Flatland Crusoe
Member
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2014
- Messages
- 572
I have to say that despite some of the grumblings about how it should be easier/cheaper for non-residents to hunt western states, I haven't found an eastern that doesn't keep and iron fist on their hunting spots. Specifically, my father in law gets landowner vouchers in CO for a 1-2 point mule deer unit, voucher rules mean the holder gets to hunt his private land. Every year we harvest 3-4 bucks on the place and on average they are 140-160 and every 3-4 years we get something in the 180 range. After about 10 years of trying to find someone in the midwest/east/texas that would let him hunt decent sized white tails in the 120 inch range for a voucher he gave up and now just gets 1 voucher so he can hunt every year.
I would consider this to be a large part of why I don't like hunting in the East in that people put too much value on whitetail access. On the open market its not uncommon to see $30/acre annual hunting leases. I'm clearly lukewarm on whitetails in general, and I've found the biggest deterrent to hunt them is other deer hunters. I also think there is an unhealthy level of competition over who shoots the biggest whitetail, but among friends and in the eastern hunting community as the whole.
The biggest reason someone from out west would want to hunt the east would in theory be deer density and potential size in places like Iowa, Kansas and West central Illinois if they found access to decent properties in these areas. The irony from a public land DIY perspective is the really good deer (by B&C numbers) areas are mostly private and the bigger chunks of most national forest either have smaller deer (Ozark, Southern, Appalachian) or lower densities (Northern Great Lakes Big Woods).
I was going to say that turkeys, small game and waterfowl are a reason to hunt the East, but so far my experience is that they are plentiful out west in a lot of cases and are less pressured. Obviously there are still experiences unique to hunting the east like flooded rice fields/flooded corn/flooded timber that exist in varying degrees of public/private opportunity. Western turkey hunting is just different than the east. The birds are less wary, but finding them usually requires more miles.
Convenience is probably the big reason people like eastern hunting. It is certainly possible to get in quick morning/evening hunts and its possible to make the hunts as easy as one would like with fixed blinds and the like.