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Started by longbeards, January 28, 2021, 07:08:59 PM
Quote from: GobbleNut on January 29, 2021, 10:30:58 AMI, too, am looking at a future "trifecta hunt" to hit Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont in the next few years. Looking at the map apps showing land status and ownership, I was shocked at the amount of private land compared to public, at least in Maine. My very first thought was "how does one really go about finding a place to hunt when there appears to be so little public land and so many broken-up private parcels?" When I do head up that way, I will probably have a pretty small window of hunting time, and I don't want to spend much of it knocking on doors trying to find a place to hunt.Other than what has already been said in previous posts, anybody that might have gone up there "blind" have any additional thoughts on this subject?
Quote from: GobbleNut on January 29, 2021, 12:30:10 PMSooo,...this brings to mind the obvious question of what approximate percentage of private property is posted up that way? ...And what are the posting requirements? How difficult would it be, with all those small parcels of private property, to end up wandering onto a place that was posted without knowing it?
Quote from: turkeyfool on January 29, 2021, 01:24:36 PMIn Maine from the ground I've covered which is Kennebunk all the way up to Augusta I'd guess that 9 out 10 properties are not posted.
Quote from: TauntoHawk on January 29, 2021, 06:08:01 PMHe did not say there's a turkey behind 9 out of every 10 trees, people are just trying to understand a foreign concept and get sound advice about these law's and permissions. If you have a cautionary tale, drop it here just like to did. If you want to talk about the nats, miles of timber with thick late may vegetation, or the steep rocky mountains of the north east we can do that too. Common sense also dictates if the barrier to entry is a easy hurdle than Obviously places are going to get obvious amounts of hunting pressure making it not a cake walk to locate and kill birds. This "your ruining hunting" every time a hunter drops a shred of useful information gets old, especially coming from a member of an online internet hunting forum.Sent from my Pixel 5 using Tapatalk
Quote from: turkeyfool on January 29, 2021, 08:44:31 PMNever said behind 9 out of 10 trees. It's not an easy state to hunt. There's a lot you're working against. The best part of hunting the state isn't necessarily the turkeys or population. It's just a beautiful state. At the end of the day when I go up there, I'm fishing for smallmouth and basically carrying my turkey gun with me.Didn't mean to infer that it was easy or that the population of birds was high. If you want that, go to the Midwest. I'm not going to name particular states, but Maine itself is by no means easy. Also, as far as hundreds of people opening up this thread and thinking "i'm going to go to Maine". I can tell you that the majority of the country simply lives too far to hunt it. People in New England can hunt it by driving a few hours, but Vermont and New Hampshire are just as good.