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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Navasot]
#6944149
11/02/17 09:57 PM
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Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 19,876
Pitchfork Predator
THF Celebrity
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I believe Michigan and a few other states do that. We discuss it from time to time because it's a logical modification that our state needs to adopt.
Run as many deer off as possible, and then close the fence. Fly it with a chopper to get a relatively close count and then pay the state for the native deer left inside.
That way the landowner owns the deer and the state doesn't spend resources controlling that property. In theory this is a ideal way to get what a landowner wants out of a HF and then TPWD wont have to worry about it.... but my issue is how long until theres more HF than actual free range deer running around... this shuts off vital land to native deer that had the right to be here but now forgotten because their antlers wernt big enough.... I dont mind if people hunt HF its part of the game but there needs to be limits on huge jumps in what an owner can do inside of them like that needs to be regulated the most imo What it boils down to is this isn't going to get better because it's the effects of a expanding population and urban sprawl. 30 years ago there were very few individual land owners that hunted their own "ranch". Now they are springing up everywhere. A guy buys 50 acres and hunts it like it's 5000 because he's hunting far more deer that his land will support. It's a domino effect as we've seen with these ranches turned into "ranchettes". This is the dynamic that drives most landowners to high fence.
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: SherpaPhil]
#6944185
11/02/17 10:31 PM
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Joined: Dec 2016
Posts: 314
HCHunter28
Bird Dog
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Bird Dog
Joined: Dec 2016
Posts: 314 |
What I don't get about this conversation is that there are plenty of deer in the majority of Texas. Are the people arguing for paying for deer in hf not seeing enough deer? Fencing in property also prevents outside bucks from going in so the ratio of deer per acre should not change. Genetics would be the same on both sides of the fence so high fenced lo are not hurting the herd genetics. How are they affecting the herd in a negative way?
I don't think it would affect my hunting at all. It is simply that I think if someone privatizes a public resource, they should pay for it. The great thing about deer is that it's a renewable resource.
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Pitchfork Predator]
#6944367
11/03/17 12:52 AM
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Joined: Apr 2013
Posts: 2,265
maximus_flavius
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What it boils down to is this isn't going to get better because it's the effects of a expanding population and urban sprawl. 30 years ago there were very few individual land owners that hunted their own "ranch". Now they are springing up everywhere. A guy buys 50 acres and hunts it like it's 5000 because he's hunting far more deer that his land will support. It's a domino effect as we've seen with these ranches turned into "ranchettes". This is the dynamic that drives most landowners to high fence. Indeed. In many places, if you want to have nice, big, mature bucks & plenty of does, your gonna have to HF.
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Midwaytmm]
#6944395
11/03/17 01:11 AM
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Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 63,268
BOBO the Clown
kind of a big deal
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kind of a big deal
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 63,268 |
28 million people in Texas and growing daily.
3.9 million deer, shrinking daily.
Just a matter of time.
Last edited by BOBO the Clown; 11/03/17 02:39 AM. Reason: Far fingered 28million
Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, b/c they know not victory nor defeat"- #26 TR
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Midwaytmm]
#6944456
11/03/17 01:54 AM
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Joined: Aug 2009
Posts: 3,131
postoak
Veteran Tracker
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Woah, there are no where near 250 million people in Texas.
googled it, current population is 28 million.
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: postoak]
#6944516
11/03/17 02:38 AM
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Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 63,268
BOBO the Clown
kind of a big deal
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kind of a big deal
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 63,268 |
Woah, there are no where near 250 million people in Texas.
googled it, current population is 28 million. Yelp that’s US, I added zero sorry, but none the less
Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, b/c they know not victory nor defeat"- #26 TR
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: BOBO the Clown]
#6944561
11/03/17 03:13 AM
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Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 3,903
JJH
Extreme Tracker
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Extreme Tracker
Joined: Oct 2006
Posts: 3,903 |
If you’re on interstate 10 in Houston, you’d swear there WERE 280,000,000!
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: JJH]
#6944585
11/03/17 03:48 AM
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Joined: Nov 2008
Posts: 44,461
rifleman
Sparkly Pants
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Sparkly Pants
Joined: Nov 2008
Posts: 44,461 |
If you’re on interstate 10 in Houston, you’d swear there WERE 280,000,000! 10 is bearable..now 45, it exceeded CC a long time ago and it’s causing a great migration out 290.
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Midwaytmm]
#6944589
11/03/17 03:51 AM
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Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 5,714
TAT
THF Trophy Hunter
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THF Trophy Hunter
Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 5,714 |
guess I don't see the issue with LO's highfencing their property. If enough around you do it then you can run a little and have one yourself and manage those deer in your place as you see fit. I know guys that never would have highfenced if the small acreages around them wouldn't shoot everything that walks. Hell, I own small acreage (68 acres) and I am very selective when I harvest a deer. If that means not shooting a deer off it for a few years so be it. To each his own in my opinion. That's not much I guess!
It's not how you fall, It's how you get up.
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Navasot]
#6944997
11/03/17 04:03 PM
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Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 7,205
therancher
THF Trophy Hunter
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THF Trophy Hunter
Joined: Jul 2013
Posts: 7,205 |
I believe Michigan and a few other states do that. We discuss it from time to time because it's a logical modification that our state needs to adopt.
Run as many deer off as possible, and then close the fence. Fly it with a chopper to get a relatively close count and then pay the state for the native deer left inside.
That way the landowner owns the deer and the state doesn't spend resources controlling that property. In theory this is a ideal way to get what a landowner wants out of a HF and then TPWD wont have to worry about it.... but my issue is how long until theres more HF than actual free range deer running around... this shuts off vital land to native deer that had the right to be here but now forgotten because their antlers wernt big enough.... I dont mind if people hunt HF its part of the game but there needs to be limits on huge jumps in what an owner can do inside of them like that needs to be regulated the most imo I don't get your concern. You either own the place you hunt, or you lease or hunt at the pleasure of the landowner. That doesn't change with a fence. Typical high fence ranches have MUCH higher CC's. I'm sure you've noticed the fact that the cost to hunt bigger bucks has gone way down over the past decade. 150-160 class deer are within most people's budgets today. Mainly because high fence ranches produce so many of them. What I do see happening in the next few decades is big low fenced deer will draw a premium price. Simple supply and demand. But relatively cheap big bucks are here to stay thanks in large part to hf ranches. AND thanks to hf ranches operated like mine there will be virtually free does and cull bucks. Friends of mine have been slaughtering the "states" native deer on my place pasture by pasture since 2011. Making room for those deer with my preferred genetics. And the states not getting anything out of it. I'd LOVE to pay the state for those natives to get them out of my business.
Crotchety old bastidge
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: therancher]
#6945315
11/03/17 09:40 PM
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Joined: Feb 2015
Posts: 5,758
flintknapper
THF Trophy Hunter
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THF Trophy Hunter
Joined: Feb 2015
Posts: 5,758 |
I believe Michigan and a few other states do that. We discuss it from time to time because it's a logical modification that our state needs to adopt.
Run as many deer off as possible, and then close the fence. Fly it with a chopper to get a relatively close count and then pay the state for the native deer left inside.
That way the landowner owns the deer and the state doesn't spend resources controlling that property. In theory this is a ideal way to get what a landowner wants out of a HF and then TPWD wont have to worry about it.... but my issue is how long until theres more HF than actual free range deer running around... this shuts off vital land to native deer that had the right to be here but now forgotten because their antlers wernt big enough.... I dont mind if people hunt HF its part of the game but there needs to be limits on huge jumps in what an owner can do inside of them like that needs to be regulated the most imo I don't get your concern. You either own the place you hunt, or you lease or hunt at the pleasure of the landowner. That doesn't change with a fence. Typical high fence ranches have MUCH higher CC's. I'm sure you've noticed the fact that the cost to hunt bigger bucks has gone way down over the past decade. 150-160 class deer are within most people's budgets today. Mainly because high fence ranches produce so many of them. What I do see happening in the next few decades is big low fenced deer will draw a premium price. Simple supply and demand. But relatively cheap big bucks are here to stay thanks in large part to hf ranches. AND thanks to hf ranches operated like mine there will be virtually free does and cull bucks. Friends of mine have been slaughtering the "states" native deer on my place pasture by pasture since 2011. Making room for those deer with my preferred genetics. And the states not getting anything out of it. I'd LOVE to pay the state for those natives to get them out of my business. ^^^^^^^^ Exactly....Thank You.
Spartans ask not...how many, but where!
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: flintknapper]
#6948116
11/06/17 03:32 PM
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Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 28,087
Navasot
Hollywood
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Hollywood
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 28,087 |
I believe Michigan and a few other states do that. We discuss it from time to time because it's a logical modification that our state needs to adopt.
Run as many deer off as possible, and then close the fence. Fly it with a chopper to get a relatively close count and then pay the state for the native deer left inside.
That way the landowner owns the deer and the state doesn't spend resources controlling that property. In theory this is a ideal way to get what a landowner wants out of a HF and then TPWD wont have to worry about it.... but my issue is how long until theres more HF than actual free range deer running around... this shuts off vital land to native deer that had the right to be here but now forgotten because their antlers wernt big enough.... I dont mind if people hunt HF its part of the game but there needs to be limits on huge jumps in what an owner can do inside of them like that needs to be regulated the most imo I don't get your concern. You either own the place you hunt, or you lease or hunt at the pleasure of the landowner. That doesn't change with a fence. Typical high fence ranches have MUCH higher CC's. I'm sure you've noticed the fact that the cost to hunt bigger bucks has gone way down over the past decade. 150-160 class deer are within most people's budgets today. Mainly because high fence ranches produce so many of them. What I do see happening in the next few decades is big low fenced deer will draw a premium price. Simple supply and demand. But relatively cheap big bucks are here to stay thanks in large part to hf ranches. AND thanks to hf ranches operated like mine there will be virtually free does and cull bucks. Friends of mine have been slaughtering the "states" native deer on my place pasture by pasture since 2011. Making room for those deer with my preferred genetics. And the states not getting anything out of it. I'd LOVE to pay the state for those natives to get them out of my business. ^^^^^^^^ Exactly....Thank You. It changes the amount of habitat native game has available to utilize
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Midwaytmm]
#6948118
11/06/17 03:34 PM
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Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 28,087
Navasot
Hollywood
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Hollywood
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 28,087 |
That is my main concern not the ethics of what happens inside... thankfully not everyone is in the position to pay for such a thing but if its made easier and cheaper each year our future generations may not even get to see such a thing as a wild native Tx deer
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Navasot]
#6948175
11/06/17 04:03 PM
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Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 63,268
BOBO the Clown
kind of a big deal
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kind of a big deal
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 63,268 |
That is my main concern not the ethics of what happens inside... thankfully not everyone is in the position to pay for such a thing but if its made easier and cheaper each year our future generations may not even get to see such a thing as a wild native Tx deer There will always be those that take pride in Native(before fence) genetics. I worry more about the demise of the big ranches more then the fence height, But then again they kind of go hand in hand.
Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, b/c they know not victory nor defeat"- #26 TR
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: SherpaPhil]
#6948748
11/06/17 09:49 PM
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Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 267
FordEvangelist
Bird Dog
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Bird Dog
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 267 |
If Bernie Sanders was in this discussion this is exactly what he would say, too. Even if a particular property wasn't high fenced, you still couldn't hunt the deer on it without permission. Not legally anyway. Wait a minute... are you complaining because the high fence makes it harder to poach? You are "taking" the deer by fencing them in and denying they public the opportunity to hunt them and take them themselves.
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Navasot]
#6949801
11/07/17 03:31 PM
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Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 19,876
Pitchfork Predator
THF Celebrity
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Posts: 19,876 |
That is my main concern not the ethics of what happens inside... thankfully not everyone is in the position to pay for such a thing but if its made easier and cheaper each year our future generations may not even get to see such a thing as a wild native Tx deer About 40-50% of the state that's low fenced does not have native Texas deer.
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Pitchfork Predator]
#6949825
11/07/17 03:44 PM
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Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 28,087
Navasot
Hollywood
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Hollywood
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 28,087 |
That is my main concern not the ethics of what happens inside... thankfully not everyone is in the position to pay for such a thing but if its made easier and cheaper each year our future generations may not even get to see such a thing as a wild native Tx deer About 40-50% of the state that's low fenced does not have native Texas deer. Then even more of a reason to keep what we have
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Navasot]
#6949848
11/07/17 03:53 PM
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Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 19,876
Pitchfork Predator
THF Celebrity
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THF Celebrity
Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 19,876 |
That is my main concern not the ethics of what happens inside... thankfully not everyone is in the position to pay for such a thing but if its made easier and cheaper each year our future generations may not even get to see such a thing as a wild native Tx deer About 40-50% of the state that's low fenced does not have native Texas deer. Then even more of a reason to keep what we have They had to restock these areas where the natives were hunted to extinction. Your area is one of them.
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Midwaytmm]
#6949856
11/07/17 03:58 PM
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Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 63,268
BOBO the Clown
kind of a big deal
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kind of a big deal
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 63,268 |
Interesting enough the only pure genetic Whitetail herd left after the 20-30’s restocking programs(screw worms, commercial hunting) is a private herd, aka the King Ranch.
If Flounder is correct with his apocalypse CWD view, only animals left will being ranches like George straight that’s double fenced.
Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, b/c they know not victory nor defeat"- #26 TR
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Navasot]
#6949939
11/07/17 04:34 PM
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Joined: Apr 2013
Posts: 2,265
maximus_flavius
Veteran Tracker
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Joined: Apr 2013
Posts: 2,265 |
It changes the amount of habitat native game has available to utilize What about the native game that's in the HF? Now the game inside (native) can be managed properly, without Dickhead Von Cheapskate (the neighbor who owns 40 acres & has 10 hunters) shooting everything. Decreased predation, increased food, selective hunting, all equal better deer.
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Midwaytmm]
#6949983
11/07/17 04:55 PM
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Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 63,268
BOBO the Clown
kind of a big deal
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kind of a big deal
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 63,268 |
Nav has managed and guided LF and HF. He is aware on how to grow big deer. He has a photo album full.
As a landowner Nav just loves the surprise of the river bottom monster that pays heed to no fence and no man just mother natures raising and falling waters.
I get it, I don’t think anyone truly knowns the best way to preserve it since the big ranches are being sold of by the square foot, especially his country
Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, b/c they know not victory nor defeat"- #26 TR
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: Midwaytmm]
#6950052
11/07/17 05:40 PM
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Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 8,719
cameron00
THF Trophy Hunter
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THF Trophy Hunter
Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 8,719 |
I don't understand why anyone would have to reimburse the state for animals inside the fence when they throw up a HF. Say they never put up a fence. Sure, some of the animals would leave their property to be taken by other hunters, but some would leave surrounding properties and settle on their land. The deer on their property when the fence went up should theoretically be the equilibrium quantity of deer that would've been there and unavailable to outside hunters anyway.
Even under the argument that they put up food plots, feeder, etc to attract more deer than the surrounding properties where the argument is that they are trapping deer that would've otherwise been taken by others - they paid money to feed more of the state's deer anyhow, and the state is still going to tell them how many they can take, high fence or not.
I guess in exchange for reimbursing the state they're now allowed to harvest however many and under whatever timing they desire? Is that the tradeoff?
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: maximus_flavius]
#6950497
11/07/17 10:09 PM
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Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 28,087
Navasot
Hollywood
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Hollywood
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 28,087 |
It changes the amount of habitat native game has available to utilize What about the native game that's in the HF? Now the game inside (native) can be managed properly, without Dickhead Von Cheapskate (the neighbor who owns 40 acres & has 10 hunters) shooting everything. Decreased predation, increased food, selective hunting, all equal better deer. See thats something you hear from soooooo many people... the durn neighbors that are shooting up all the deer.... Id bet in maybe MAYBE 10% of these they are actually causing an issue with the herd performance... increased food would be the same on your property depending on how much you put into it.. the fence wont change that.. now the control of food you want them to eat can but not the amount.. whats available on your property will be the same either way.. and even with running snares 24/7 you will not decrease the predators in a sizable HF property.. dig holes will be all along the fenceline and will continue to grow in numbers.. with a large enough property they will be able to thrive just as well as the other wildlife like any other property. Selective hunting will be for sure the key in the HF. but at what cost.... iv hunted plenty of HF places like I said its not an ethics thing.. im not against putting meat on the table but id never pay to hunt in one.. this is yet just an opinion of mine.. nothing against anyone who does.
Last edited by Navasot; 11/07/17 10:24 PM.
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Re: High fence regulation
[Re: BOBO the Clown]
#6950527
11/07/17 10:25 PM
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Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 28,087
Navasot
Hollywood
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Hollywood
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 28,087 |
Nav has managed and guided LF and HF. He is aware on how to grow big deer. He has a photo album full.
As a landowner Nav just loves the surprise of the river bottom monster that pays heed to no fence and no man just mother natures raising and falling waters.
I get it, I don’t think anyone truly knowns the best way to preserve it since the big ranches are being sold of by the square foot, especially his country

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