What to Look For and How to Handle Bad Neighbors - Skip Sligh

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  • Опубликовано: 19 дек 2024

Комментарии • 7

  • @royguidry1311
    @royguidry1311 2 года назад

    I had 13 acres in Ohio that was a valley between 3 ridges that were 100-200 acre properties. All the deer in the area came off the ridges to check the does that bedded on my property. I had pics of everyone’s deer. The problem was I had to park on the road and when the neighbor across the street saw that I was hunting he would bang on metal constantly for the last 45 min of the day and would shoot a rifle into ledge on one of the trails the deer used to come down the mountain. I finally had to hide my vehicle about 2 miles down the road on a side road and walk back to my property. My second day of doing this I was able to shoot a beautiful 155” 12 pt buck. I was going to take the time and effort to try to make a place I could park on my land but I would be encroaching on the small property. I luckily had hundreds of pics of big bucks and used them to sell the property for a mean profit. I was able to buy two separate parcels with the money. I kinda feel bad for the new owner, but hopefully they were able to come up with a solution that was better than mine, which was to beat the crap out of the guy. In the end it’s not worth the frustration. I don’t have that dream setup but I have calm quiet properties that are enjoyable.

    • @jake-hofer
      @jake-hofer  2 года назад

      Man, that sounds super frustrating. To your point, peace and quiet can be worth more than trophy quality.

  • @williamcox7190
    @williamcox7190 2 года назад

    People killing little bucks on their own property does not make them bad neighbors... Maybe purchase a larger track land?

  • @tompeplinski
    @tompeplinski 2 года назад

    What do you do when a neighbor who flaunts his money tries to tell you how to hunt your own land. Oh wait...