geetar
Well-known member
Bringing in your friends and family to kill 23 deer off a 20 acre parcel is the Eastern version of spot burning and ruining an area.
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It’s crazy what is allowed. There are basically no wetlands left around here on private property. Everything has been drained. Now the farmers are going back and putting tile grids in to ensure absolutely no water is allowed to recharge our aquifers and to make sure as many nutrients as possible make it into our rivers and lakes. In the meantime, the state is dumping chemicals into the lakes to try to keep the algae blooms at bay. Every year I think it can’t get worse. Then, a week after harvest is done, the tiling machines are back out in full force.example of this. Most current onX satelite image:
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just three years ago, I've circled in purple some wetland areas that are now gone due to tilling that went in near or at those locations:
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I'll take a shot at it. Looking at a 1 square mile section on onX, I have put a dot on every "tower gun stand" I could find. This is near where I live but not very close (15 miles away). This is an area with almost all owners enrolled in QDM and the deer density is extremely high. 5 different landowners would be hunting this square mile. I would bet that at any given moment before hunting season begins there are at least 75-100 living in this square mile. Karl F Bruins on the north end is a 20 acre section for size comparison. Of note there are also 7 houses on this square mile section. Another fun fact - Victor Mueller is selling. 465 acres, asking 3.3 million.
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They survive because I think most people are generally respectful and pretty good at deer management on private. The general herd can afford a few bad apples laying waste to every deer they see. Most though are only taking what they need for their freezers and than only excess being high quality mature bucksPffff…..hold my beer bro.
My lease is the yellow boundary. Welcome to my yearly nightmare. Everyone wonders why I go on two out of state trips a year.
Its a success story that ANY deer even survive the 3 MONTH rifle season where I hunt.
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Yup same here. Tilling season started this week here. If I were to ever go criminal, my list of crimes would be all in efforts destroying tilling equipment.It’s crazy what is allowed. There are basically no wetlands left around here on private property. Everything has been drained. Now the farmers are going back and putting tile grids in to ensure absolutely no water is allowed to recharge our aquifers and to make sure as many nutrients as possible make it into our rivers and lakes. In the meantime, the state is dumping chemicals into the lakes to try to keep the algae blooms at bay. Every year I think it can’t get worse. Then, a week after harvest is done, the tiling machines are back out in full force.
I don't know how you know all of those locations, but I like the idiots camp...lolPffff…..hold my beer bro.
My lease is the yellow boundary. Welcome to my yearly nightmare. Everyone wonders why I go on two out of state trips a year.
Its a success story that ANY deer even survive the 3 MONTH rifle season where I hunt.
View attachment 396165
They survive because I think most people are generally respectful and pretty good at deer management on private. The general herd can afford a few bad apples laying waste to every deer they see. Most though are only taking what they need for their freezers and than only excess being high quality mature bucks
This is something that has indeed crossed my mind. I could invite a bunch of people (perhaps some HT'ers!) to just come and help me by sitting the edge of their woods and shooting every deer before they go into it. That just doesn't really solve the problem though long termJust don't join the "if you cant beat them, join them".... That solves nothing. Treat your property as its own ecosystem the best you can and manage it to a level of deer that you think is right.
This is something that has indeed crossed my mind. I could invite a bunch of people (perhaps some HT'ers!) to just come and help me by sitting the edge of their woods and shooting every deer before they go into it. That just doesn't really solve the problem though long term
Our neighbors sat on the boundary line one year. My uncle was hunting by himself and shot a buck way down in a hole. As mentioned, breaking them down is not something we do in MN. The neighbors got to listen to a come-along click click click for hours while he slowly dragged his buck out of that hole. Neighbors haven't sat there sinceThis is something that has indeed crossed my mind. I could invite a bunch of people (perhaps some HT'ers!) to just come and help me by sitting the edge of their woods and shooting every deer before they go into it. That just doesn't really solve the problem though long term
The neighboring farmer didn’t like our restored wetland, so he complained to the state. They paid to tile his field right up to the property line so that he doesn’t get his tractor tires muddy on about a 1/8th acre of his land. The tiling happened in September. I took the employee that oversaw the restoration out hunting for teal season. His dog wouldn’t stop growling at the tiling machine sitting there. We both agreed that the dog knew what the real enemy was that morning.Yup same here. Tilling season started this week here. If I were to ever go criminal, my list of crimes would be all in efforts destroying tilling equipment.
Development is obviously the worst habitat destroyer. Number two is easily tilling.
My suggestion is to do what we did on our lease in Illinois that had bad slob redneck neighbors. Just don’t pay attention to any of it and control what you can control on your land. If the deer keep getting the living shit shot out of them on their land, maybe they won’t go over there anymore.
And if there is in fact a way to end their access through your land, do it and cut ties with them completely.
are you kidding me? That is really the case in NE? That is bonkers!Most farmers are pushed by insane property taxes ($100+ an acre) to farm every square inch they can,

Yep, and it’s worse out west where it’s irrigated. It costs me way more to hunt property I own in Nebraska than it does for me to hunt elk in a state I’m a non resident inare you kidding me? That is really the case in NE? That is bonkers!
Here is my tax bill this year for one of my parcels which is just over 50 acres with the assessment listing 22+ acres as agricultural and 28 as "undeveloped"
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So I shouldn't be mad about my tax bills going up 6% this year?Yep, and it’s worse out west where it’s irrigated. It costs me way more to hunt property I own in Nebraska than it does for me to hunt elk in a state I’m a non resident in
No.So I shouldn't be mad about my tax bills going up 6% this year?