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Started by Neill_Prater, June 22, 2024, 09:04:55 AM
Quote from: GobbleNut on June 29, 2024, 08:16:37 AMQuote from: dah on June 29, 2024, 12:32:54 AMI cant wait till the states say camping , hiking , driving roads , boating , bird watching , sightseeing , entering , leaving , climbing , taking pictures on federal lands is regulated and restricted to you differently because your house is on the other side of the line . Even though they used the resources from your house side of the line in the federal land for camping , hiking , driving roads , boating , bird watching , sightseeing , entering , leaving , climbing and taking pictures . They already have a name for me , called non resident , proud to be a citizen , I still have that. For any of those things mentioned, restrictions are increasingly being put in place in a lot of places. The common thread in almost all of those instances is that there are too many people doing too many things that are negatively impacting the landscape and resources to a degree that managers have no choice but to put those dreaded restrictions in place. That is not just related to federal lands, but also to any public lands, federal or state, that need protection. It is also not restricted just to nonresidents. Most of those types of restrictions apply to everybody. Regarding equal hunting access to all on federal lands, that issue is waaayyy more complicated than many seem to believe it is. ...And it also opens a waaayy bigger "can of worms" than any of us might think it will. Again, be careful what you wish for...
Quote from: dah on June 29, 2024, 12:32:54 AMI cant wait till the states say camping , hiking , driving roads , boating , bird watching , sightseeing , entering , leaving , climbing , taking pictures on federal lands is regulated and restricted to you differently because your house is on the other side of the line . Even though they used the resources from your house side of the line in the federal land for camping , hiking , driving roads , boating , bird watching , sightseeing , entering , leaving , climbing and taking pictures . They already have a name for me , called non resident , proud to be a citizen , I still have that.
Quote from: merriamsman on June 29, 2024, 01:36:41 PM"Read the 2003 publication in the the link I posted and get back to me."I read it and it does nothing to change the current system that states have control over the management of resident wildlife within their borders regardless of land ownership. The feds do have the authority to override state authority on federal land but only when the resource is threatened. How does limiting nonresident hunting threaten the resource when it's being done to protect the resource? The authority of the feds is to make more restrictive regulations, not less restrictive as some are advocating regarding nonresident hunting on federal land.
Quote from: joey46 on June 30, 2024, 11:16:10 AMQuotas are coming for these states practicing nothing more than resident appeasement on federal land. You don't try and claim it's all for the turkey and leave a three bird limit in place as some have done. There is plenty of room for reasonable compromise on these issues.
Quote from: nativeks on June 30, 2024, 08:28:48 PMKansas is going after non resident waterfowlers next. The process is partially done but it would limit non residents to 3 days a week on all public including federal reservoirs, NWRs, etc. The feds actually asked for steeper restrictions than the state proposed.
Quote from: merriamsman on July 01, 2024, 04:36:20 PMNorth Dakota and South Dakota already limit non-resident waterfowl hunters without regard to land ownership. South Dakota has a quota system for non-resident waterfowlers and North Dakota limits non-resident hunters to 14 total days of hunting. Neither law has been successfully challenged in court.[/quot] Yet