kebo
Elite Member
- Joined
- May 16, 2006
- Messages
- 2,928
- Location
- Lexington, SC
- Tractor
- 2001 John Deere 790 4x4, bar tires
This was a bit humorous and does involve a tractor, so I thought I would share it. My hunt club has our two main leases in one location that are adjacent to one another. The smaller tract is 274 acres, the larger is 360 acres. The owner (who buys/sells/owns and manages land for timber production) had this 274 acre tract thinned out this past summer. One narrow strip maybe about 1 acre wide by 5 acres long was completely clearcut because it was separated from the rest of the tract by a set of RR tracks. Because of the RR tracks blocking access, the loggers had to get permission from another tract owner to cross their land and use the nearest RR crossing (also on that same tract) to get to the nearest paved road. This adjacent land was also leased to another hunt club.
Last Friday afternoon, as I was driving by the club, I looked over at the RR tracks (which run parallel to and are only about 100ft or so from the paved rd) and just on the other side where the 5 acres had been clearcut, I saw a black truck with a trailer and tractor on it. I was pretty sure it wasn't any of the guys in my club so I turned around and parked at a pulloff on our lease. Walked through the woods and began watching the guy. He was unloading the tractor so I just wanted to watch and see what he was going to do with it. Soon he started using the bucket to try and push some brush piles around. It looked like he was maybe clearing out some area to plant a food plot?? The guy had a subcompact Zen-Noh tractor with a Koyker loader on it. It couldn't have been more 20hp, but that tractor ran quiet as mouse!
Well, I don't think he spotted me right off cause I was standing on the shoulder of the tracks (opposite the side he was on) and I was visible from about the waist up. Anyway, I watched him for about 10 minutes or so before he finally acknowledged me and waved at me. Shortly after, he shut it off and walked over to the tracks. We introduced and I asked him if would mind telling me what he was doing. He said he was trying to clear out a place for a food plot. I informed him that he was doing it on the wrong property!!! He said that when he joined that club, he was told they leased everything on that side of the tracks. I told him that was not totally correct. I then pointed out the orange paint on the boundary trees that bordered the small clearcut where he was planning to hunt. Everything on the side of the orange paint where we were standing at was part of our lease!!
Turns out he was from Brevard, NC and that he had only been in that hunt club for two years. He was really nice about it, as was I. He asked if he could leave his truck and trailer parked there while he worked on a couple other food plots he wanted to put in on their lease. I said no problem, I know how hard it is to maneuver trucks with long trailers on these logging roads. I explained to him that because the loggers had used their logging road, it appeared that this strip was part of his lease, since the logging road led right into it. He then thanked me and apologized for disturbing me. I told him it was no problem, no harm done. So, I got back in the truck and left and he went on about his work, but on their lease!!:thumbsup:
The end result is that it was good because we got this cleared up before he had a chance to hunt it. That could have resulted in a trespassing offense and a fine. The other thing we learned is we need to get over there and put up a cable or a gate where their road ends at our property line, and put up some posted signs as well. Really though, we would like stay on good terms with this other club. We might want/need road access to that small strip ourselves one day and have to go through their gate to get to it. Right now the ONLY way we can get to it legally is to walk across the tracks, since you can't drive anything across the RR tracks. I seriously doubt that Norfolk Southern would spend a dime to put in a crossing for us just to get a tractor over to that 5 acres.
Last Friday afternoon, as I was driving by the club, I looked over at the RR tracks (which run parallel to and are only about 100ft or so from the paved rd) and just on the other side where the 5 acres had been clearcut, I saw a black truck with a trailer and tractor on it. I was pretty sure it wasn't any of the guys in my club so I turned around and parked at a pulloff on our lease. Walked through the woods and began watching the guy. He was unloading the tractor so I just wanted to watch and see what he was going to do with it. Soon he started using the bucket to try and push some brush piles around. It looked like he was maybe clearing out some area to plant a food plot?? The guy had a subcompact Zen-Noh tractor with a Koyker loader on it. It couldn't have been more 20hp, but that tractor ran quiet as mouse!
Well, I don't think he spotted me right off cause I was standing on the shoulder of the tracks (opposite the side he was on) and I was visible from about the waist up. Anyway, I watched him for about 10 minutes or so before he finally acknowledged me and waved at me. Shortly after, he shut it off and walked over to the tracks. We introduced and I asked him if would mind telling me what he was doing. He said he was trying to clear out a place for a food plot. I informed him that he was doing it on the wrong property!!! He said that when he joined that club, he was told they leased everything on that side of the tracks. I told him that was not totally correct. I then pointed out the orange paint on the boundary trees that bordered the small clearcut where he was planning to hunt. Everything on the side of the orange paint where we were standing at was part of our lease!!
Turns out he was from Brevard, NC and that he had only been in that hunt club for two years. He was really nice about it, as was I. He asked if he could leave his truck and trailer parked there while he worked on a couple other food plots he wanted to put in on their lease. I said no problem, I know how hard it is to maneuver trucks with long trailers on these logging roads. I explained to him that because the loggers had used their logging road, it appeared that this strip was part of his lease, since the logging road led right into it. He then thanked me and apologized for disturbing me. I told him it was no problem, no harm done. So, I got back in the truck and left and he went on about his work, but on their lease!!:thumbsup:
The end result is that it was good because we got this cleared up before he had a chance to hunt it. That could have resulted in a trespassing offense and a fine. The other thing we learned is we need to get over there and put up a cable or a gate where their road ends at our property line, and put up some posted signs as well. Really though, we would like stay on good terms with this other club. We might want/need road access to that small strip ourselves one day and have to go through their gate to get to it. Right now the ONLY way we can get to it legally is to walk across the tracks, since you can't drive anything across the RR tracks. I seriously doubt that Norfolk Southern would spend a dime to put in a crossing for us just to get a tractor over to that 5 acres.