Go to Arkansas . . .
Posted: Sun Nov 17, 2002 8:15 pm
I generally tell folks to go to Arkansas. However, I am joking when I make this statement. I grew up hunting in Arkansas and Mississippi but now live in Louisiana. I still hunt 15 -- 20 times a year in the MS Delta and a few other select locations all of which are on public land. So, yes, I am an out of state hunter but an experienced one at that.
Torch -- your suggestion about a draw hunt system may have applicability only in a few locations. I strongly disagree that such a system should be put into place for all state controlled lands. I hunt some public places in MS every season that few people visit on a regular basis (& yes, I kill a decent number of ducks at these places). I also have concerns that any resouces spent on a draw system would be pulled from other programs like habitat improvement.
Most of my concerns with out of state hunters have been safety related. In the past few years, I have encountered a number of out of state hunters in MS and LA that are improperly equiped to attempt their intended hunts. I did, however, have problems at a WMA several years ago with a crew from Alabama. Its funny how things work out sometimes.
Examples of the safety issue . . . two out of state hunters from Georgia with a sixteen foot canoe wanting to hunt a major oxbow off the MS River when a third of the lake was covered with ice and the rest of the lake was rough with a north wind. I basically begged them not to go out on the lake and still today am not sure what happened. Also, no ducks were present, but that lake is where they had been told to hunt.
Second example . . . this one from LA . . . three out of state hunters in Venice, LA in a 16-foot flatboat with a yellow lab and a pirouge powered by a 25-hp . . . the stern running light is about three feet tall . . . the guys tell my partner and I before leaving the ramp that they are headed across the river to a NWR . . . we leave later and catch up with them coming out of the "Jump" . . . the swells on the river and crew boat wakes are large enough that the 16-foot boat and the running light disappear between the swells . . . basically STUPID!!
Out of state or in-state, I try to be hospitable everywhere to all people, but I may have a serious issue with my finding a Yankee in one of "my" duckholes.
Signed, Bodean who saw the aftermath of an IN-STATE hunter's truck TORCHED at a public hunting area in the 1997-98 season.
Torch -- your suggestion about a draw hunt system may have applicability only in a few locations. I strongly disagree that such a system should be put into place for all state controlled lands. I hunt some public places in MS every season that few people visit on a regular basis (& yes, I kill a decent number of ducks at these places). I also have concerns that any resouces spent on a draw system would be pulled from other programs like habitat improvement.
Most of my concerns with out of state hunters have been safety related. In the past few years, I have encountered a number of out of state hunters in MS and LA that are improperly equiped to attempt their intended hunts. I did, however, have problems at a WMA several years ago with a crew from Alabama. Its funny how things work out sometimes.
Examples of the safety issue . . . two out of state hunters from Georgia with a sixteen foot canoe wanting to hunt a major oxbow off the MS River when a third of the lake was covered with ice and the rest of the lake was rough with a north wind. I basically begged them not to go out on the lake and still today am not sure what happened. Also, no ducks were present, but that lake is where they had been told to hunt.
Second example . . . this one from LA . . . three out of state hunters in Venice, LA in a 16-foot flatboat with a yellow lab and a pirouge powered by a 25-hp . . . the stern running light is about three feet tall . . . the guys tell my partner and I before leaving the ramp that they are headed across the river to a NWR . . . we leave later and catch up with them coming out of the "Jump" . . . the swells on the river and crew boat wakes are large enough that the 16-foot boat and the running light disappear between the swells . . . basically STUPID!!
Out of state or in-state, I try to be hospitable everywhere to all people, but I may have a serious issue with my finding a Yankee in one of "my" duckholes.
Signed, Bodean who saw the aftermath of an IN-STATE hunter's truck TORCHED at a public hunting area in the 1997-98 season.