Sounds about right. My guy charges $125.My taxi charges $130 for a euro mount. He's not in you area but gives an idea of the cost. Sunman area.
Sounds about right. My guy charges $125.My taxi charges $130 for a euro mount. He's not in you area but gives an idea of the cost. Sunman area.
Im glad you guys are seeing bucks with doe's. I have not seen one little sign of the rut in well over a week. I'm not seeing much movement, and what I am seeing is all at night.
I just took two doe’s. I had nine come in. I shot one through the heart and she dropped instantly. They ran off about 50 yards and turned around and came back. So I took another one. This has been an amazing weekend. Got my first buck and tagged out in one weekend.
another amazing thing happened Saturday. My dad shot a doe. He was a little low and didn’t hit anything vital. She was bleeding bad but still ran off. We looked for two hours to find her. About mid day I laid under my stand to take a nap. A noise about 20 feet away woke me up. And to my amazement that doe care right there and laid down and died. I can’t even imagine the odds of that but we were glad she wasn’t a waste. I know dad felt bad and wanted to find her. Absolutely amazing weekend.
Really? When the actual owner of the property isn’t even wanting him criminally trespassed?
It is kind of fascinating to me that the will of the people who actually OWN both pieces of property seems to mean nothing to most anyone here.
Never mind the half dozen other legal issues present here.
Yeah, that's what I was referring to as title 14 trespass. However, I don't see where he hunted on someone else's property. He crossed it to get to his hunting spot and then to get out. Either way, the conservation officer could, and probably should, be disciplined if he is agreeing to arrest people for his friends prior to doing an actual investigation, especially in light of Indiana's misdemeanor presence requirement.It kind of sounds like "hunting without permission" is being conflated with actual trespassing to me based on the comment. The standard/threshold for hunting without permission is much lower, IIRC, and is what COs more commonly issue citations for.
I was fortunate to get back up to my home state of Michigan for a rifle season hunt with my dad this year. Last Wednesday, I bagged this little buck with my freshly built .300 BLK.
On opening morning (Nov 15th), my pops dropped this buck with his 30-06.
It was our first time hunting together in over ten years, and I am extremely grateful that everything worked out to allow us to make these memories together.
Where in Michigan do you hunt? I used to spend a lot of time hunting Pinckney, west of Ann Arbor. It was nice country.
We hunt just outside of the little town of Merrill. It is west of Saginaw about twenty miles or so. Most of the area is farmland, so it makes for some very tasty venison.
Not many bucks older than a year and a half though, due to the amount of hunters per square mile in that area.
Had a Sunday morning that I will always remember. This is my first buck in 10 years. I've passed on a lot of smaller deer over the last decade and this one seems to make everything worth it. Finally after countless miles and hundreds of hours spent in the woods, I was able to take this mature 10.
Yeah, that's what I was referring to as title 14 trespass. However, I don't see where he hunted on someone else's property. He crossed it to get to his hunting spot and then to get out. Either way, the conservation officer could, and probably should, be disciplined if he is agreeing to arrest people for his friends prior to doing an actual investigation, especially in light of Indiana's misdemeanor presence requirement.