justalayman
Senior Member
Yes I agree! The common way to hunt turkey is to use a locator call. A locator is normally used just before sunrise. Its dark out! A locator call makes a male turkey gobble from the roost. Turkeys are known to roost near food sources. So a hunter locates a gobbler in the dark, sets up and tries to call the Tom into range. How is a hunter supposed to know that someone else baited the area? That he is hunting within 300' of bait? The hunter shoots, a game warden is close, comes and finds bait and the hunter is fined. You are violating the Regulation by your location.
Ok, same scenario but you’re in a tree stand. You shoot. The warden shows up and points to the feed stand 200 feet away that you didn’t see because it was dark and writes you a citation
What’s the difference?
The argument about it being difficult to ensure you are at least 300 feet away from a feed stand has nothing to do with the issue you have been arguing which is the regulation conflicts with the law, which it clearly does not