Saturday, April 26, 2025

Dean Bortz: Are the stands, blinds staying at the Public Land in Wisconsin at night? Many mixed opinions


ANDIn January 2017, the Council for Natural Resources Wisconsin approved a change in the rules, which since then allowed hunters to erect stands and thickeners at night in the state area north of Hwa. 64 from September to January. The change of the rule took place after the public support of the idea during the hearing of spring fish and games 2016. Hwy. 64 runs through a state from Stillwater, Minn., To Marinette.

The change of rules in state areas in northern Wisconsin was probably due to the fact that night stands and blinds were already allowed on the federal land of the national forests and on some lands of poviat forests. Wisconsin currently has 30 district forests covering 2.4 million acres – more space than the national forests Chequamegon and Nicolet. Not all departments of the Forests of the Function have the same hunting rules, but many poviats allow to place stands and blinds overnight.

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Hunters are confined to placing two night carcies or groups for the Fountain.

I heard more negative rumors about this principle after the 2024 deer season than from 2017. There are no hunters, but stands. What now?

Would the owner of the position still be on his way to this place? Stay or go? Do you climb the stand? Has the stand remained in the Woods Fair game for every early bird? Two hunters came out. One hunter stayed, but he went on.

I also hear the fears of retired game guards who have been following problems with night stands and blinds since 2017. It seems that the level of sport associated with the stand and the blind can be worsened, and we will probably see the resolution of a citizen, which is aimed at the NIX practice entering the spring interrogations in April.

More information from Wisconsin Outdoor News:

Wisconsin Angler pulls stout fish with incredibly shallow depths under ice

Wings on the Wisconsin Group Diaries over four decades of protection support

Wings over Wisconsin has available wheelchairs

Recently, I asked readers of their thoughts about the stand for the night and a blind position. This attracted a powerful answer for and against. Here are the thoughts of several readers.

The 72-year-old reader from Kiel hunted 33,000 acres George W. Mead State Wildlife Area south of Hwy. 64 and in central Wisconsin for over 50 years. I had a gentleman’s name, but I lost it. He hunts for deer and honey bears.

He wrote: “Why could I not leave Staństwo after hunting bears? What hunter would he sit on someone’s bait? But I can’t leave the stand there, as if they could north of hwy. 64, so I made a ladder on wheels. It was really not funny, making noise, pulling him and leaving this day. South should join the northern half of the state and make it legal. “

Jim Voigt from Fremont is against the locals: “There is no way. Come first, he served for the first time. He who gets there should have the right to hunt in this place. I see it even with duck hunt. You go out to your favorite swamp duck, and all favorable places you had a flag at the pole, holding them, as if it would mean that someone is impaired. Even if it meant sleeping in your skif at night.

The reader of Menomonee Falls Kevin Gatzow registered. By the way, Gatzow was The subscriber from the place in 1993 or at the beginning of 1994 wrote: “Regardless, for the first time, he served for the first time. This is the public land, there are no tasks. Now for a meeting that will certainly be created, let’s hope that there is cooler heads. You can make a new friend or not. If not, pack and huge. Wood is huge.”

Joe Steckbauer from Vilas wrote: “I also had one of these situations. I live in an area with a lot of state land around me. My health is not the greatest, so I do not venture too far and showed or explained the family in which I will be in this place. I found a place with a good sign and hunt. Found was found for alternative locations.

Mike Shaw froze a bit in slipping during this frosty spell, but his ink flowed well enough to say: “Absolutely not. Public land belongs to everyone. If someone wants to separate the place, he can pay taxes. The same with large docks in public water. I could go forever, not now.”

From Jeff Schumacher with Kaukauna: “If I came across a rack with a ladder in a place that I was chasing earlier, and it was a place that I planned to hunt this morning and nobody was in it, I would sit in it, as long as the guy appeared. Then go immediately. I will not leave. If I sat down to him until I sit down that I can’t sit it down, and I can’t do it if I sat down.

Everyone who lives in the area of ​​Wisconsin Rapids and buys insurance, probably knows Mike “Ruess” Ruesch. Ostare Russski works from time to time to make sure I don’t get it. Russski wrote: “Hey, Bortz, you asked readers to send their thoughts, so please. If I hunted public earth, I would not like to compete with the already disappointed, ladder or blind. The most military people want this advantage over others. Przystodowi people more accept the rule, even at least the same day is royal pain. I think that this is the balance option.

James Rozek from Eldorado wrote: “I agree with leaving the racks. Fishermen can throw ice shangles and leave them there all winter. Duck hunters can build blinds in the Eldorado swamps. I hunted at Eldorado Bagna throughout my life up to 11 years ago. I am 77 years vintage. I am 77 years vintage. Parking and arthritis and I asked if I hunt for the blind.

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