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New regulations

JNRBRONC

Well-Known Member
Looks like I saved $3 on my the habitat fee by buying it for spring turkey season.

Changes in Iowa laws affect outdoor recreation
By JULI PROBASCO-SOWERS
REGISTER STAFF WRITER

July 15, 2007
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Iowa hunters need to become familiar with new regulations before they head out this fall.

A range of changes in Iowa law took effect July 1, from giving youth deer hunters more time to use their tags to requiring that people be attached to an automatic engine shut-off device while they are riding personal watercraft (also called Jet Skis).

Heads-up for hunters

New regulations for hunters will be included in a booklet that will be available where hunting and fishing licenses are sold. The booklets are being compiled and will be printed soon, said Lon Lindenberg, district law enforcement supervisor for the Iowa Department of Natural Resources.

"We usually try to get it done before the Iowa State Fair (in August)," he said.

Changes in the law or new portions of the regulations will be highlighted in yellow.

For example, youth deer license holders will be able to use their unfilled license in any other firearms season.

"That will give youth a longer window of opportunity," Lindenberg said.

All hunters and anglers will pay $3 more when they purchase their licenses because the habitat fee was raised from $8 to $11. Of the additional $3, $2 will go toward wetland work by using the money to match federal grants available, and $1 will go toward a habitat buffer program for landowners, said Dale Garner, chief of the department's Wildlife Bureau.

The original $8 of the habitat fee is split between the state and county conservation boards, with the main purpose being to buy land for public hunting.

Other changes include:

-The birthdate for requirement of hunter safety certificates has been changed from Jan. 1, 1967 to Jan. 1, 1972. Anyone born in 1972 or later needs a certificate, Lindenberg said.

-Anyone who shoots a deer on land where they do not have permission is not allowed to retrieve the deer and is subject to liquidated damages.

-Only employees of the Iowa Department of Natural Resources will be allowed to administer birth control shots for wild deer.

-No one in Iowa will be allowed to set up an Internet hunting operation. That does not regulate people from Iowa doing Internet hunting from Iowa on an operation set up in another state.

"We haven't had problems with Internet hunting in Iowa, but there have been in other states," Lindenberg said. "We are just getting ahead of the ball game."

Internet hunting allows a person to go online and operate firearms at a remote location, hunting and shooting an animal without being at the location.

-Liquidated damages for taking game illegally have increased.
 
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-Anyone who shoots a deer on land where they do not have permission is not allowed to retrieve the deer and is subject to liquidated damages.


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This change will be interesting.
 
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-Anyone who shoots a deer on land where they do not have permission is not allowed to retrieve the deer and is subject to liquidated damages.

[/ QUOTE ]

I am guessing this is pointed toward the tresspassers if the animal was harvested on someone else's land in which they did not have permission, However if the animal was shot on the land you had permission and it went on to a neighboring property you will still be able to retrieve the animal without a weapon, Correct?
 
"Only employees of the Iowa Department of Natural Resources will be allowed to administer birth control shots for wild deer."


What's up w/ this? Are they currently waisting our tax dollars doing this?

Birth control is easy...just put an arrow through their lungs.

Maybe they should pay us to do this rather than waist money giving birth control shots to deer.

Libs must have come up w/ this idea.
 
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Libs must have come up w/ this idea.

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Exactly!!! Iowa City was planning on doing this and now they can't as only DNR (not White Buffalo) employees are allowed to administer the drug.
 
I agree talltines terrible idea. Mother nature will always win out in the end so when the 2 year BC shot wears off and every doe in the county has triplets the herd will be right back where it was, big waste of cash not to mention they don't have a clue how effective this is going to be and if there will be an effective when it comes time for us to eat the venison. To many unknowns with this technique and much easier solutions to this problem.

Kratz
 
Hey Guys, the DNR does not want to administer birth control to deer. They DON'T WANT ANYBODY ELSE to, either. That is the intent of this change in regulation.

Sorry for shouting.
grin.gif
 
Thanks for the post JRB.

Curious to know how the 1000's of different hunters try to interpret that retrieval law.

If I shoot a deer and it heads towards land I don't have permission to be on (and expires)...I go straight to the landowner and try to get permission. Luckily in my area, landowners will allow you to track them down.

Gotta ask first though. I caught a guy running through my dad's land that didn't have permission. Turns out he was tracking a wounded deer, so I explained to him how he should have persued the situation. Kind of pissed me off since he ruined the area I was planning on hunting.

It's not a free-for-all if you draw blood, but the law DID that hunters should make every attempt possible to retrieve a wounded animal.

For some (most here on the board) it's a common understanding on how things work, but there are those who "wing" a deer just to get a chance to blow through some ground they don't have permission to be on. Especially during shotgun season.
 
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-The birthdate for requirement of hunter safety certificates has been changed from Jan. 1, 1967 to Jan. 1, 1972. Anyone born in 1972 or later needs a certificate, Lindenberg said.

[/ QUOTE ]

[ QUOTE ]
Residents born after July 1, 1972, and nonresidents
born after Jan. 1, 1967, must satisfactorily
complete a hunter education course in order to obtain
a hunting license. A person who is 11 years-old or
older may enroll in a course, but those who are 11 and
successfully complete the course shall be issued a
certificate of completion which becomes valid on that
person’s 12th birthday. Residents under the age of 12
can be issued deer and turkey licenses, but the youth
hunter must be accompanied by and under the
immediate control of or direct supervision of a licensed
adult hunter

[/ QUOTE ] as taken from last years regulations booklet. Must be for Non-Residents if that is the case????
 
I'm not trying to start a "hot topic" but, does anyone know where the regs back up Turtl's post? I know that ethically he is absolutely right. I was trying to find it in the regs and I'll be darned it I can find it. I thought the law stated that if you hit a animal and tracked it onto private property with out permission and with out a weapon, you were in the green and had all legal right to do it. Just curious that all!
 
I understand that Turtl wasn't actually talking about the legality of his post but more about the ethical idea of asking permission. I imagine most people won't have a problem getting permission in tracking a wounded animal but it is something that I would have a problem with in one location. I thought I'd post what I found...once again, I'm not posting this with the idea of getting around asking permission to find a animal but you do have the right to retrieve it if permission is declined....

“Trespass” means entering property without the
express permission of the owner, lessee or person in
lawful possession, with the intent to commit a public
offense; to use, remove therefrom, alter, damage,
harass, or place anything animate or inanimate, or to
hunt, fish or trap on the property. The term trespass
does not mean entering the right-of-way of a public
road or highway. Railroad right-of-ways are considered
private property.
This paragraph does not prohibit the unarmed
pursuit of game or furbearing animals lawfully injured or
killed which come to rest on or escape to the property
of another
 
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"Only employees of the Iowa Department of Natural Resources will be allowed to administer birth control shots for wild deer."


What's up w/ this? Are they currently waisting our tax dollars doing this?

Birth control is easy...just put an arrow through their lungs.

Maybe they should pay us to do this rather than waist money giving birth control shots to deer.

Libs must have come up w/ this idea.

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My does are on the pill, am I still ok with this one?
smirk.gif
 
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My does are on the pill, am I still ok with this one?


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Only until they find out about each other.
smirk.gif
 
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