happy Easter. Hunters, target shooters, whoever pick up your shells, hard enough on this side to find places to shoot , we will lose privileges .
In December, I went to shoot a couple of shells thru my new shotgun, drove up finn settlement road, been a long time, no place to shoot, the place by the pilchuck campground posted no shooting by state, houses are too close. I continue looking at ONXS for state land, all the land I found posted by State, too close. Real hard to find spots to shoot, sign of the times
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How exactly do yo know it was hunters.
Lots of people like to target shoot.
Just asking ,don't get too worked up.
Looking at the picture- those are mostly non-toxic shells in the 3" or greater range. He is implying he found them in a hunting area along a waterway. I will go with hunters garbage as well. Target shooters do not usually use non toxic 3" shells.
Either way- pick up your crap if you are out using public lands is a good message.
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Why bother. Most places are a dump already. Olympia is forking out some of my tax money to beautify the slums. Let them pick up my trash. Take that guvna!
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Because it’s the right thing to do.
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Don’t be a slob
Pick up your own crap
Roads and highways are a freakin pig sty already
Don’t need more
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I do agree it's a good message.
I do pick up my own.
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Been doing the right thing for decades. Because of it, I've been sued, lost my shot at the US ski team, and carry a load of shrapnel along with the dark secrets that came with it. In it for me now.
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Looking at the picture, it's not much of a pile and likely multiple users.
While I try to pick up my hulls, I won't stop a hunt to search them out. Who here finds all of their shells?
That little pile hardly warrants the finger shaking admonition.
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That pile of shells was only half of what i pictured, and the area of land they were on is 300 yards long and 20 yards wide.
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Looking at the picture, it's not much of a pile and likely multiple users.
While I try to pick up my hulls, I won't stop a hunt to search them out. Who here finds all of their shells?
That little pile hardly warrants the finger shaking admonition.
I do. I find all my shells before leaving an area. Not really that hard.
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OU or SXS makes it much easier to pick up brass, plus, you don't tend to waste the first shell to 'make them fly faster'.
:chuckle: :chuckle: :chuckle: :chuckle: :chuckle: :chuckle: :chuckle: :chuckle: :IBCOOL:
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When duck hunting, some places are really hard to find all your shells. That said, you can almost always easily find other people shells and have more coming out than you went in with.
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The two pass shooting spots on Fir always have lots of empties laying around in front and on the back side of the dike. Have watched lots of folks burn through boxes of shells shooting at geese that are way to high.
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When duck hunting, some places are really hard to find all your shells. That said, you can almost always easily find other people shells and have more coming out than you went in with.
Not always a good idea to pick up others I learned this season. I picked up a bag full and brought them out and the game warden was counting empty shells. Fortunately they were multiple different brands, various corrosion to the metal etc. If your in a 15 shell restriction, I will only account for what I brought in.
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The two pass shooting spots on Fir always have lots of empties laying around in front and on the back side of the dike. Have watched lots of folks burn through boxes of shells shooting at geese that are way to high.
Nothing is too high to shoot at on Fir Island! You are just not exerting yourself... It is not a good hunt unless you shoot at least three boxes of 3 1/2's and then leave the empty shells there.
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When duck hunting, some places are really hard to find all your shells. That said, you can almost always easily find other people shells and have more coming out than you went in with.
Not always a good idea to pick up others I learned this season. I picked up a bag full and brought them out and the game warden was counting empty shells. Fortunately they were multiple different brands, various corrosion to the metal etc. If your in a 15 shell restriction, I will only account for what I brought in.
Good point, I forgot I had the same thing happen last season during a license check. They were largely rusty and obviously not from that day so the warden thanked me, but if you bring out a pile of fresh ones I could see that ruining your spirit of cleaning up after other people.
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When duck hunting, some places are really hard to find all your shells. That said, you can almost always easily find other people shells and have more coming out than you went in with.
Not always a good idea to pick up others I learned this season. I picked up a bag full and brought them out and the game warden was counting empty shells. Fortunately they were multiple different brands, various corrosion to the metal etc. If your in a 15 shell restriction, I will only account for what I brought in.
Good point, I forgot I had the same thing happen last season during a license check. They were largely rusty and obviously not from that day so the warden thanked me, but if you bring out a pile of fresh ones I could see that ruining your spirit of cleaning up after other people.
I wonder what happens if they stop to check you and you have no shells to show. Do they give you a ticket for littering?
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When duck hunting, some places are really hard to find all your shells. That said, you can almost always easily find other people shells and have more coming out than you went in with.
Not always a good idea to pick up others I learned this season. I picked up a bag full and brought them out and the game warden was counting empty shells. Fortunately they were multiple different brands, various corrosion to the metal etc. If your in a 15 shell restriction, I will only account for what I brought in.
Good point, I forgot I had the same thing happen last season during a license check. They were largely rusty and obviously not from that day so the warden thanked me, but if you bring out a pile of fresh ones I could see that ruining your spirit of cleaning up after other people.
I wonder what happens if they stop to check you and you have no shells to show. Do they give you a ticket for littering?
Not sure. But I did see the warden go and looking around the area a group of kids were hunting. They had shot probably a 120 shots between the 4 of them in a 15 shell area. I think the warden had seen them making multiple trips back to the parking area as well. I heard the next day all 4 received tickets.
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These are all good reasons to pick up your shells. Another good reason: so other hunters won't stumble across your empties and find your "secret" spot! When I was starting out on public land years ago, I found some of my favorite mallard holes cause other hunters had left a pile of empty shells on the shore.
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These are all good reasons to pick up your shells. Another good reason: so other hunters won't stumble across your empties and find your "secret" spot! When I was starting out on public land years ago, I found some of my favorite mallard holes cause other hunters had left a pile of empty shells on the shore.
:yeah: I'm all for clean lands, but this is always on my mind in my spots :chuckle:
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Dog and I were hunting the Potholes and stumbled across the most well made, from all natural stuff, blind I have ever seen. Then or since. I would not have seen it except the dog was sniffing around the edge of it. They had also left all their empties inside. We made use of the blind! Picked the hulls up since they were a different gauge (I shoot 16 gauge) so no issues with picking up those empties.
They spent some time setting it up, I will say. Very well done.
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While I try to pick up my hulls, I won't stop a hunt to search them out. Who here finds all of their shells?
We hunt public and nothing screams "this spot is good" like a pile of fresh, not rusted hulls. To that end we do carefully search out all of our hulls. We have some honey holes that don't get hit by other guys and the last thing I want to do is leave a clue that they should set up and hunt it. I also pick up hulls because it is the right thing to do.
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Always pick up my empties and other trash and I agree that if I find a spot with a pile of fresh evidence of a good spot, I'm sure going to give it a try.
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Always pick up my empties and other trash and I agree that if I find a spot with a pile of fresh evidence of a good spot, I'm sure going to give it a try.
I always pick up my empties and then some. Then I dump them somewhere I don't want to hunt to draw people off the X.
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A game warden shouldn't (and really can't) write you a ticket for having over 15 empties in a 15 shell limit location...for one, you are picking up trash and it's highly unlikely that if you took more than 15 shells into that area that you are sportsman enough to carry out your own trash...secondly, empty hulls are just that and not legally "shells" so if you get a ticket, just take it to court and ask the court the definition of the 15 shell limit, i.e. the definition of a "shell" which is a hull, primer, powder, wad and shot...an empty is literally just a piece of brass and plastic. It's the same as if a youngster brought out a bag full of crushed and empty beer cans and the gamie wants to write them a ticket for possessing alcohol...its just a container.
Grade
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Looking at the picture, it's not much of a pile and likely multiple users.
While I try to pick up my hulls, I won't stop a hunt to search them out. Who here finds all of their shells?
That little pile hardly warrants the finger shaking admonition.
I do my best if I’m hunting a popular area I will usually come out with more empty’s then I fired even if I didn’t find most of my own. I don’t understand why it’s so hard for some. I mean I usually find one or two good intact shells in a blind as well. If I’m in a more private spot I will got he extra mile to get every single one if for nothing else to not make it look like a good spot to the random guy.
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When duck hunting, some places are really hard to find all your shells. That said, you can almost always easily find other people shells and have more coming out than you went in with.
Not always a good idea to pick up others I learned this season. I picked up a bag full and brought them out and the game warden was counting empty shells. Fortunately they were multiple different brands, various corrosion to the metal etc. If your in a 15 shell restriction, I will only account for what I brought in.
That is one STUUUU-PID game warden. I would of told him you are trying to set me up by planting all those empty shell mr Rosco P Coltrain. Go tell Boss Hog shove it up his phat ass! LMAO!