With duck hunting it is not too difficult to spill the banks
of the written laws. Now, if you’re unlicensed and make a hobby out of
shooting lead from unplugged shotguns on someone else’s property while piling
up birds to the point it threatens a flyway, you’re nothing more than a wanton
criminal bent by your own sadistic whims and concepts of sporthunting. There’s
really no place for you here. But there are plenty of other occasions when well-intentioned, law-abiding
hunters cross the line into the realm of lawbreaker.
Let’s be clear before we move forward – there’s no gray
area. The USFWS and other governing bodies have laid bare the laws. How they
enforce them is often a matter of discretion, but ignorance is not an excuse,
though we all know plenty of folks where you could at least make a strong case
out of it. The rules that bind the sport are so varied that accidents do
happen.
We can always start with motorized boats. It’s a cinch to
have running lights fail or forget to slap a current registration sticker on
the side. Flares can be out of date. Maybe a cushion or life vest blew out on
the ride to the ramp. Or whatever is absent on that long list of safety gear and
equipment Florida boaters, at
least, must carry on their vessels.
Last year’s Early Teal Season was a prime example. We’d run
out of Lake Toho
before dawn when the bow lights quit and the spotlight failed. The captain used a flashlight to
navigate and alert others to our presence. With few boats around us and the moonlight illuminating the lake, it
wasn’t a dangerous matter. The Man got us the second that flashlight was
quelled for the slightest moment, descending on us like a hawk on a field
mouse. It happened quickly. Granted, they had no running lights and their boat
was solid black…but you can’t argue with The Man.
I’ve seen this sort of thing happen too many times, and, I
mean, they are right, it’s the law. But, frustratingly, there is almost no circumstance in this
world where a game officer will show mercy and not cite you for a vessel
violation. Furthermore, if they want to find something wrong, they most
certainly will. I’m convinced some would look past large bales of grass tucked
under the bow and focus more on the mold content of your throw-cushion thus
fining you for it being out of code, probably because it’s a simple ticket and
they won’t have to appear in court.
Speaking of having to go to court, that reminds me of a very
recent situation. Of course, I would not be party to such things, so let’s
think of this as a secondhand story instead. There was this group of guys who
hunted STA 5 one Sunday afternoon back in September for the Early Teal Season.
These guys shot one duck shy of their limit and were quickly stowing their gear to
return to the check-in station. This being South Florida ,
their bare flesh was being flayed by the various ground based and
aerial combat insects that reside here. They did what anyone who still has
nerve endings would do, namely, toss all their gear and ducks into the bed of a
truck and haul butt out of there.
Upon arrival at the check station and staring at the mound
of ducks behind the tailgate, the FWC
officer informed these folks that it was against the law to store ducks in that
manner, even though the group was under their limit. All the birds must be
separated and/or kept on a stringer of some fashion to designate who they
belonged to.
She said this was a federal offense, and
they should be lucky federal officers were not there or the group would be
cited and have to return to Hendry County
to go to court. Kindly, this group of ne’er-do-wells was allowed a pass. She
let these guys know – several times – how nice she was being, and there were
plenty of thank-you’s to go around because no one wants to go to court in
Hendry County where the judicial system is already bogged
down with meth possession trials and cockfighting arraignments.
Naturally, I knew all of this because I read all the federal
rules and clearly understand their meaning…OK, I’m lying. I’ve been duck
hunting off and on for over ten years now and have neither heard anything about
this nor seen it done despite the fact I hunt with experienced waterfowlers. Hell, I’ve left other STA’s with similar piles of ducks that were
checked by game officers and nothing was ever said. Having looked it over a second time, it is there in the guidelines in typical legal jargon, easy enough to browse over without fully understanding its purpose while seeking the current bag limits.
Did you realize that until you get to your primary residence –
or abode as the feds call it - that all dressed birds must have their head or
one wing attached for positive ID? So make sure you keep a wing on
that breast after you’re done plucking it in the hotel room sink. Furthermore,
if you transfer a bird to another person, including a game processor, taxidermist,
or buddy who has freezer space, it must have a tag attached with your name,
signature, harvest date and address of the hunter who shot the bird. If you
drop off several dressed birds to anyone, you must also include the species and total
number of birds killed on that day. You can clip this info to the wing, I suppose.
Well, let’s finish this off with a positive note and not get
into those hunts when a bag limit is exceeded or a bird misidentified.
Do your best to read the rules and keep an eye out for changes. Quite
honestly, though I do read the rulebooks, I’ve mostly learned this sport by following the crowd. But just like trying to argue your way out of a speeding ticket by saying you’re
just going with the flow of the traffic, no game officer worth his salt is
gonna buy that excuse.
When you do mess up, just hope you’re not caught; if you are
pray for the kindness of that game officer and hope he or she is not a federal
agent.
Imagine the looks you’ll get in the Hendry
County courthouse when you tell the
resident hardened felons that you’re in for failing to keep your ducks in a
row.
1 comment:
In our area, where hunting often requires 8, 10, or 12 dozen full body decoys, you are going to have more than one hunter. And if the birds fall, they are going to almost definitely end up in a pile.
The rule, as it's been read to me (sternly), and verified in a friend's state (VA) court case, is that the birds have to be separated and labeled at the time the hunt has concluded. Basically, when the ducks are transferred from the boat (or 4-wheeler) to the truck in which you are going to get on a public road. There is no such thing as a "blind limit" although, when 80 geese are tolling in on top of the blind, we'd be wise to consider the blind's entire limit (I shot two geese accidentally with one shot this year - had I shot one earlier, I would have been in violation).
On transporting someone else's birds - always have tags. Construction flagging, plant tags, ANYTHING to identify who shot each one, on what day, and in what county, along with their phone number.
The "transport with wing" rule is a tough one in warm states - how many whole geese can you fit in one cooler?
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