Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I personal witnessed this happening where I had a hunting camp,people started putting up gates on public roads to end access to public lands. The thought was who’s going to pay 40 grand to go to court and get the gates removed. The locals handled it their way & the shit stopped be cause the county sheriffs would not respond to trespassing calls in that area. people will try shit & see if they can get away with it . Take note of the happenings in Seattle & Portland , it’s becoming a lawless world.I hope you are just kidding. This is a serious issue for those of us that value public lands and increasing opportunity. That is how access gets shut down not increased...
Or people claiming public land as their own.You know, one of the reasons it has become more and more difficult to get permission to hunt and fish on private property is because of a decline in people respecting private property.
Yes, frustrating. I don't remember the exact amount of public land landlocked by private in Montana but it is significant...and inaccessible legally.Or people claiming public land as their own.
Your example is not a corner hopping issue.I personal witnessed this happening where I had a hunting camp,people started putting up gates on public roads to end access to public lands. The thought was who’s going to pay 40 grand to go to court and get the gates removed. The locals handled it their way & the shit stopped be cause the county sheriffs would not respond to trespassing calls in that area. people will try shit & see if they can get away with it . Take note of the happenings in Seattle & Portland , it’s becoming a lawless world.
You know, one of the reasons it has become more and more difficult to get permission to hunt and fish on private property is because of a decline in people respecting private property.
So a lazy, greedy government acquiest (sic) to wealthy developers and nothing has changed since the 1860's except the private land owners are now blocking off access to public lands adjacent to theirs?FYI, background, so we can have an educated conversation. Even my experienced speculation may not have been correct. It appears even in the beginning they realized the problem but did not address it.
https://scholarship.law.uwyo.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1549&context=land_water
There's no protection via state law for you ?BTW I own land that has hunting and not only is vandalism (wire cutters) and dumping (like dead dogs in my pump pond) an issue but so is liability. I was told to carry insurance to protect myself from trespassers who hurt themselves on my land.
They almost never do , But people do it because it’s thier only option in many cases due to lack of money. not the way to go but I get it.Yes, frustrating. I don't remember the exact amount of public land landlocked by private in Montana but it is significant...and inaccessible legally.
Not certain monkey wrench gang tactics will help the cause.
The deal in my case was if you could drive on the public road and get to the dead end you could legally access thousand of acres of public land. Some of the landowners with thier ten or twenty acre parcels tried to deny access to the public land for thier personal gainsYour example is not a corner hopping issue.
The court ruling will have significant impact on something like 6 million land locked acres. Crossing my fingers this land is legally opened up for good.What if you really suck your gut in and cross sideways?As I understand it, you cannot step over a corner from public to public without technically trespassing on the private sections which make up the other two quarters of the corner. Even climbing a ladder is still trespassing i.e.trespassing through air space of private.
So even with survey pins a no-no.
Wyoming has language which suggests a crime has been committed based upon the intent of the persons doing the corner hopping.
Like I said, I haven't followed the case in Wyoming closely, but I think some guys got pissed and corner hopped during hunting season but without weapons, knowing they would get caught. In this case, I believe they were trying to push the envelope to test the legality of it all, and bring in some publicity.
I wonder if we could get the state or Feds to stake the corners? Then there is no question, you can step over.Ok back to corner crossing. A lot of people think this is more a Wyoming/Montana issue but we have our checkerboards as well. This is just north of Moses Lake for example:View attachment 6114The court ruling will have significant impact on something like 6 million land locked acres. Crossing my fingers this land is legally opened up for good.
Anything can happen if it ever ended up in court. The right (or wrong) legal firm can sue for almost anything and win or at least bleed you dry. It's a risk.There's no protection via state law for you ?
(Sorry was meant as a question. Realized the question mark was missing )
Mathematically a corner is a point, it has no size, no length, no width, so you can not pass over that point or a line projecting from the center of the earth through said point and into space without violating the space around it, because you have size.What if you really suck your gut in and cross sideways?