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Started by quavers59, March 07, 2024, 07:45:05 AM
Quote from: arkrem870 on March 19, 2024, 09:14:23 AMSaturday late morning I drove around an area and checked it for vehicles. A couple access spots lead into the same big block. Everyone had left for the morning so I unloaded my bike and proceeded. I got in the area I wanted to start and fired up a hen right off. Within seconds a gobbler hammered. I saw him through the woods out in front of me. He started skirting me to the right. When he got in a bunch of brush I repositioned. I got a glimpse of him at about 40 yards. He then went back left. And was well in range just in a bunch of junk and I was catching glimpses. I had a window and took the shot at about 35 yards and stoned him. I looked up through the woods about 120 yards away....At my 10 o'clock and another hunter was walking away. I was met at my truck by the hunter that dropped off the other hunter in the area and I took a cussing over the close call. No way I could know the other hunter was there.....if a vehicle was there I would have moved on.
Quote from: ScottTaulbee on March 19, 2024, 11:39:34 AMWe had that happen a lot down here last year, the out of state hunters would come in a group...load 3 or 4 deep in a vehicle and drop guys out at gates while the driver was going elsewhere and you'd never know they were there
Quote from: sippy cup on March 18, 2024, 08:38:21 PMThat's our biggest problem here in Virginia especially from PA hunters they see you parked there and still pull in and park even though there are 2 guys there then there buddy shows up the first time they said hello and walked right in on us so it got verbal next morning they did it again this time it went from verbal to picking himself up off the ground I try to get along with everyone if someone is parked there I'm not stopping but Pennsylvania hunters definitely are the rudest group of hunters I ever delt with
Quote from: ScottTaulbee on March 19, 2024, 11:39:34 AMWe had that happen a lot down here last year, the out of state hunters would come in a group, with different vehicles and one would leave a tent popped up at a gate, one would leave a vehicle at another gate, and then both of those would get in a separate vehicle with someone else and go hunt a different area. They would have you believe someone was there when in fact, they would be miles down the road. Or they'd load 3 or 4 deep in a vehicle and drop guys out at gates while the driver was going elsewhere and you'd never know they were there Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: Spurs on March 20, 2024, 03:45:35 PMNow I do not do the mean mugging, I will talk to everyone with respect, and if there is another option, will discuss how we may tackle an area together/separately. But if someone gets upset because they are asked to leave a public spot after getting beat, that sounds like a YOU problem and not a ME problem.
Quote from: eggshell on March 19, 2024, 08:20:33 AMWell, I know I am very blessed, because I pull up unlock the gate to 1,000 acres and then lock it behind me. There is no other easy access and it's all private. Even my best Out of state spot is behind locked gates and several hundred acres of high fence. When I do hunt open public, i usually move on if even a single vehicle is there. If some one is at the vehicle I stop and talk. If they are pleasant I ask if we can spit up the area (assuming it's a big area). I feel comfortable saying 80% of the time it works out. I believe in the goodness of people and most hunters are good reasonable people. There's always an arsehole, I agree some areas are more densely populated with a-holes. I just move on. It never hurts to talk.
Quote from: ruination on March 20, 2024, 04:53:34 PMQuote from: Spurs on March 20, 2024, 03:45:35 PMNow I do not do the mean mugging, I will talk to everyone with respect, and if there is another option, will discuss how we may tackle an area together/separately. But if someone gets upset because they are asked to leave a public spot after getting beat, that sounds like a YOU problem and not a ME problem.Kinda sounds like a you problem since you're the one asking someone to leave.Work is relative, too.
Quote from: Spurs on March 20, 2024, 08:45:37 PMQuote from: ruination on March 20, 2024, 04:53:34 PMQuote from: Spurs on March 20, 2024, 03:45:35 PMNow I do not do the mean mugging, I will talk to everyone with respect, and if there is another option, will discuss how we may tackle an area together/separately. But if someone gets upset because they are asked to leave a public spot after getting beat, that sounds like a YOU problem and not a ME problem.Kinda sounds like a you problem since you're the one asking someone to leave.Work is relative, too.I don't see how it's my problem as my plan worked out and you should be understanding. Therefore, your problem to figure out what plan b is...which any public land hunting should have at a minimum 4-5 backups...so not really a problem per se, but a less desirable option. But that's semantics.No, work is not relative. Personal life decisions does not factor in either if that is what you are referring to. Nor does scouting, pop up blinds, grand pappy's old spot, or any other excuse on the day of the hunt. Hunting is hunting and life is life. If you are working on a night shift, get off at 4, make it to the gate at 4:30, and that's your excuse....sorry, you should be have backups on top of backups.If you walked that same road for a week straight for the opener, cleared out every twig off the train, did your duty and picked up trash...that was yesterday and you got beat. There is absolutely no excuse.But I want to stress that I have and will NEVER tell someone to get lost or mean mug them. I've been dog cussed, even when I was the first to the gate. I treat everyone with respect. I've had, on many occasions, people hear me out, just to come right in with me and screw me up. That's all part of it though. Embrace the suck and be thankful that I wake up just to have the same conversation the next day.