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Trespassers trailcam

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Handcannon

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I was walking back to the truck this morning & noticed a giant pile of apples beside the trail. I hunt on about 5 acres of PRIVATE property & there isn't an apple tree for miles. I turned around & holy cow there's a nice looking trail cam staring right at me & it's even held on w/ really nice ratchet strap. It's strapped to a tree, on private ground, about 75 yards from the road.

Last year there was a guy that put up a tree stand & a ground blind on this same land. The landowner confiscated his ground blind. The guy never had permission & no one else other than me has permission this year.

So, I pondered all day what to do w/ this thing. It's still on the tree. I'm not real fond of taking other peoples property BUT I'm gonna pull the card & see who is on it. Getting rid of those damn apples too. What would you do?
 
Personally,
I'd leave it UNLESS you know its a tresspasser. odds are maybe the farmer gave permission to another guy, with the price of trailcameras the guy probably isnt just gunna trespass then put a trail camera over apples of all things. It might be a friend of the farmer and stealing it might make the owner upset and could result in you losing your ground. IF you own this and this guy is trespassing hell yeah take the thing but i'd pry wait and find out for sure!!!
 
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Personally,
I'd leave it UNLESS you know its a tresspasser. odds are maybe the farmer gave permission to another guy, with the price of trailcameras the guy probably isnt just gunna trespass then put a trail camera over apples of all things. It might be a friend of the farmer and stealing it might make the owner upset and could result in you losing your ground. IF you own this and this guy is trespassing hell yeah take the thing but i'd pry wait and find out for sure!!!

Yeah, make sure it's a tresspasser for sure. I have two uncles that are farmers and I hunt on their ground for deer and pheasant. They always say that my Dad and I are the only ones who have permission. But theres a few times where we've run into people and it ends up that they have permission too, or they are friends of my uncles and my uncles are just like, "Oh yeah, that's alright, he can be out there." So just make sure you know for sure. Otherwise I'd confiscate it:grin:
 
I'd talk to the owner first since if it's left on his trees it's his property. Hard to prove otherwise. When your hunting there's nothing worse than people who knowingly tresspass. We have a family that does it on our farm, usually with their ATV's. We've had them cited so many times it's amazing that they can afford it. Usually we get them on a well hidden trail cam.

If he's not sure who left it there, I'd bet that the person who put the camera up ended up on one of the pics. This summer I ended up on our camera while running the tractor a few times. On one of them I was probably 100 yards away.
 
Like others mentioned, make sure it is a trespasser. If it is, I would take the camera.I would write a note on the tree simply telling them if they want it back to call your number. Then you can work it out.
 
My opinion is exactly this...

Like others mentioned, make sure it is a trespasser. If it is, I would take the camera.I would write a note on the tree simply telling them if they want it back to call your number. Then you can work it out.

Make sure the landowner knows and supports your actions otherwise he could end up telling everyone "no hunting" to avoid the hassle.
 
Just ask the land owner if anyone has permission and if they don't I'd take it. I would aslo nail a piece of paper on the tree letting them know what i think of trespassers.
 
Just ask the land owner if anyone has permission and if they don't I'd take it. I would aslo nail a piece of paper on the tree letting them know what i think of trespassers.

Leave the memory card with the note, too. Make sure there is a pic or two on it of you showing the trespasser your favorite finger. Maybe even a pic of you eating a nice apple!
 
Like others mentioned, make sure it is a trespasser. If it is, I would take the camera.I would write a note on the tree simply telling them if they want it back to call your number. Then you can work it out.

Thats what I would do too.
 
I had a similar situation last year. I found a camera and mineral block 50 yards into my land near a line fence. My neighbor is in his 80's and doesn't hunt nor does his family. I took the camera, found a picture of the trespasser taken while he set the camera complete with his name on the picture, he was wasn't local. I printed his picture, wrote my name and phone number on it, put in a zip lock and pinned it to the tree. Two weeks later he showed up and couldn't understand why I was upset, he was hunting private land two farms to the south....he got his camera back but sometimes I just don't understand.
 
I had something happen a week ago that may change your mind about taking it. I had permission to hunt this place as well as another guy since last year. I knew where this guy had his stand perviously and went to see if it was there, as well as where it was last late muzzy. I saw that it was gone so I figured he wasn't planning on hunting there this year. Since this was the best spot on the place I thought WTH I'll put my stand in the same tree. (Now mind you if this guy was even close to that spot I would have set up a long way from him) I hunted there for a week and went back last Sunday to find this other guy sitting there by his truck with my stand. He says I have your stand I took down because you don't have permission to hunt here! I told him I know both the guy and his wife and do have permission from them both and they told me you also hunted out here more than once.

About this time the owners come down the lane and he gets this bright idea to drag them into it by asking them if I have permission to which they answer yes. Well this starts some sh*t because I told them he took my stand down without even asking anything about it. Well long story short I told them not to worry we'll take care of the problem between us on our own. I know his wife and she was to the point that she was going to tell us both that we won't be hunting there anymore. If you have a problem with someone that can be worked out with them and WITHOUT dragging the owners into it DO IT you will be better off!

On a side note the reason this guys stand was not there is because evidently it was stolen along with a stand on the neighbors property. So I'm just curious what you guys would have done in my situation if he would have yanked your stand down without even asking? Would you have told him tough sh*t, you're stand wasn't there and I'm putting my stand there or would you have told him like I did he was there before and he can hunt the tree? I really got to thinking about it and really think since he took my stand down without asking I should have told him to count his blessings I didn't kick his ass for taking it down to begin with. I also have my name on ALL my stands in permanent maker so he could have called before taking it down. Just wondering what you guys would have done?
 
I gotta admit thats a tought call. Like the rest of the posts say, IF IT WAS ME... I'd talk to the land owner, tell him the story and then tell him if he doesnt care your pulling the cam and leaving a note. Problem with taking the cam and keeping it is you might lose stands/cams there in the future.
 
I had permission to trap a farm that was a really good farm for fox. Another older guy also had permission. He apparently did not know that I was friends with the landowner and had gotten permission. This older guy found my traps and yanked them and left me a nasty note accusing me of tresspassing. The next day I ran into him and asked for my traps back. He proceeded to cuss me out and told me he was keeping them since I did not have permission to be there. I said well let's go talk to the landowner so we drove over there. You should have seen the look on his face when he was told that I had permission. So he now cusses out the landowner.

The landowner just turned to me and said "you'll be trapping here by yourself from now on" and turned and went back into the house. I went to the guy's truck and listened to some more cussing while he dug out my traps and then sped off.

Tread lightly is all I can say.
 
I'd do some checking with the landowner about that camera and see what he wants to do.




I saw that it was gone so I figured he wasn't planning on hunting there this year. Since this was the best spot on the place I thought WTH I'll put my stand in the same tree.

Your problem started when you didn't check with the landowner or hunter to see if the guy was still hunting. Just because a stand isn't inplace, doesn't mean much. Seems to me, he had reason to be upset also. First with his stand being stolen, then you jumping in without bothering to check with either the landowner or him.
 
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I'd do some checking with the landowner about that camera and see what he wants to do.






Your problem started when you didn't check with the landowner or hunter to see if the guy was still hunting. Just because a stand isn't inplace, doesn't mean much. Seems to me, he had reason to be upset also. First with his stand being stolen, then you jumping in without bothering to check with either the landowner or him.

I agree .
 
I had something happen a week ago that may change your mind about taking it. I had permission to hunt this place as well as another guy since last year. I knew where this guy had his stand perviously and went to see if it was there, as well as where it was last late muzzy. I saw that it was gone so I figured he wasn't planning on hunting there this year. Since this was the best spot on the place I thought WTH I'll put my stand in the same tree. (Now mind you if this guy was even close to that spot I would have set up a long way from him) I hunted there for a week and went back last Sunday to find this other guy sitting there by his truck with my stand. He says I have your stand I took down because you don't have permission to hunt here! I told him I know both the guy and his wife and do have permission from them both and they told me you also hunted out here more than once.

About this time the owners come down the lane and he gets this bright idea to drag them into it by asking them if I have permission to which they answer yes. Well this starts some sh*t because I told them he took my stand down without even asking anything about it. Well long story short I told them not to worry we'll take care of the problem between us on our own. I know his wife and she was to the point that she was going to tell us both that we won't be hunting there anymore. If you have a problem with someone that can be worked out with them and WITHOUT dragging the owners into it DO IT you will be better off!

On a side note the reason this guys stand was not there is because evidently it was stolen along with a stand on the neighbors property. So I'm just curious what you guys would have done in my situation if he would have yanked your stand down without even asking? Would you have told him tough sh*t, you're stand wasn't there and I'm putting my stand there or would you have told him like I did he was there before and he can hunt the tree? I really got to thinking about it and really think since he took my stand down without asking I should have told him to count his blessings I didn't kick his ass for taking it down to begin with. I also have my name on ALL my stands in permanent maker so he could have called before taking it down. Just wondering what you guys would have done?

G6-
It funny but I was in the exact opposite position as you last night. I had a tree cleared from the previous year and believe me it took at least 3 hours to get this thing limbed out. I try never to leave a stand out over the winter and rarely leave a stand out anyway, but this particular spot is one of the few that I hunt more than once and justifies a permanent set. Our family, prior to this year were the only ones bowhunting the ~400 acre farm, but during the offseason someone else was able to get permission, which was fine. I spoke with him this winter and he had said he'd seen a number of our set ups and vowed to stay clear of them being the new guy and all. I appreciated it and didn't think much else of it.

Anyway, I headed out last night to set this stand for the Rut and to hunt it as well. After the 3/4 mile walk in I got to the tree only to find a stand sitting in the exact tree I had painstakingly cleared. To top it off a 50 year old cedar tree which provided great draw cover was sawed down as well....making the setup far less appealing.

I decided to just hunt elsewhere, but I would never have had the gall to set my stand in another persons limbed tree (which equates to claiming it as his own in my book) knowing exactly who had done the work on this private farm. I probably wouldn't be as upset if the guy had done a take in/take down job while hunting it, but to go and leave the stand knowing full well that I had not done the legwork to prepare it.....foul play IMO. I certainly won't hunt the stand now since its not mine, but should I (I wont)? There is always 2 sides of the story, I'm not sure of the exact specifics of yours, but it sounds like the other guy had a beef that I find quite reasonable.

As for the guy taking your stand down, probably pretty sketchy, but he was likely heated due to having his stand jacked and it probably just stoked the fire when he got back only to find another stand in his tree to top things off.

Good luck the rest of the season. I try to go by the Golden Rule while in the woods, the problem is, not everyone feels the same about what is proper hunting etiquette.
 
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