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Originally Posted by Be_Cam
Hunting land is a deal breaker as well I think. When I was a kid I had 500 plus acres I could roam. Our farm and all the neighbors plus timber companies. It was all free to hunt, kill what you want and how you want. Deer hunt today, rabbit hunt the same woods tomorrow. As I got older in my teenage years, we just hunted with beagles and killed deer or rabbits when they got up. 🤣🤣
Now it seems guest rules at clubs are so strict it’s hard to take other folks kids hunting. And folks seem more Sue happy these days as well.

And we had a thread on here the other day about guest rules and most of them boiled down to basically no damn guests. All about “trophy” deer.
Originally Posted by goodman_hunter
This is more of a stand hunter issue. In dog hunting, shorty gotta put his own work in. Dad can only help him so much. On the flip side, kids enjoy it alot more for multiple reasons. At an early age they can legitimately be part of the hunt, if it aint nothing but listening for the dogs or helping to catch them. Not having to sit still for so long, picnic snacks and the comradery helps too. During the meet up in between hunts they run around with the other kids like wild Indians. Its more like the traditional rite of passage for young braves. You gotta earn it by working for it and towards it.

And dog hunting was just about killed by these “trophy” hunters that always complained about it running off their big bucks.

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Originally Posted by Boathand
Originally Posted by Be_Cam
Hunting land is a deal breaker as well I think. When I was a kid I had 500 plus acres I could roam. Our farm and all the neighbors plus timber companies. It was all free to hunt, kill what you want and how you want. Deer hunt today, rabbit hunt the same woods tomorrow. As I got older in my teenage years, we just hunted with beagles and killed deer or rabbits when they got up. 🤣🤣
Now it seems guest rules at clubs are so strict it’s hard to take other folks kids hunting. And folks seem more Sue happy these days as well.

And we had a thread on here the other day about guest rules and most of them boiled down to basically no damn guests. All about “trophy” deer.
Originally Posted by goodman_hunter
This is more of a stand hunter issue. In dog hunting, shorty gotta put his own work in. Dad can only help him so much. On the flip side, kids enjoy it alot more for multiple reasons. At an early age they can legitimately be part of the hunt, if it aint nothing but listening for the dogs or helping to catch them. Not having to sit still for so long, picnic snacks and the comradery helps too. During the meet up in between hunts they run around with the other kids like wild Indians. Its more like the traditional rite of passage for young braves. You gotta earn it by working for it and towards it.

And dog hunting was just about killed by these “trophy” hunters that always complained about it running off their big bucks.


Dogs crossing property lines is what killed dog hunting.

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Dogs crossing property lines were not near the problem as people want to think they are until this “trophy” deer hunting mindset really set in. Most people have never been encroached upon by someone’s dog they just like to repeat that mantra they've heard before. Many responsible dog hunters that are trying to keep the tradition alive are tone breaking their dogs and using technology to keep the peace.

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Originally Posted by Boathand
Dogs crossing property lines were not near the problem as people want to think they are until this “trophy” deer hunting mindset really set in. Most people have never been encroached upon by someone’s dog they just like to repeat that mantra they've heard before. Many responsible dog hunters that are trying to keep the tradition alive are tone breaking their dogs and using technology to keep the peace.


Dogs crossing property lines is STILL an issue. I’ve had leases all over this state and dog issues with at lease 75% of those tracts. To say I’m repeating a mantra is a complete lie.

I don’t care if you dog hunt as long as those dogs stay on YOUR property. Most don’t. And while it probably doesn’t mess things up I do not want to spend weeks and thousands of dollars getting my lease or personal property the way I want it and have dogs run deer on, around, or through it. That’s not me being rude, selfish or an a$$. It’s just common courtesy and a LARGE portion of dog hunters don’t know what that is.

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Freak of Nature
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Originally Posted by Boathand
Dogs crossing property lines were not near the problem as people want to think they are until this “trophy” deer hunting mindset really set in. Most people have never been encroached upon by someone’s dog they just like to repeat that mantra they've heard before. Many responsible dog hunters that are trying to keep the tradition alive are tone breaking their dogs and using technology to keep the peace.



We dealt with dog hunters bringing the dogs over and dropping them on our property

We had dog hunters walk them down our roads and let them go. We had dog hunters turn them loose on one side knowing they’d cross us and circle back if they jumped a deer.

Had a guy I know kill a pit full of deer dogs. He played nice but the dog club insisted on dropping dogs off the blacktop for the dogs to run across his property. He asked them nicely to not do that several times. Finally dug a big hole and got a bunch of tires. Huge fire after those truck drove off. He quit hunting after that.

I’m still not against dog deer hunting. Just the azzholes that abuse other hunters rights.


“Socialism only works in two places: Heaven where they don't need it and hell where they already have it.” ― Ronald Reagan
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Booner
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Originally Posted by joshm28
Originally Posted by Boathand
Dogs crossing property lines were not near the problem as people want to think they are until this “trophy” deer hunting mindset really set in. Most people have never been encroached upon by someone’s dog they just like to repeat that mantra they've heard before. Many responsible dog hunters that are trying to keep the tradition alive are tone breaking their dogs and using technology to keep the peace.


Dogs crossing property lines is STILL an issue. I’ve had leases all over this state and dog issues with at lease 75% of those tracts. To say I’m repeating a mantra is a complete lie.

I don’t care if you dog hunt as long as those dogs stay on YOUR property. Most don’t. And while it probably doesn’t mess things up I do not want to spend weeks and thousands of dollars getting my lease or personal property the way I want it and have dogs run deer on, around, or through it. That’s not me being rude, selfish or an a$$. It’s just common courtesy and a LARGE portion of dog hunters don’t know what that is.

I doubt you any know a large portion of dog hunters. Sounds like you've probably met a couple of a,hole dog men. I get what you're saying though. Also, alot of folks have dog issues, not alot have problems with most dog hunters. If you've had these issues all over the state. I would think that some hella bad luck you got.


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Originally Posted by goodman_hunter
Originally Posted by joshm28
Originally Posted by Boathand
Dogs crossing property lines were not near the problem as people want to think they are until this “trophy” deer hunting mindset really set in. Most people have never been encroached upon by someone’s dog they just like to repeat that mantra they've heard before. Many responsible dog hunters that are trying to keep the tradition alive are tone breaking their dogs and using technology to keep the peace.


Dogs crossing property lines is STILL an issue. I’ve had leases all over this state and dog issues with at lease 75% of those tracts. To say I’m repeating a mantra is a complete lie.

I don’t care if you dog hunt as long as those dogs stay on YOUR property. Most don’t. And while it probably doesn’t mess things up I do not want to spend weeks and thousands of dollars getting my lease or personal property the way I want it and have dogs run deer on, around, or through it. That’s not me being rude, selfish or an a$$. It’s just common courtesy and a LARGE portion of dog hunters don’t know what that is.

I doubt you any know a large portion of dog hunters. Sounds like you've probably met a couple of a,hole dog men. I get what you're saying though. Also, alot of folks have dog issues, not alot have problems with most dog hunters. If you've had these issues all over the state. I would think that some hella bad luck you got.


The dog club north of us are super nice guys. Their dogs have been on us twice in 7 years. The second time they sent me a text before they even crossed the line. I have no issues with that club. The one to our SE however is another issue. They get on us several times a year. And they have to cross ANOTHER private tract before they even get to us.

But I’ve had issues in 5 different counties.

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Booner
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Has hunting gotten easy ??? i guess that would be determined by your age
when you start getting old, aint nothing easy


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The older I get the better I used to be
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I love the dog hunters that set em loose at your property line and then when confronted tell you they’ll only run rabbits.

I swear I can’t tell if they’re really dumb enough to think I would believe that,

A man letting his dogs run on my property is just a no good outlaw poacher just like the rest of the people that trespass

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Freak of Nature
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first year I was stationed in Jefferson Co I drove up on a bunch of dog hunters on the side of the road next to some USSteel permit land. I could tell they were mad before I even stopped. One of said that the guy that lived next to that land had shot their dogs. I asked how they knew he shot them. He said we turned the dogs loose and soon heard a full auto gun blasting and dogs yelping. I asked if they turned the dogs loose on his land.( they did) They were pissed and said they were going to his house and whip his ass. I told em that he had a belt fed tripod mounted 30 cal machine gun(what they heard) sitting on his front porch and not a damn one of them would make it to his house. I asked em to wait fifteen minutes to allow me to get to the other end of the county. LOL


I've spent most of the money I've made in my lifetime on hunting and fishing. The rest I just wasted.....

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Dog hunting is a dying sport. There isn’t enough large blocks to justify it. I don’t hate dog hunting and have had plenty of trouble with them many years ago. Had one guy threaten to kill me. The PROBLEM I had with dog hunters is every freaking one of them when confronted about their dogs crossing lines said “ don’t get mad, you never know, my dogs might run the biggest buck of your life by you “ ......... Is there not 1 dog hunter that can understand some people care nothing about killing a deer being chased by a pack of dogs. It just doesn’t interest everybody and turn them on. Some folks want to be left the hell alone and enjoy some peace and quiet on the lease they worked overtime to pay for.

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Old Mossy Horns
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We’re not dead. We just smell that way. Dayum. - AC870

Yessir! I’m always gonna shoot what makes me happy and I want everyone else to do the same! If you shoot one be proud of it and don’t worry what anyone else thinks. - SJ22
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Freak of Nature
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You know BCLC even the Mountain men and Frontiersman before us went afield prepared, they carried food, jerked beef n such, and warm clothing, and even something for shelter, but damn, if you carry a snickers and a bottle of water or a natty lite you're be labeled a pu$$y amongst some of these hardasses 😄


Do not regret growing older, it's a privilege denied to many!

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Old Mossy Horns
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LMMFAO....that’s a fact! rofl


We’re not dead. We just smell that way. Dayum. - AC870

Yessir! I’m always gonna shoot what makes me happy and I want everyone else to do the same! If you shoot one be proud of it and don’t worry what anyone else thinks. - SJ22
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spike
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Originally Posted by Be_Cam
As I’m scrolling through Facebook this morning, I see a lot of kids “5-7 years old” with there first deer. Well that great and I’m glad the kids want to hunt and kill a deer that bad at a young age. But what was learned out of the hunt? If I’m in a blind with my 5 year old and we kill a deer over a corn pile at 10 yards with a cross bow, did we hunt it and kill it or did we just pull a trigger? Does parents not teach there kids how to small game hunt anymore? Learn about squirrels and rabbits then work your way into deer hunting? When I was a kid “early 90s” we didn’t have many doe days in Cleburne county, like 2 or 3 after Christmas Day I think. Hell we didn’t have a lot of deer at all really. But I learned the woods and gun saftey while squirrel and rabbit hunting. Daddy would let me carry my shotgun unloaded constantly preaching saftey to me, until we seen a squirrel the he would hand me a shell. To each his own I guess, I just can’t help but wander if we’re raising trigger pullers now instead of actually outdoorsman and hunters. But I also think that’s why we so many dogs get called into bad shots, and why a lot of grown men only know how to hunt shooting houses. They was never taught how to shoot, where to aim, wait on a good shot etc. How many grown men you know now that don’t know what oak trees are? Or know what a natural funnel is, draws, pinch points, ridges and so many other terms to go into deer hunting. A man should do what’s best for him and his family whatever that may be, I just think for the most part, a kid should learn about the woods, how they work, why they work, and earn a respect for them. Just morning thought while I drink my cup of Brandon. 😁😁


Older than 7 here on the first one here. 17 on the last-Antelope buck at over 750 yards
No shooting houses, no feeders. All spot and stalk or stand hunting at the edge of a field somewhere.
100 yard shot off of shooting sticks (1 and done) completely on his own with a MOA Maximum in 260 Remington.
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Ernie
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Originally Posted by MorningAir
Dog hunting is a dying sport. There isn’t enough large blocks to justify it. I don’t hate dog hunting and have had plenty of trouble with them many years ago. Had one guy threaten to kill me. The PROBLEM I had with dog hunters is every freaking one of them when confronted about their dogs crossing lines said “ don’t get mad, you never know, my dogs might run the biggest buck of your life by you “ ......... Is there not 1 dog hunter that can understand some people care nothing about killing a deer being chased by a pack of dogs. It just doesn’t interest everybody and turn them on. Some folks want to be left the hell alone and enjoy some peace and quiet on the lease they worked overtime to pay for.

Muh Facebook city boy post.
My fav part was the "is there not 1" like a modern day Shakespeare I tell ya.
On a serious note, I'm not so sure I would call the sport dying at this point. It has been slowly dying for years leading up to this point, Them Alpha collars have revolutionize the sport. Not only can large blocks still be leased, you can do more with less continual acreage due to the collars.

Cool pic's Erinie


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Originally Posted by Boathand
Originally Posted by Be_Cam
Hunting land is a deal breaker as well I think. When I was a kid I had 500 plus acres I could roam. Our farm and all the neighbors plus timber companies. It was all free to hunt, kill what you want and how you want. Deer hunt today, rabbit hunt the same woods tomorrow. As I got older in my teenage years, we just hunted with beagles and killed deer or rabbits when they got up. 🤣🤣
Now it seems guest rules at clubs are so strict it’s hard to take other folks kids hunting. And folks seem more Sue happy these days as well.

And we had a thread on here the other day about guest rules and most of them boiled down to basically no damn guests. All about “trophy” deer.
Originally Posted by goodman_hunter
This is more of a stand hunter issue. In dog hunting, shorty gotta put his own work in. Dad can only help him so much. On the flip side, kids enjoy it alot more for multiple reasons. At an early age they can legitimately be part of the hunt, if it aint nothing but listening for the dogs or helping to catch them. Not having to sit still for so long, picnic snacks and the comradery helps too. During the meet up in between hunts they run around with the other kids like wild Indians. Its more like the traditional rite of passage for young braves. You gotta earn it by working for it and towards it.

And dog hunting was just about killed by these “trophy” hunters that always complained about it running off their big bucks.



So youre saying you love running dogs and should be able to hunt like you want , even if YOUR dogs go on other peoples property ruining what THEY are trying to do on their land.

And in the same breath you put down "Trophy Hunters" who see things differently and try to do things their way. And I am pretty sure that those people are running QDM clubs that you were speaking about that limited guests.

I am amazed when people act like "Trophy Hunting" and managing game is bad, but chasing deer with dogs, shooting everything you see and your dogs going on other peoples property is fine. That is some very selfish and subjective thinking there my friend.

The QDM "Trophy Hunter" type is not going to do ONE THING that adversely affects you or your hunting, but your hunting is definitely going to affect his plans of low pressure and managing what they shoot. You may need to try to see both points of view and not just look at through the lense of what YOU like.

Last edited by Here4fun; 10/28/21 09:51 AM.
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spike
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Originally Posted by Be_Cam
As I’m scrolling through Facebook this morning, I see a lot of kids “5-7 years old” with there first deer. Well that great and I’m glad the kids want to hunt and kill a deer that bad at a young age. But what was learned out of the hunt? If I’m in a blind with my 5 year old and we kill a deer over a corn pile at 10 yards with a cross bow, did we hunt it and kill it or did we just pull a trigger? Does parents not teach there kids how to small game hunt anymore? Learn about squirrels and rabbits then work your way into deer hunting? When I was a kid “early 90s” we didn’t have many doe days in Cleburne county, like 2 or 3 after Christmas Day I think. Hell we didn’t have a lot of deer at all really. But I learned the woods and gun safety while squirrel and rabbit hunting. Daddy would let me carry my shotgun unloaded constantly preaching saftey to me, until we seen a squirrel the he would hand me a shell. To each his own I guess, I just can’t help but wander if we’re raising trigger pullers now instead of actually outdoorsman and hunters. But I also think that’s why we so many dogs get called into bad shots, and why a lot of grown men only know how to hunt shooting houses. They was never taught how to shoot, where to aim, wait on a good shot etc. How many grown men you know now that don’t know what oak trees are? Or know what a natural funnel is, draws, pinch points, ridges and so many other terms to go into deer hunting. A man should do what’s best for him and his family whatever that may be, I just think for the most part, a kid should learn about the woods, how they work, why they work, and earn a respect for them. Just morning thought while I drink my cup of Brandon. 😁😁


Your post and this thread has a lot of false assumptions.
I'm okay with the opinions, as long as you don't expect others to follow your opinions.
If it is legal and you are capable, do it, and don't worry about the opinions of others.

First, you don't know what parents have or have not taught their children.
To assume all youth hunters have not hunted small game and or varmints in the 5-7 year old range would be incorrect for my children.
To assume they were not out hunting with their dad, before they started hunting, would false as well

Our daughter has never shot a BB gun, but started with a single shot 22lr and was shooting paper at 5 on up.
Erik never shot a bb gun or 22lr, he just jumped to center-fire specialty pistols at 9 years old, and was shooting out past 500 yard steel on his second day doing it.

Around 7 Kristen was shooting prairie dogs at over 100 yards with that chipmunk 22lr rifle and with my center-grip 221 Fireball XP-100. The Chipmunk still has the same scope on it.
[Linked Image]
I forgot what was the youngest age, you could hunt deer was in Kansas back in the day.
But her very first year, she shot her buck at 285 yards with a single-shot MOA Maximum pistol in 260 Remington.
She never used a rifle, but used the MOA Maximum and a center-grip 6mm-284 XP-100.
I am not going to list all of her hunting, but making a point, that some kids start young, and in a number of ways can out shoot adults from the bench and from the field.

You can have all of your ideology, ethics, and what you think is right or wrong, but that doesn't make it so.

Don't let others bind their ethics on you or your children. Don't let their limits control you.
A friend of mine said this recently: "Don’t let others limitations get confused with ethics or become your own limitations."

If it is legal and you are capable, do it, and don't worry about the opinions of others.

Sometimes I kill big game at under 40 yards with one of my handguns, and at other times I may kill one at 1,000 yards with one of my specialty pistols.
I hunt the way I want (Dependent up on that states game laws of course), depending on my mood, the amount of practice I have put in, atmospheric conditions, the terrain, etc..
My max distance limit with the very same weapon is going to be different, based on a number of factors.

Maybe we should be more supportive of other sportsmen, sportswomen, and their children, without attempting to bind our own sense of right and wrong on others.

We wonder sometimes why the tide moves against us.
Sometimes we are our own worst enemy
[color:#000066][/color]


"If you can see it, you can hit it"
Ernie
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spike
spike
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Originally Posted by goodman_hunter
Cool pic's Ernie


Thank you sir!
E


"If you can see it, you can hit it"
Ernie
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Hey Ernie, looks like she definitely shoots like a girl. The same way my daughter does. smile

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