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Is it really a law?

dblmainbeam

Member
I heard today that you cant wade down a river without permission because the land owners on both sides own the the land under the water. You can take a boat down but if your bottom touch your tresspassing. Is that B.S.?
 
States are different as are the rivers you are talking about, but that is pretty much the way it is here. Float a boat and the state owns the water, set anchor or get out, your on private property.
Like wise if your dog is trespassing you are trespassing if you are on the offended property or not. Like you can't send your dog across the fence to flush or retrieve game
 
Game Warden in a county I lived in here in Iowa told me this is true, on water you are fine wading in the water you are trespassing, this is if it flows from a public water way. Like any of the Lakes in Iowa that are Public
 
Does anybody know where you can see this law?
How about when there is ice? Snowmobiles run rivers when there ice all the time.

How about duck hunting out of a boat can you retrieve them if they fly on to land? I don't hunt ducks.

A guy I know son just got his butt chewed for wading down a river shooting ducks. I have never heard this law and I can't find anything about it on the dnr site.
 
Limb
The question about retrieving the wounded animal is it the same as with other game, just have to be unarmed, or send the dog in?
 
Dogs can't read signs. and you have the right to go get the game unarmed. you are fine on the water. another question I have is. is it legal to shoot out of the boat if the motor isn't running? granite if you had permission on the land (for whitetails). cuz duckhunting you are shooting out of the blind with the motor off.
 
I am a little rusty on this since it has been a few years since I looked into this. But the answer to this question is, it depends...

There are two distinct classifications of moving streams in Iowa, meandering v. non-meandering. At any rate, there are two fairly different sets of rules that apply based upon the stream classification.

If a steam is classified as meandering then the river bottom, the shoreline up to the permanent vegetation line and so forth is considered public access. The larger rivers like the Cedar, Iowa, etc, are considered meandering. In this case you can wade the stream, camp or build a duck blind on the sandbars, walk the bank below the highwater mark, etc, and do so without trespassing, regardless of whether the adjacent land is posted or not.

Now then, if the stream is classed as non-meandered , then the adjacent landowners rights apply and you can be considered trespassing if you are not floating. Technically speaking, jumping out of a canoe and touching the bottom is considered trespassing, etc. I know the Upper Iowa River is non-meandered, giving the farmers the right to stretch a fence across the stream to keep cattle in, etc. (This can lead to a bad mix of high water and canoes, but don't ask me how I know this!) It gets a little more complicated if the adjacent land is posted on a non-meandering stream. You should double check this, but I think I remember that you can be charged with criminal trespassing if you walk/wade/etc on posted ground on a non-meandering stream.

So, find out how the stream you are referring too is classed and go from there. But I will guess from what I read in your original post that this person is probably pretty close to true.

Good luck.
 
I believe 15 feet of shoreline here on both sides of the river are considered public water access.

The landowners only actually own up to 15 feet from the water.
 
I saw this law used to some hunters advantage last year. A guy that has a bunch of land close to one of my hunting areas has every thing posted as "no hunting declared game reserve", yes it says reserve. He's selling off the land in 2 acre plots for the city folk.
Anyway, the two guys decided they wanted to hunt the river that meanders through his property during second season shot gun last year, so they did! He of course called the sheriff who called the DNR and the DNR told the guy they were doing nothing wrong and there was nothing he could do about it.
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Needless to say there will probably be a lot of traffic along the banks of that river this year as there are a ton of deer along there.
 
I do not think it is 15 feet, I think it is to the high water mark. Meaning on a meandered stream you can hunt, trap, fish, etc. up to the high water mark. I used to trap a lot of the larger rivers in Iowa, and though I did it by boat, I could get out on land and set traps as long as I did not go past the high water mark.
 
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I do not think it is 15 feet

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Pretty sure that was the # one of my neighbour's told me, he owns a bunch or river roperty. It maybe wasn't 15 but it was a # of feet. The high water mark would be in the 100's of feet on most rivers.
 
To muddy the waters a little more, so to speak
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, I don't think it is legal to shoot "on or over public waters" but I doubt that is stopping anyone who is exploiting this loop hole to gain access to ground. I'm guessing they would shoot across the river or at deer that are swimming. I know a landowner who is getting TONS of pressure off a meandered river bottom.
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