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How To Hunt Big Game
Hunter-Landowner Relations
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<blockquote data-quote="Topgun 30-06" data-source="post: 728890" data-attributes="member: 28854"><p>Amen to that! I have had some free partial access the last few years to a small ranch that an older couple owns in Wyoming and the guy is in bad health. They try to be self sufficient and this year I almost demanded to help mend several miles of their fences and then also spent one day helping the Vet do pregnancy tests on their 40 cows and the neighbor's 60 head. I now have permission to hunt a good chunk of the neighbor's ranch and the older couple gave me a key for full access to their ranch, except for the first few days of deer season when two old guys that have hunted it for 40 years are there. The northeast sides of their ranches also border over 2,000 acres of public land that is basically landlocked and only hunted by a couple people that own property on the other sides of it, so that also opens up new territory. It pays off to offer help like that and even at 65 I'm actually having a lot of fun being a ranch hand! I may even go out for a couple weeks next Spring to do a lot more work roofing a small building that is in disrepair, more fence mending, and may even throw in a little turkey hunting in the Black Hills on the way out!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Topgun 30-06, post: 728890, member: 28854"] Amen to that! I have had some free partial access the last few years to a small ranch that an older couple owns in Wyoming and the guy is in bad health. They try to be self sufficient and this year I almost demanded to help mend several miles of their fences and then also spent one day helping the Vet do pregnancy tests on their 40 cows and the neighbor's 60 head. I now have permission to hunt a good chunk of the neighbor's ranch and the older couple gave me a key for full access to their ranch, except for the first few days of deer season when two old guys that have hunted it for 40 years are there. The northeast sides of their ranches also border over 2,000 acres of public land that is basically landlocked and only hunted by a couple people that own property on the other sides of it, so that also opens up new territory. It pays off to offer help like that and even at 65 I'm actually having a lot of fun being a ranch hand! I may even go out for a couple weeks next Spring to do a lot more work roofing a small building that is in disrepair, more fence mending, and may even throw in a little turkey hunting in the Black Hills on the way out! [/QUOTE]
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