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Land owner

loose_is_fast

Junior Member
618
108
McClure
How many acres does one need to own for land owner tags? I have read 5 but that was from a while ago. I just picked up an 8 acre bottom ground to hunt and the land owner was asking about land owner tags as he is thinking about hunting.
 

Wildlife

Denny
Supporting Member
5,247
191
Ross County, Ohio
ON PAGE 37 WITHIN THE 2021/22 'HUNTING & TRAPPING REGULATIONS'
________________________________________

LICENSE EXEMPTIONS:


Certain categories of persons are exempted from buying licenses, permits, and stamps.

1. Ohio resident landowners, spouses, and their children are not required to have a hunting license, fur taker permit, eithersex deer permit, deer management permit, spring or fall turkey permit, or Ohio Wetlands Habitat Stamp when hunting or trapping on land they own.

2. A nonresident landowner, and the spouse and children living with the landowner, may hunt on that property without a license, either-sex deer permit, deer management permit, spring or fall turkey permit, Ohio Wetlands Habitat Stamp, or fur taker permit if the nonresident’s home state allows residents of Ohio owning property in the nonresident’s home state, and the spouse and children living with the Ohio property owner, to hunt without a license, deer permit, spring or fall turkey permit, wetlands habitat stamp, or fur taker permit.

3. A member of a limited liability company or partnership is a landowner provided the member is an Ohio resident and the limited liability company or limited liability partnership consists of three or fewer individual members or partners, or the beneficiary or trustee of a trust that has three or fewer trustees or beneficiaries.

4. Tenants and their children on land on which they reside and from which they derive the majority (more than 50 percent) of their income from agricultural production on that land are not required to have a hunting license, fur taker permit, either-sex deer permit, deer management permit, spring or fall turkey permit, or Ohio Wetlands Habitat Stamp when they are hunting or trapping on land where they reside.

5. Ohio resident landowners’ grandchildren who are under 18 years of age are not required to have a hunting license or an Ohio Wetlands Habitat Stamp while hunting on their grandparents’ land. All other licenses and permits are required.

6. Members of the U.S. Armed Forces on active duty while on leave or furlough are not required to purchase a hunting license, Ohio Wetlands Habitat Stamp, or fur taker permit. All other licenses and permits are required. Members of the U.S. Armed Forces on active duty stationed in Ohio, but NOT on leave or furlough are required to purchase a resident Ohio hunting license and other applicable permits before hunting deer, turkey, or hunting and trapping furbearers, and an Ohio Wetlands Habitat Stamp for hunting waterfowl.
 
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5Cent

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
12,334
212
North Central Ohio
But, I believe the animal needs to die on your property too. Meaning, you shoot it from the stand/blind but the animal expires on the neighbors land, you must have a license/tag to retrieve and keep....can someone confirm?
 

Wildlife

Denny
Supporting Member
5,247
191
Ross County, Ohio
I would strictly adhere to what it states within the 'Hunting & Trapping Regulations'. and interpret it as being literal in the definitions, and never go outside those definitions to be on the safe side.

However, I'm sure that most all Game Wardens and/or Wildlife Officers have the authority to make judgment calls within the field and might allow some leeway for someone to slide if it was not a past habit, and if the deer was truly shot first on the owners property, and then died on the neighboring property and the neighbor is okay with you to retrieve the deer.

If the neighbor is in fact okay with you to retrieve the deer without issue, I still would most likely make the call to my local Wildlife Officer, explain my current situation to him and accept whatever advice and/or recommendation on how to proceed.

If I have to purchase a license & permit based on that phone call conversation afterwards with the Wildlife Officer, then I would easily do so through the new ONDR cellphone on-line internet application before I went to retrieve that deer on the neighbors property. It's a real snap to do and it does not take long at all to complete that process through that application if you have adequate internet access. Probably takes all of about 5 minutes to complete that purchasing transaction. I know because I have done it just last season from the field.

Hope that I am pretty clear about what I just stated above for everybody?
 
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Smawgunner2

Active Member
1,238
63
Athens County
But, I believe the animal needs to die on your property too. Meaning, you shoot it from the stand/blind but the animal expires on the neighbors land, you must have a license/tag to retrieve and keep....can someone confirm?
I have no ruling to provide on this but I’d think not. Your hunting license, permit, tag whatever should apply to where the animal is shot, not what county, state or land it dies in.
 
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bowhunter1023

Owner/Operator
Staff member
48,922
274
Appalachia
I'd say that's a question for your GW to address, but I don't see why that would change things. The law address the act of hunting, not the act of dying. If it is indeed the case, I claim the 5th on a handful of recoveries. Hell, even on 2,000 acres, you could run into this issue and I have a few times on 80 acres. I've honestly never thought anything about it. I was legally hunting as a landowner and had permission to recover the deer.

Flip the script and say you shoot the deer on your neighbor with tag in pocket, but it dies on your ground. Are you going to tag it as a landowner?
 

Spencie

Senior Member
5,046
145
Constitution Ohio
A friend of mine shot a buck on his own property and it crossed a township road and died. GW pulled up as he was recovering it. $327 fine for not having a license or permit even though the animal was shot on his own property.
So, if in doubt get the license/permit.
 
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OhioWhiteTails

Senior Member
Supporting Member
8,477
191
Flatlands
So if I shoot a deer in one county and it runs to another, I need to have an open tag for that? Imma call BS. I was hunting legally.
Same thing for does shot on private, but run onto public that doesn't allow doe hunting after gun law? Big Grey area...
 

giles

Cull buck specialist
Supporting Member
Knew I read it somewhere, only other outdoor forum I read. Conflicting GW messages, I'm going to email local office and have it on record for both land owner and county 2 county given the line proximity and they're headed that way to the river after shot lol.

Good call. I wouldn't trust 11 year old second hand information in your case.