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Not clear on your question(s). My ONX shows name of owner on each tract, usually easy to see what is private and what is public. Remember there is a difference between public land within private land with no public access and public land with public access.This is prolly a dumb question but .... is there something that identifies land that is deeded?
I know when looking at a map that State lands are blue, BLM is orange, Private is white .... but how does a person know if an area is deeded.
Can an area of state or BLM land also be deeded and not public? Does an onX map show this?
Please add some clarity to this to avoid any trespassing concerns.
Thank you in advance for any input.
Depends on state. In Montana - yes. In Colorado - generally no.I guess all I was asking is if I look at a map and see blue (state) or orange (blm) that I can assume that it is huntable.
Where would a person find those "other factors and information" ? .... for Wyoming?Hunting access is typically more complex than checking the colors of tracts on the map or determining "deed land".
It's not difficult, but it does include other factors and information, sometimes not evident on ONX or on a map.
Fish & Game dept, USFS district office, BLM office, county road office, sportsmans groups, etc. First step is the map recon and info Google-up of a specific area where you wish to gain access to hunt.Where would a person find those "other factors and information" ? .... for Wyoming?
Excellent ... Thank You sir, much appreciated.Fish & Game dept, USFS district office, BLM office, county road office, sportsmans groups, etc. First step is the map recon and info Google-up of a specific area where you wish to gain access to hunt.