T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1154.1 | An Opinion, and a Source for Clarity...... | SALEM::PAPPALARDO | | Mon Apr 06 1992 14:17 | 16 |
|
My thoughts on this subject would have to agree with you. If the club
is private then state regulations would not apply (IMHO). To give an
example, if you went to one of these bird hunting preserves you don't
need a license and your paying for the birds which you already doing as
part of your club dues. The only catch would be the technicality of a
possesion limit in your freezer. If your home was ever searched (which
in 99.9% of our cases wouldn't happen) you may be written up for more
birds than what the law reads. This happened to a couple of poachers
caught in N.H. for taking a deer/moose (can't remember which) illegally
and when they searched the house they had a huge amount of trout. A
call to your State Fish & Game Dept. would really clear things up.
Guy
|
1154.2 | | GIAMEM::J_AMBERSON | | Mon Apr 06 1992 14:36 | 7 |
| Does your club tag your birds? Any preserve that I have shot at
insists on tagging the birds before you leave. This covers you for
the situation you described. The tags are metal bands. If there
not tagged I don't know how you could prove that they were shot on
club property vs public land.
Jeff
|
1154.3 | limits | ASDG::DUFFY | | Mon Apr 06 1992 15:12 | 10 |
| re.1 as far as someone coming in and searching my freezer that wouldn't
help them much, I love the taste of game so much not to many birds
make it to the freezer.
Re.2 no my club doesn't tag the birds, one way I have made sure that
I dont have 3 birds on me is a quick stop home, I live 5 min from my club
which is great for those hunts early in the AM after they stock the
night before and before work.
Duff
|
1154.4 | Get a reciept.. | CSC32::SCHIMPF | | Mon Apr 06 1992 18:07 | 7 |
| Duff,
Just to C.Y.A; See if the club can give you a reciept of sorts; So
that if you are ever checked, you have proof that the birds are legal.
Jeff
|
1154.5 | ya, but... | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Tue Apr 07 1992 09:20 | 4 |
| but then again, if everyone ran home and dropped off a few birds and
went back out hunting...
think about it...
|
1154.6 | takin' a chance | KAHALA::NELSON | Shorthairs | Tue Apr 07 1992 09:44 | 16 |
|
Unless your club is tagging the birds for you, I believe
a warden questioning the possesion of the birds would count
them towards your daily bag limit.
Ethically, its your call. Legally, I think you'd be in the
wrong if you got caught doing what you're doing.
dave
Just as an aside, and this has been discussed in other notes; It
is up to us to regulate and govern ourseleves especially when the
issue of SEASON limits come to light. I can't begin to count the
number of times I've heard guys boasting of getting 15-20 birds
a season off the WMAs. Is this wrong ??? Should we stop hunting
when we've shot our six bird season limit ??
|
1154.7 | | DECALP::HOHWY | Just another Programmer | Tue Apr 07 1992 11:44 | 25 |
|
> Just as an aside, and this has been discussed in other notes; It
> is up to us to regulate and govern ourseleves especially when the
> issue of SEASON limits come to light. I can't begin to count the
> number of times I've heard guys boasting of getting 15-20 birds
> a season off the WMAs. Is this wrong ??? Should we stop hunting
> when we've shot our six bird season limit ??
Dave, in my mind: absolutely! I think everybody would agree
that it would be dead wrong (apart from the legal aspects of
poaching etc) to take more big game than what was on your
license (e.g. 2 der when only one was allowed). Why bird season
limits should be treated differently, I don't see.
All season limits (big game, small game ...) have been put
into effect because statistically a limit has been established
that it is safe to harvest of a particular species. Disregarding
the possibility of political influence, the system of limits
has been a central part in the regeneration of US wild game
populations since early 20'th century - one of the biggest success
stories in conservation in the world. Why fool around with something
that works?
- Mike
|
1154.8 | ONE MANS OPINION | ELWOOD::GATH | | Tue Apr 07 1992 13:30 | 46 |
| I don't want to make this reply to strong. I mean my flame is not
on and I will type in a unemotional low voice.
What we are discussing is against the law as a few noter pointed out
and IMO find it difficult that we can rationalize this.
first off, when your club releases the birds they become
property of the state. They are the state property even when
they are on club property.. Also there are no Garantees that
birds you shot that morning were club stocked birds, wild birds
or state stocked birds.
If the birds were taged before releasing with a metal band it would
still make no difference.
The club would need to petition the state some how to become a
"License" hunting preserve then and only then would the state
regulation change.
Those birds fall under all state Game Laws...
That is some of the legal aspect of it.
Here comes the opinion on the ethics.
It is my opinion that this is unethical because it is against the LAW.
It's pretty straight forward if you ask me.
If I were teaching my son or daughter or anyone else for that matter
this is exactly the position I would take so I can't see compromizing
it .
Beleive me I am not pure. I have made mistakes. ( were're talking
Game laws here ) I would agree that temtation and rationzation
often take place and when I was younger may have rationalized the
situation and shrugged it off..
As I get older I perceive things differently...I do not expect
any one to live by my ethics I hope to only to have a few of you
stop and ponder your position.
That's all.
Sincerely,
Bear
|
1154.9 | | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Tue Apr 07 1992 13:38 | 3 |
| Bear, very well said...
Fra
|
1154.10 | Go west | CRXSEL::WILSON | Must wear many hats..... | Tue Apr 07 1992 15:44 | 13 |
| Man, I feel sorry for you folks in the East. I guess this topic really
gives me more appreciation for what I have in the Midwest. I do all
of my pheasant hunting in Iowa. They have a three bird daily limit
with a Possession limit of 6. I have never heard of a season limit
when it comes to upland birds.
Just some stats Iowa's harvest. 1990's harvest was in excess of
1.2 million pheasant. In the region of the state where I hunt,
there are no hunting clubs, so I would have to guess that for
the most part, this number is for wild birds. Just to compare
the data to the two other pheasant states, South Dakota and Kansas,
they harvested about 800 to 900 thousand pheasants.
|
1154.11 | here is Mass. we have liberal do-gooders in abundance ;-) | SA1794::CHARBONND | if I should fall behind... | Tue Apr 07 1992 17:12 | 6 |
| re.10 That's because you have native birds. Here in Mass. there's a
debate over whether there even are any 'native' birds. Virtually all
pheasant are stocked on a put-and-take basis. This forces us to
have tight limits.
Every state and region has it's blessings.
|
1154.12 | Still uncertain | ASDG::DUFFY | | Wed Apr 08 1992 16:35 | 64 |
| Boy you guys love to get on your high horse and jump on people
in this conferance at times. I posed the question to ask for your
opinion and if it was illegal, not for you to judge anyones ethics.
When someone has a question I always thought here is a good
place to to start. I would think that we would want as many people to
participate in this conference as possible, but if the "new hunter"
gets jumped on by you EXPERTS someday you will be talking between
yourselves..
Everyone I talked to before I was questioned about this thought the way
I do (including an officer at mt club ). Since I just didn't say to
them noway the birds at the club are free and I will take as many as
a want, I looked into it more so my ethics should not be questioned.
By reading the replys so far it seems as though we have 2 different
interpretation, so I call the Ma. F&G department 3 times today to see
what they had to say. I got 3 different answers...
1st person says he was not sure and it is not written down, but he thought
the only problem might come from having more than 2 birds on you at one
time and he said it would be up to the wardens interpretation ( oh
thats great) on the law. He also said that most warden don't know all
the laws that well anyway. I know that for sure, one time out last year
I was hunting a state stocked area with an orange hat and a red vest,
she told me I was illegal because I didn't have enough orange on, i
went back to my car got the abstacts and showed her the law. Now we
are suppose to take there word as law??
2nd person didn't know for sure but thought that it might come under
the same rules as a shooting preserve.
3rd person says it is against the law, but this person must have been
having a bad day because he sounded like a recording, he just didn't
want to talk. Even though he talk in more legal mumble jumble than
the other 2.
Some of the things I brought up to the F&G people was things like..
What if I went out and bought 2 birds to train my dog with in the
backyard and the ended up in the freezer, would they be part of
my yearly bag?? Reason why I asked them that was because ( as one reply
stated) I released them so now are they part of the states program.
Good question was 2 of their answers the 3rd guy gave me the recording.
What about the guy who belongs to more than 1 hunting club and both of
the clubs stock, does that mean if he goes to one club and gets 2 birds
he can't go after birds he paid for (dues) at the other club?? Same
answers 2 good question 1 recording
I always thought that if I had more than 3 birds on me and a warden
saw this it might be a sticky situation, thats why I said a quick stop
home to drop off birds, not because I wanted to get away with something
but to avoid a situation I wouldn't be able to prove to the warden that
I got the birds at my club.
I'm not sure of this but I believe there is a club in Millis ?? or
someplace that has a 3 bird a day limit and if I understand this
correctly it is a club not a perserve , so why is that.
So in conclusion to my long winded note is..I'm still not sure what the
real law is. But I will know for sure before next season.
Duff
|
1154.13 | Don't know if it applies to your club... | CHRLIE::HUSTON | | Wed Apr 08 1992 16:48 | 17 |
|
Don't know if its any help, but..
I was in NC hunting deer a few years ago. The lodge owner and his son
never hunted on the lodge land (they had problems in the past when they
would get a bigger deer than a client adn the client would complain
they got the good stand and the client got the bad one), so they
only hunted at there club.
The club was bound be state F&G laws, it was simply private property
and you had to be a member to hunt it.
If you extrapolate (big jump possibly) to your club, then if you
get 2 birds at the club, then you are done for the day.
--Bob
|
1154.14 | I can't afford no horses... | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Wed Apr 08 1992 17:34 | 13 |
| Duff,
I don't think anyone is jumping down your throat, or that were stepping
on our high horses... you asked for opinions and people here are more
than happy to give em... ;^)
It's a touchy subject and people have at some point have ran into this
problem with others who regardless of game laws do as they please...
To myself and a lot of others here, daily bag limit is a pretty
concrete thing... 3 per day, regardless of where you take em...
Fra
|
1154.15 | Well, what if .. .. ? | CSC32::SCHIMPF | | Thu Apr 09 1992 02:39 | 24 |
| I can see where Duff is coming from, sort of; I have never had
the privilage of hunting the East Coast, so, these thoughts are purely
based on my expierence in Colorado. I have purchased live birds
(pheasant) out of season/hunting. And have used them to train my dog,
which was also out of season.
I have purchaced "left over" birds, from pheasant clubs; Again out of
season. These birds are raised from incubation in a private
facility, fed, shelted...ETC.; They are in effect "livestock".
The point that I am trying to make is that "here", as long as I
have something that indicates that the birds I'm using are coming
from a "private" organization for private use, well it is ok.
Whats a real hoot; I called the Colo. Div. of Wildlife and told them
I had several grown adult Pheasant, and wanted to release them on state
land; In hopes they would reproduce. I was told not to do it for
a multitude of reasons. So, the dog got a REAL good work out.
I'm not sure I made the point that I started out to; Oh well..It's
late and I'm tired.
Jeff
|
1154.16 | I can't help it. | ELWOOD::GATH | | Thu Apr 09 1992 08:13 | 47 |
| I tried to word my reply purposely so you would not be
offended. I failed...I am sorry.
I was sincerely tring to give the best advice I could.
What everyone has to be real careful of even though every
state is similar every state is different.
I presently live in N.H. but have lived 10 years in MASS.
I still beleive what I wrote is over 90% correct.
Most states have just about cover all the what if's . Please
find someone who knows the laws well.
I am in a very gentlemanly way trying to dissagree. I am not all
high an might and do not have a I am better than you attitude.
I would bet you , If you call up 3 co's with more that 12 years
experience that their answers will not be far apart and will
not be all that different from my previous reply.
as far the what if's,, I think you will find those are covered
with special permits or are also against the LAW.
For instance I beleive in MAss it is against the law to be
in posesion of a wild animal.. I am pretty sure this applies to
Raccoons, Halks etc. there may be exceptions but I beleive
permits are needed.. Now does phesants fall under the catagorie
"wild Bird/ wild animal" ... Not sure....
Perhaps the purchasing of a couple phesants for dog training
when it comes to shooting the bird is also against the law when
not in season or
also needs a permit.....not sure...
I am no expert. If i seemed hi and mighty I am sorry. If I
am disliked because I didn't agree well I guess I shouldn't
say any more.....
Good Hunting and my your covers be filled with birds.
Bear
|
1154.17 | I Meant "LIVE ANIMAL" | ELWOOD::GATH | | Thu Apr 09 1992 08:19 | 10 |
| In the last reply It occured to be that perhaps I should
have said.
I beleive it against the law to be posseion of a "live" wild
animal such as "live" Racoons or "live" halks.
To posess one live halk may require permit... To be in posseion
of a live phesant may require permit...
bear
|
1154.18 | Game Birds & Dog Training | KAHALA::NELSON | Shorthairs | Thu Apr 09 1992 09:59 | 27 |
|
re: .1
A clarification of shooting preserves..... In Mass and Rhode
Island, a valid hunting license for that state IS required.
In the case of Rhode Island, they offer a one day permit at
a minimal fee.
RE: buying a couple pheasant, releasing them for training my dog, ending
up in the freezer.
In Mass., you can not LEGALLY possess live game birds, especially
Ringneck Pheasant without the proper permits. Anyone licensed
to sell game birds places themselves in jeopardy by selling
those game birds to anybody without the proper permits.
In Mass., you may LEGALLY possess Quail for the sole purpose of
training dogs, both out of season and in season, IF you file for
and are granted a Class 8 Propogator's Permit (?). This permit
allows you to maintain, release and recapture QUAIL for the sole
purpose of training dogs. HOWEVER, these or any 'game' bird MAY NOT
be shot out of season. That is the reason most dog trainers use
pigeons in training, which is still a 'gray area' in the
interpretation of the law in Mass.
I know NH and Maine, do have more leniant regulations governing the
training of dogs, the posession of and ability to kill game birds while
training dogs. I know NH requires permit(s), not sure about Maine.
|
1154.19 | Semantics.... | TARKIN::AHO | How about some SMOKED SKEET? | Thu Apr 09 1992 10:01 | 25 |
|
I think the issue here is semantics.... Are we using Hunting Club/Hunting
Preserve and Sportsmen's Club similarly ?? This seems as if it's
the issue....
IF you are hunting on a "Private" "Hunting Club or Preserve" then your
limits are not included with season limits because a Hunting Club or
Preserve has an "extended" season. Here in the East it's usually
Sept 15 - Apr 15... They also have much more generous daily limits. ;-)
However if your Club is a Sportsmen's Club and you are open to the public,
your limits are the same as your state limit.... Now I'm talking about
"most" New England states here, maybe in other parts of the country
it's different, but I believe that possibly the same holds true...
It would be no different than if you released deer or any other game
animal. I wouldn't expect to get two deer from my local Sportsman's Club
property and then get two from a Wildlife Management Area (MA limits).
I hope this straightens out the issue at hand?
~Mike~
|
1154.20 | It's illegal! | GIAMEM::J_AMBERSON | | Thu Apr 09 1992 10:24 | 17 |
| Most states will not allow the average person to release game birds
into the wild. The reason for this is that they don't want disease
introduced to the native population. This is why th F&G people inspect
your pens before granting a permit to propogate. One of the largest
contributors to disease in pheasants is overcrowding in the flight
pens. The F&G will inspect your facilities and grant a permit for how
many birds they feel you can legitimately keep in the pen.
Any legitimate shooting preserve I have shot at tags there birds. I
know that some of the sportsmans clubs use to release there own birds
for there members. Alot of these clubs got the birds from the state.
These should count on your daily and seasonal bag. I just called the
Division. If the place you are shooting these birds is _NOT_ a
_licensed_ shooting preserve, then the birds count against your daily
and seasonal limit. A licensed shooting preserve _must_ tag all birds
shot on there premises.
Jeff
|
1154.21 | One more reply
One more reply | BUSY::CARL_JOHNSON | | Mon Feb 08 1993 12:14 | 9 |
| I belong to Leicester Rod and Gun Club in Leicester MA. Last fall we
received our "Game Preserve" status and license. There are a number of
regulations governing posting of the land etc. which have to be followed. As
previously mentioned birds killed on the preserve must be tagged. Also you are
only allowed to "take" 80% of the released birds. It does extend the season
and as it was explained to me birds taken on the preserve don't count towards
your limits.
Carl
|