Michael
Appreciate the answer. Times they are a changin...
Eric
Appreciate the answer. Times they are a changin...
Eric
Michael McCord said:Eric, I think the goal with the restructuring is to get away from so many rules except on the sites where conflict will be inevitable- most will be temp blind/boat blind, and the best holes will be assigned through the computer draw so hunters will have assurances that they can hunt a good spot without having to worry about someone trying to bully them off it.
Popular public areas and birds can cause people to lose their minds- I got cussed out a few years ago when I asked a fellow hunter on his way in to not cut through my spread 15 minutes after legal, as if that was an outrageous request.
Eric Patterson said:Michael
My displeasure may be misplaced with the handling of TN permanent blinds, which certainly poses issues for the typical hunter at the hands of possessive retaliatory hunters, that state managers are trying to prevent. Nonetheless, more complexity is piled on the sport and I'm tired of the complexity of it all.
Eric
P.s. I am glad to see boat-in hunting is still allowed and encouraged. During my short visit to Reelfoot I did not witness anyone try this. Sure seems underutilized.
Michael McCord said:Eric Patterson said:Michael
My displeasure may be misplaced with the handling of TN permanent blinds, which certainly poses issues for the typical hunter at the hands of possessive retaliatory hunters, that state managers are trying to prevent. Nonetheless, more complexity is piled on the sport and I'm tired of the complexity of it all.
Eric
P.s. I am glad to see boat-in hunting is still allowed and encouraged. During my short visit to Reelfoot I did not witness anyone try this. Sure seems underutilized.
Reelfoot is definitely the exception to the rule. Freelancing at reelfoot is unfortunately strongly discouraged by locals however they can.
rfberan said:There is a dementia, Lewy Body Dementia, that can have intermittent violent episodes. It is more rapidly progressive than Alzheimer's and differs also in that it has periods of lucidness. I watched a relative suffer from it and he would have times where he knew he had a problem. It was sad. He would have horrible hallucinations and on one occasion chased his wife with a knife. The longevity from diagnosis is much shorter and it is often misdiagnosed as Alzheimer's.
I am in no way implying this is related to this incident, simply wanted to answer your question as to a casual relationship between dementia and violence.
Michael McCord said:Eric Patterson said:Michael
That is why my earlier post included stiff penalties for those that try and deprive others. I have been told Reelfoot has one game warden and it was even suggested he "sees" things from the locals point of view. If true, that right there is where you start. I don't have the time right now to go into a personal experience I had in another state, but local authorities fixed the issue pronto when we were bullied. That's how it should work.
Eric
Unfortunately stiff penalties depend on law enforcement being in close enough contact/proximity to respond and judges being willing to enforce them. It may be different in other states, but most judges are notoriously lenient on wildlife laws. Cell coverage is terrible on that lake in particular. Not sure about the other WMAs that are up for changes. And then it's often a question of whose story you believe and what can be proven.