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Started by eggshell, October 17, 2019, 12:18:46 PM
Quote from: BigSlam51 on October 17, 2019, 04:00:42 PMQuote from: eggshell on October 17, 2019, 03:34:34 PMI feel for you guys in Florida. I was down there in 2012, of course to finish my grand slam, and it was getting tougher then. Even in the last 7 years I have noticed prices have sky rocketed for guided hunts and with that I'm sure lease rates have gone up. People have no other option for an Osceola. A buddy of mine winters in Florida and says it's not even worth trying anymore, he just quit hunting down there. I think you can thank all the hunting videos, shows and NWTF for that. It used to be that bad here way back in the day as we had the best part of the state to hunt and there were only birds in a few counties (I'm talking 1970s and 80s). As the flock expanded it lightened up. That is not what I meant however, I know probably half the local hunters have quit turkey hunting or only hunt a few days. No one fall hunts. Deer are the rage here in Ohio and We are getting bombarded by out of state traffic and out of staters buying up leases. Lease prices have tripled from 10-15 years ago. Have I told you I hate leasing!! It is too the point I can not even walk out my back door and hunt, 1,000 acres I used to freely hunt is now leased all around me, and all out of state people. Two years ago some of the lease holders tried to run my buddies off my land, said they had it leased. My buddies called me and they said the fools actually took off running when they heard my truck coming through the woods. There is still a group of land owners who have joined me in standing against leasing and don't lease our lands. We have about 2,000 acres the local Joes can still hunt. I think nothing else has hurt hunting participation more than leasing. If people don't have a place to hunt they just give up, because public land is too crowed.I was just about to bring up ohio, the out of state deer hunters, and the leasing lol. It's pretty bad right now, and I'm in northeast ohio. My buddy and I had planned on hunting some public that I grew up hunting last weekend and got beat there by some guys from Pennsylvania. I guess that's what happens when ohio is the closest midwest big buck state to guys from the east and has some of the cheapest licenses available considering our trophy animals.Sent from my SM-N975U using Tapatalk
Quote from: eggshell on October 17, 2019, 03:34:34 PMI feel for you guys in Florida. I was down there in 2012, of course to finish my grand slam, and it was getting tougher then. Even in the last 7 years I have noticed prices have sky rocketed for guided hunts and with that I'm sure lease rates have gone up. People have no other option for an Osceola. A buddy of mine winters in Florida and says it's not even worth trying anymore, he just quit hunting down there. I think you can thank all the hunting videos, shows and NWTF for that. It used to be that bad here way back in the day as we had the best part of the state to hunt and there were only birds in a few counties (I'm talking 1970s and 80s). As the flock expanded it lightened up. That is not what I meant however, I know probably half the local hunters have quit turkey hunting or only hunt a few days. No one fall hunts. Deer are the rage here in Ohio and We are getting bombarded by out of state traffic and out of staters buying up leases. Lease prices have tripled from 10-15 years ago. Have I told you I hate leasing!! It is too the point I can not even walk out my back door and hunt, 1,000 acres I used to freely hunt is now leased all around me, and all out of state people. Two years ago some of the lease holders tried to run my buddies off my land, said they had it leased. My buddies called me and they said the fools actually took off running when they heard my truck coming through the woods. There is still a group of land owners who have joined me in standing against leasing and don't lease our lands. We have about 2,000 acres the local Joes can still hunt. I think nothing else has hurt hunting participation more than leasing. If people don't have a place to hunt they just give up, because public land is too crowed.
Quote from: Southerngobbler on October 17, 2019, 01:50:20 PMHere in N/W Florida we're getting bombarded. Saw more out of state tags last year than Iv'e ever seen. More turkey hunters every year, residence and non residents. Also noticed with this influx of hunters its no longer the normal to drive on to the next place if someones already parked there. This seemed to be a the widely excepted practice for so long but just in the last year or so it doesn't seem to matter who got there first, just pull on up, park next to me and come help hunt that one bird that's gobbling back there.
Quote from: guesswho on October 17, 2019, 12:36:10 PMThere's a shortage of turkey hunters in the Southeast, but no shortage of people trying to play the part.
QuoteI see more Sprinting younger Hunters coming to the Gobble.
QuoteI have never hunted anywhere where landowners gave free rein to hunters, but I do know how public land hunting can be here in Georgia and I can honestly say that I much prefer a private lease.
Quote from: eggshell on October 20, 2019, 07:39:44 AMQuoteI see more Sprinting younger Hunters coming to the Gobble.LOL, yeah one of the speedy Gonzalez crowd was on here blowing about how most of the turkeys were killed by his generation. It got pretty intense!QuoteI have never hunted anywhere where landowners gave free rein to hunters, but I do know how public land hunting can be here in Georgia and I can honestly say that I much prefer a private lease. Have you ever wondered why public land was like that? Maybe all the people who can't afford a lease are there. Actually, public land is huntable in much of our state. Sure it's more crowded than private land, but it's not so bad you just give up. In most cases it's only super crowed the first weekend of season. However, I see it getting more crowded after leasing came. In my area we don't have but one small block of public land, 90% is private. So if you don't want to travel it's not a choice. I hunt national Forest in a couple other bordering states and have very few conflicts with other hunters. Neither are heavily leased. A local paper company used to allow public hunting on thousands of acres until they hired a new forest manager from Ga. and he quickly told the higher ups they could make a lot of money if they leased hunting rights. That started the onslaught here. When you say you've leased with friends and family, that's great. What grinds my grits is the out of staters from down south came rolling in and paying big prices that locals can't afford. I asked the landowner that joins me if he'd lease to a small group of locals and he said I'd have to match the price the guys from North Carolina was paying, that is $10,000.00 a year....too steep for an old retired government worker!
Quote from: quavers59 on October 20, 2019, 03:31:16 AMFall Turkey Hunting used to be more Popular in New York. I don't see many Fall Huntersnow. Spring Hunting however has exploded. Unfortunately, I see more Sprinting younger Hunters coming to the Gobble.