[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
It is not legal to take just the head/cape off of a road kill deer in Iowa. You need to have a valid hunting license to tag it or be issued a salvage permit. The salvage permit requires that the meat be edible and if you don't take the whole carcass, you can be charged with wanton waste (though some here have found more lenient CO's than I). Just taking the head and leaving a headless body sends the wrong message to everyone who sees that deer on the side of the road, IMO.
[/ QUOTE ]
Good point... But leagle or not, people are doing it. And I for one wouldn't want to take the meat from a smelly rotten deer that I do not know how long has been lying around.
My point is, its a misconception that shining deer is poaching, and although on the rare occasion it occurs, for the most part, it is a great past time, and scouting tool. And laws don't stop outlaws, poaching is already illeagle, they stop Guys like us from enjoying deer watching.
[/ QUOTE ]
But you would be willing to just take the cape and horns off that smelly old deer, right? I will go on record as wanting to make spotlighting illegal, for lots of reasons. I don't believe that ths would stop poaching at all but it would make them much more visible. In my neck of the wood we see spot lights quite often and unless we hear shooting we can never tell if it is legal or illegal activity. By making spotlignting illegal we know that anyone shining a light is breaking the law and can inform the law officals. This would also be much better for the COs because now if they stop a vehicle spotlighting they can't tell if the occupents are just " out for some great family fun" or are armed to the teeth looking to score some big cash on a huge set of horns. I know that if I were a CO knowing that I could approach as if it were an illegal sisituation would make me much more aware of possible problems.
Another thing that bugs me about some of the replies are the ones about spot lighting just to see what is available. This ain't Walmart and you aren't shopping for a set of horns, you are hunting! Should you shoot the 140" buck in front of you because it is the biggest on available in the area or let it walk because there is a 160" available. To me that some how deminishes the experience of seeing or shooting the 140, because in either case you had to just "settle for" the 140. To me deer hunting is about a lot more than just shooting the largest buck available.
As far as spotlignting on any land you choose just because there isn't a law against it, I think that is wrong even if it isn't illegal. Just suppose that you buy 60 acres using every spare dollar that you have for the next 30 years. Then you work yourself to death for months putting in several food plots of varing foods that will draw and hold deer clear into winter. Because of the size and lay of your land these food plots are all visible from a road. Someone starts spotlighting your fields all sumer long because of the number and size of deer there. That someone turns out to be an out of state outfitter who then leases up the land all arround you and puts up stands and blinds right on your boader fence lines. Now you have several hunters overlooking you fields for every season and cutting of every travel route from bedding to feeding areas. This sisutation may have happened anyway but how do you think lots of outfitters find areas to try to lease? From spotlighting food sources during the summer to find out what is available!
Sorry I tend to go on sometimes but I really do think that spotlighting should be made illegal and especialy during any hunting season. One last thing how would you legal spotlighters feel if when the CO stopped you he found a shotgun shell that had rolled under the seat, or the hatchet that you were cutting brush with, or the folding knife in your belt sheath that you always wear. All of these become weapons and make you illegal and eligable for a citation. Lets have a show of hands of those who would think the CO was a creep and a jerk for writting the ticket.