Tresspassing neighbors

   / Tresspassing neighbors #101  
Send us your coordinates so we can all come up and do as we please!

I read it. So why the attitude? So now you don't want people roaming your property?

There's a bit of a difference between roaming, and doing what you please.

But yes the undeveloped part of my land is open to responsible use, and it's not unheard of for me to leave my house and see somebody coming out of the road through my field. I generally know who they are, and by having people I know use it it's being watched even when I'm not home.
 
   / Tresspassing neighbors #102  
So, if you trespass on someone's property, you proclaim yourself an "owner's representative".

Sent from my iPad using TractorByNet

When my employer has signed a management contract with the landowner, then " Yes, I am the Landowner's Representive."
 
   / Tresspassing neighbors
  • Thread Starter
#103  
What model is your game camera BTW.. I wouldn't mind having something that took great pics like that.

That is a Wildgame Innovations Blade (5x I think). It works well but is a bit temperamental....mostly because it has a blue power button on the front that seems to attract a bird in the area to peck it which cuts off the camera.
I would suggest Wildgame innovations Cloak 3D 6mp. I have 8 of them. So far they are the best functioning, most foolproof camera I have owned. Battery life is great. I get good pictures and video. And the power button is hidden inside a waterproof hatch.
 
   / Tresspassing neighbors #104  
When my employer has signed a management contract with the landowner, then " Yes, I am the Landowner's Representive."

And your story just keep changing ........ and changing.

Over and out!

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   / Tresspassing neighbors #105  
When you talk to your neighbors just talk to them respectfully and layout the rules for being on your land... if you even want them on your land. If you don't just respectfully tell them that and why. Then ask them some things to get to know them. Let them know it isn't personal and you wish to have them as a good neighbor. I have had bad and good neighbors. It sucks to have a bad one so work at making them a good one. A good neighbor is worth their weight in gold. A bad one is like a bag of ShXX.

I remember when we first moved to our last house we had some kids running a quad on my property... I walked out there and stopped them and said... hi boys. I don't mind if you run that quad out here but i would ask you to not be out here if it is muddy and cutting up the yard. Then I started talking to them and let them know I wasn't trying to be a Dicx . They were good boys. About 10 years later one of them came to my house with a big international tractor and a blower and said do you care if I blow out your drive. I had a bunch of snow in my drive... and I said sure go ahead. When he got done he got out of the tractor and told me who he was and he was that 13 year old kid I talked to about riding his quad. He was now a man that worked at an implement dealership and he lived about a mile down my road.

Treat your neighbors good even if they are being a little stupid.
 
   / Tresspassing neighbors #106  
And your story just keep changing ........ and changing.

Over and out!

{
ASIStreamID = 10;
}

Actually it's your reading comprehensive skills that are lacking...
 
   / Tresspassing neighbors #107  
When you talk to your neighbors just talk to them respectfully and layout the rules for being on your land... if you even want them on your land. If you don't just respectfully tell them that and why. Then ask them some things to get to know them. Let them know it isn't personal and you wish to have them as a good neighbor. I have had bad and good neighbors. It sucks to have a bad one so work at making them a good one. A good neighbor is worth their weight in gold. A bad one is like a bag of ShXX.

Now we're back to the point of beginning... :thumbsup:
Hopefully the OP will let us know when "the rest of the story" is over.
 
   / Tresspassing neighbors #108  
There's a bit of a difference between roaming, and doing what you please. But yes the undeveloped part of my land is open to responsible use, and it's not unheard of for me to leave my house and see somebody coming out of the road through my field. I generally know who they are, and by having people I know use it it's being watched even when I'm not home.

And there is the issue. Opening up my property for people to roam it can lead to do as you please. Ones persons definition of roaming could be poaching, throwing out trash, starting fires and you name it while another's definition of roaming is a stroll through the woods. Why open my property up to risks like starting a forest fire? I would be held liable for that.

Your fortunate that you have responsible use there because you can monitor activity. I'm not that trusting as I live 100 miles from my property so I can't monitor who comes and goes. And no, I don't think I'm a big shot for having property I don't live on. It's our future retirement place.
 
   / Tresspassing neighbors
  • Thread Starter
#109  
This is Virginia
On Posted Property:
It is unlawful to hunt without written permission of the landowner and is punishable by a fine of up to $2500 and/or 12 months in jail.

On Property Not Posted:
It is unlawful to hunt any unposted property without permission of the landowner and is punishable by a fine of up to $500.

My land is clearly posted.. have walked the entire border posting and marking it according to Virginia law. Soon after I did that, an adjoining 100 acres was posted by the hunt club there. When I was hunting with my daughter a few dogs came thru....they chased a few deer thru the property at warp speed. Not what I was hoping for. I don't hunt with dogs, but many people in VA do. One of the dogs camped out below our stand until his owner came thru to collect him. In Virginia it is legal to enter another person's land to retrieve a dog but you may not carry a weapon. He was not armed. He was cordial. I got down and said hello. He took his dog and left. I wasn't particularly pleased, as they had to drive up the private road and dump the dogs out of the truck for them to come across the land like that, but for all I know the might own one of the parcels above me (up the mountain) and the parcel beyond me. He obeyed the law and was respectful of my property. I'm fine with it. Tomorrow I will stop at the neighbor's house around lunch time since I am hunting in the morning. I will introduce myself and point out the no trespassing signs. I will give him my phone number in the event that there was an emergency...as I said before, unforeseen things occur.
Concepts of ownership are different in different places. I have busted my butt all my life to be able to buy land that Is mine, so that I can hunt on my own land. Partly because I want to hunt without having some dipstick stomp all over my hunt. There are a lot of people I have run into on public land who just didn't handle themselves in a safe or respectful manner. I am also building my home here and will be farming it ( and orchard). I don't own the land to show off, I own it because I wanted it and so I saved and sacrificed for the last 20 years to get it. He could have asked permission....he didn't. He saw the signs....all of them, and he did what he wanted on my land anyway...he wanted to walk around. He has 3.5 acres that he rents...not a lot but definitely enough to take a stroll or do some target shooting since his place is tucked in agains a 65 acre parcel with a small barn and house on it and beyond that is a huge multi hundred acre parcel with a single house on it. Heck, his land is enough to hunt on. But he wanted to take a stroll on my land. So he did. Having someone just decide they want to waltz all over my land doesn't sit too well with me. The previous owner might have had a ***-bi-yah attitude but I don't. I want my privacy. I want to be able to hunt with my kids and not be disturbed. I want to plant trees and not have someone walking around touching my fence (which may be electric ) or my tractor or my supplies that I leave on the farm in a shed. The other picture is someone checking out my tractor and it is absolutely not visible fro the road. It's 1/4 mile thru the woods from the road to my tractor. You don't just happen to end up there. you go there for a reason. If you see no trespassing signs and private road/keep out signs and go there anyway, you go there because you are a criminal.
 
   / Tresspassing neighbors #110  
And there is the issue. Opening up my property for people to roam it can lead to do as you please. Ones persons definition of roaming could be poaching, throwing out trash, starting fires and you name it while another's definition of roaming is a stroll through the woods. Why open my property up to risks like starting a forest fire? I would be held liable for that.

Your fortunate that you have responsible use there because you can monitor activity. I'm not that trusting as I live 100 miles from my property so I can't monitor who comes and goes. And no, I don't think I'm a big shot for having property I don't live on. It's our future retirement place.

Different situations... and I respect that. What gets me going (as it did here) is when people paint everything with the same brush. What works in Northern Maine might not be as good in Southern Illinois, for instance.
 

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