Originally posted by longbow fanatic 1:
A spot I have hunted for the past 15 years is being sold. I was planning to hunt turkeys there with my son this month. Oh, well. I guess during deer season this fall, I may have to drive to Wisconsin to hunt public land. I'm sure you can all relate.
The same exact thing happened to us in Feb. 2010
We had the same 120 acre lease since 1995 and I took my biggest 2 white tail bucks on that property, a 145" 12pt. and a 155" heavy 10pt.
Countless other really nice bucks, gobbs of turkeys, and many, many does hit the ground from the end of my broad heads to fill the freezer over those years. I actually matured as a bow hunter on that piece of ground and I knew the place like my own bedroom. I knew where the deer bedded, where they fed, travel routes, and where they would be at different times of the season. It took me years to figure out how to cut those gobblers off before they left my property and traveled onto the neighbor's place, and I knew where to be when they would return around noon. That was the hardest part of learning how to be a good turkey hunter was teaching myself patience by not giving up at 9am just because the birds weren't talking. I knew where all the roost sites were and I'd wait em out in hopes that they would return to the area before legal hunting time ended at 1pm. I can't count how many gobblers I duped at 12:45pm when I was probably the only turkey hunter left in the woods while everybody else had gone to town for lunch.
Lots of fond memories on that property and the best years of hunting in my life along with some of the most depressing lows of my hunting career took place on that small parcel of timber, power line cuts, and open pasture/hay fields. Lots of hot summers sweating my tail end off trying to get that fall food plot in the ground and then praying for rain.
All gone in an instant to a big "Pay to hunt" operation on the other side of the fence from us. Money talks boys and hunting is big business nowadays.
Thinking about this again brings back painful moments when I found out it was stripped out from under us without so much as a phone call and we had a narrow 2 week time frame to get all our stands out and anything else we didn't want to lose.
It's sad.....Really sad that this sort of thing goes on and happens more and more these days.
I feel your pain Longbow Fanatic, I honestly do.
Hang in there and I hope you find a new and better exciting place to hang your bow that's loaded with turkey and deer my friend.