I was turkey hunting the other morning and had a hen come in closely follows by a Tom who was just out of range and then all hell breaks loose with a trespasser 200 yards away shooting the woods up. I sneak out and get to within 25 yards and let one go with the .12 straight up in the air. When I stepped out I saw it was a guy and his kid shooting a 9mm hand gun.
The guy said, "Oh, is this your land? I didn't know any one was out here hunting."
Yeah, it is. Yes, I was, that's why I'm carrying a decoy.
The guy said, "I didn't know we couldn't come back here and shoot."
Me: Really, that's wierd, since there is 12 No Trespassing Signs between here and the main road and two more on the gate you left your atv at.
He was pretty lucky he had his boy with him. I told him to wrap it up soon and walked away shaking my head. I knew that if I didn't leave I'd say something ugly in front of his boy.
I usually have my wife drop me off but only on a dirt road and always at least a couple hours before daylight. I usually use a crossbow so I don't make noise. Once I kill a bird I call her on my cell and have her pick me up at one of three predetermined pick up spots. One word of caution is always watch for electric fences in the dark. I've not been busted yet so to say I do it well would be in order.
Quote from: Gooserbat on April 06, 2015, 11:20:50 PM
I usually have my wife drop me off but only on a dirt road and always at least a couple hours before daylight. I usually use a crossbow so I don't make noise. Once I kill a bird I call her on my cell and have her pick me up at one of three predetermined pick up spots. One word of caution is always watch for electric fences in the dark. I've not been busted yet so to say I do it well would be in order.
I just woke up my wife laughing
Sent from my iPhone that I ain't smart enough to use with tapatalker
Good stuff Gooserbat
Gooser, don't laugh we caught a guy doing just that during deer season on our property about 10 years ago, but with a rifle. His wife kept driving by in a mini van while my cousin held him for the sheriff.
Gooserbrat...I know a guy who lives by your post! He always says, "You don't need permission, you just need a good place to park." It was with much delight when, in the local paper's courthouse news section, he was listed as paying fine for trespassing. Did it change him? I doubt that the only thing it changed was the need for him to find a better place to park!
My family and I own 104 acres in SE Ohio. We use to have some serious problems with trespassers. Signs will only keep the honest people out. However, I will say signs that have some type of camera wordage goes a long way. I have my entire perimeter posted with no trespassing/hunting signs every 50-75 yards. In addition, in areas of likely human intrusion I post signs that say "Warning Security Cameras In Use." I have dummy security cameras about 10 yards behind in plain view. Ever since I started doing this my trespassing issues went down dramatically. We own quite a bit of road frontage. The road frontage is hard to sneak in from, but not the back side. There is an old non-maintained county road about 300-400 yards from our back line. Guys will walk this road and call. If they hear a bird they just go.
Quote from: Gooserbat on April 06, 2015, 11:20:50 PM
I usually have my wife drop me off but only on a dirt road and always at least a couple hours before daylight. I usually use a crossbow so I don't make noise. Once I kill a bird I call her on my cell and have her pick me up at one of three predetermined pick up spots. One word of caution is always watch for electric fences in the dark. I've not been busted yet so to say I do it well would be in order.
:TooFunny: :TooFunny: Seriously though, this happens more often than what people think...
1st day last season a friend and I are about to peek out into one of our fields when my buddy says there are 3 guys out there and one is setting a decoy. I walk straight to the decoy setter who is bent over trying to push stake into the hard ground. He never saw me coming. At 5 feet I yell HEY YOU THINK THATS A GOOD SPOT! Then say who the %&*&& are you guys' and what the %^&% are you doing here? We just wanted to get up high the bottoms are flooded was the return.
I had them line up for a group picture holding there ID chest high. Told them the next time it would not be as pleasant of a shoot. They walked rite past the posted signs on the way in.
Then there was the guy I walk up to in deer season and say hello. We get to talking and I say man, it is posted heavy in here. He says ya but I park down by the gate over at so in so. I say, who owns this ground? He says my name and says don't let him catch you he is crazy. I reach out to shake his hand and ask his name. he shakes and tells me his name. I tell him my name and he turned white i kidd not. Have not seen him again.
My posters have the message: I will find you, written on them. And I will!
My grandfather came up with novel way to handle trespassers on our group owned hunting tract in NC. After several trespasser sitings and confrontations, he chained an old bear trap to a tree facing the main access road to the land and over it placed sign that read "Warning Bear Traps On This Property". I asked my grandfather about the fact that bear traps were illegal, and he stated that having a sign that said you had them wasn't. We never had another trespasser that I ever knew about.
Quote from: Gooserbat on April 06, 2015, 11:20:50 PM
I usually have my wife drop me off but only on a dirt road and always at least a couple hours before daylight. I usually use a crossbow so I don't make noise. Once I kill a bird I call her on my cell and have her pick me up at one of three predetermined pick up spots. One word of caution is always watch for electric fences in the dark. I've not been busted yet so to say I do it well would be in order.
maybe i am reading your post wrong but it almost sounds like you are saying you knowingly trespass? am i reading your post wrong?
Quote from: buckluck_9pt on April 07, 2015, 09:35:29 AM
Quote from: Gooserbat on April 06, 2015, 11:20:50 PM
I usually have my wife drop me off but only on a dirt road and always at least a couple hours before daylight. I usually use a crossbow so I don't make noise. Once I kill a bird I call her on my cell and have her pick me up at one of three predetermined pick up spots. One word of caution is always watch for electric fences in the dark. I've not been busted yet so to say I do it well would be in order.
maybe i am reading your post wrong but it almost sounds like you are saying you knowingly trespass? am i reading your post wrong?
I believe he meant it as a joke. You have to take everything with a grain of salt from a guy who calls himself Gooserbat!
Quote from: buckluck_9pt on April 07, 2015, 09:35:29 AM
maybe i am reading your post wrong but it almost sounds like you are saying you knowingly trespass? am i reading your post wrong?
(http://i657.photobucket.com/albums/uu292/Fullchoke/doublefacepalm_zps2buckzhv.jpg) (http://s657.photobucket.com/user/Fullchoke/media/doublefacepalm_zps2buckzhv.jpg.html)
Quote from: jakesdad on April 07, 2015, 09:38:29 AM
Quote from: buckluck_9pt on April 07, 2015, 09:35:29 AM
Quote from: Gooserbat on April 06, 2015, 11:20:50 PM
I usually have my wife drop me off but only on a dirt road and always at least a couple hours before daylight. I usually use a crossbow so I don't make noise. Once I kill a bird I call her on my cell and have her pick me up at one of three predetermined pick up spots. One word of caution is always watch for electric fences in the dark. I've not been busted yet so to say I do it well would be in order.
maybe i am reading your post wrong but it almost sounds like you are saying you knowingly trespass? am i reading your post wrong?
I believe he meant it as a joke. You have to take everything with a grain of salt from a guy who calls himself Gooserbat!
lol.. gotcha.. thought it was awfully forward. lol... thanks guys.. i haven't run into trespassers yet, had them on our property... got trail cam pics of them and once we had them (in the cover of darkness) walking from their property to ours, flashlights on, trying to get to our treestands and box blind.. little to their knowledge my mother ( who hunts with us) was sitting in the box blind... she yelled at them ( we know the guy, so she yelled at him by his full name) when they were about 20 yards from her.. scared the tar out of them.. they turned off their flashlights and all you could hear was them trampling through the bush to get back to their property...
Quote from: Gooserbat on April 06, 2015, 11:20:50 PM
I usually have my wife drop me off but only on a dirt road and always at least a couple hours before daylight. I usually use a crossbow so I don't make noise. Once I kill a bird I call her on my cell and have her pick me up at one of three predetermined pick up spots. One word of caution is always watch for electric fences in the dark. I've not been busted yet so to say I do it well would be in order.
LOL! You can just slap one of these signs on the side of your truck, and you can park anywhere you want. Let your wife sleep. ;)
(https://sslearthquake.usgs.gov/template/images/usgs.jpg)
Quote from: buckluck_9pt on April 07, 2015, 09:35:29 AM
Quote from: Gooserbat on April 06, 2015, 11:20:50 PM
I usually have my wife drop me off but only on a dirt road and always at least a couple hours before daylight. I usually use a crossbow so I don't make noise. Once I kill a bird I call her on my cell and have her pick me up at one of three predetermined pick up spots. One word of caution is always watch for electric fences in the dark. I've not been busted yet so to say I do it well would be in order.
maybe i am reading your post wrong but it almost sounds like you are saying you knowingly trespass? am i reading your post wrong?
Only the good spots!
I have run into a few tresspassers and most are pretty embarassed as they just gave into temptation. A large tract of our family land joins public and and guys cheat over a bit to try and get birds they hear on our land. I am pretty understanding with these guys and they usually apologize and leave. I really don't get too nasty with them as heck I understand the temptation. Now if they are a half mile over the line running and gunning they get hammered. There's no warning just tickets.
My two worse offenders were a guy I knew was repeatedly coming in. I finally walked up on him one day and he turns and in a nasty tone said, you are on private land and we don't give permission". I asked him his name and he heehawwed around and then I asked him if he knew who owned it. He told me the landowners name correctly (my cousin) and stated he was family. I pulled out my license and showed him and asked for his. when he seen the last name he just sighed and said, "I'm in deep sh#T ain't I. He did show me his license and I told him a wildlife officer would be in touch. He then told me he was a surveyor and had worked the neighbors property and saw all the turkey sign. so the neighbor got a call too. I did admire is bluff, he said it worked more than it failed as he usually just ran into other tresspassers.
The other troublesome tresspasser was one of the Turkey Thugs (yes from the TV show) and he told me to back off a gobbling bird because they were filming. He was informed real quick that was not going to happen, because they were tresspassing. He actually had the gaul to ask if they could stay and hunt. He was a field rep with a major call company at the time and they got a call too. He no longer worked for them after that.
Quote from: Gooserbat on April 06, 2015, 11:20:50 PM
One word of caution is always watch for electric fences in the dark.
The inspiration for your Posted Land Special (PLS)? ;D
Taught my son not to stop for photos until you are on your side of the line.
(http://i465.photobucket.com/albums/rr11/BillCooksey/IMG_20140322_075013_891-1.jpg)
Kidding. Bird was shot on his grandfather's farm. Photo op was too good to pass.
A few years ago a fellow walked up on me and started chewing me out said no hunting was allowed on the land and I was in big trouble I told him I would show him my slip to hunt which you have to have here if he would show me his, said he did not have to have one because he was family, told him I was sure he was lying because I owned the land and if I ever caught him there again he would go to jail, don't know who he was but I've never seen him again.
Quote from: eggshell on April 07, 2015, 11:14:26 AM
I have run into a few tresspassers and most are pretty embarassed as they just gave into temptation. A large tract of our family land joins public and and guys cheat over a bit to try and get birds they hear on our land. I am pretty understanding with these guys and they usually apologize and leave. I really don't get too nasty with them as heck I understand the temptation. Now if they are a half mile over the line running and gunning they get hammered. There's no warning just tickets.
My two worse offenders were a guy I knew was repeatedly coming in. I finally walked up on him one day and he turns and in a nasty tone said, you are on private land and we don't give permission". I asked him his name and he heehawwed around and then I asked him if he knew who owned it. He told me the landowners name correctly (my cousin) and stated he was family. I pulled out my license and showed him and asked for his. when he seen the last name he just sighed and said, "I'm in deep sh#T ain't I. He did show me his license and I told him a wildlife officer would be in touch. He then told me he was a surveyor and had worked the neighbors property and saw all the turkey sign. so the neighbor got a call too. I did admire is bluff, he said it worked more than it failed as he usually just ran into other tresspassers.
The other troublesome tresspasser was one of the Turkey Thugs (yes from the TV show) and he told me to back off a gobbling bird because they were filming. He was informed real quick that was not going to happen, because they were tresspassing. He actually had the gaul to ask if they could stay and hunt. He was a field rep with a major call company at the time and they got a call too. He no longer worked for them after that.
Buddy of mine caught some big name guys trespassing. They have a show on the pursuit network and own farms in other big buck states. Anyhow he was hunting turkeys and the birds walked over a rise in the field then he heard a shot. Went over and they were standing over a flopping turkey. They attempted to get out of it by offering to let him come deer hunt their farm in Missouri and almost had it, until his father showed up. His dad is a retired state trooper and a bear of a man. He gets out of his truck no shirt on with bib overalls. Says "you boys hunting with *******?" They say yeah. He replies with "Then you are in a world of hurt". Had them arrested for trespassing. They used to send them their hunting videos every year. I am a landowner now, and kinda looking forward to dealing with a trespasser that tries to bluff me off my own land.
Quote from: Gooserbat on April 07, 2015, 10:02:40 AM
Quote from: buckluck_9pt on April 07, 2015, 09:35:29 AM
Quote from: Gooserbat on April 06, 2015, 11:20:50 PM
I usually have my wife drop me off but only on a dirt road and always at least a couple hours before daylight. I usually use a crossbow so I don't make noise. Once I kill a bird I call her on my cell and have her pick me up at one of three predetermined pick up spots. One word of caution is always watch for electric fences in the dark. I've not been busted yet so to say I do it well would be in order.
maybe i am reading your post wrong but it almost sounds like you are saying you knowingly trespass? am i reading your post wrong?
Only the good spots!
Hey! I remember that bird, it was a good spot!
Had a game warden that I know well that has a bit of a hard tail reputation come in to my office and tell me he needed to talk to me. I said okay and just stood there. He kinda toe kicked and said, "Umm, in private". He then asks me if I know where the XXXXXX family farm is. I say sure, I treat their dogs at their place and know them well- dad and both sons (bird dog kennel). He then shows me a picture that he tells me was taken from their farm and asks if I know who is is. I look at it and do a double take. I study it carefully, it is from the back and he is quartering away from the camera. I say "I do not know who it is, but Holy Shiiite, it looks like me, TO ME!". He laughs and I tell him I don't own any clothes like that. He then starts grinning and says they actually caught the dude, but him and the whole family all said "Dang, that looks like Larry" - knowing good and well it was not. The two brothers came up with the idea of messing with me and the GW was all for it and pulled it off real good.
Had a family (dirt poor folks ) fishing my pond at my house. Came home and they were there so I walked down to run them off- did not know who they were at the time. There is a pond just down the road that looks a lot like my pond and they were on the wrong place. I told them if they wanted to fish my pond, they could any time they wanted because I needed to put my dogs away or they might get bit. As I say this, the dogs in my truck start barking, almost on cue. I never tell them that my dogs would not bite a biscuit and if someone came to my house to steal, they would help them load the TV. They fished it a couple of times, but always called first.
Had a place years ago that was getting poached for deer. They would cut the fence and drive in. We mended the fence and buried a 2 x 4 with nails in it in sugar soft sand that you could walk over, but not drive. About a week later heard about a boy I went to school with being talked about ruining his front 2 rims on his truck from driving home with 2 flats. Went back and checked and the board was pulled up. I told him I knew what happened, but he just came back with some lame story. Never had another problem. Today, he would probably sue - and win.
Had a place years ago that was getting poached for deer. They would cut the fence and drive in. We mended the fence and buried a 2 x 4 with nails in it in sugar soft sand that you could walk over, but not drive. About a week later heard about a boy I went to school with being talked about ruining his front 2 rims on his truck from driving home with 2 flats. Went back and checked and the board was pulled up. I told him I knew what happened, but he just came back with some lame story. Never had another problem. Today, he would probably sue - and win.
Had the same thing happen to us.Some guys had permission to ride on our neighbors 400 + acres but thought they needed to cut the fence and ride on our 60. We placed some plywood with roofing nails thru it at the "gate" and just waited.We also informed the neighbor who went along with it.A few days later they all came back to the neighbors on foot mad as hornets because of what we did and asked our neighbor to do something about it.He did.He drove down there with his tractor and front end loader and proceeded to load all 4 three wheelers into the bucket and promptly dumped them in his barnlot near where they had parked and told them they had 2 hours to get them off his property or the law was going to be called.Havent had trouble since after word got around.this was in the early 90s but like you said probably get sued today and lose the farm.
ive been fortunate enough to get a good job and with the better income i decided to buy some land i bought 23 acres in macon tn anyway my 2nd week hunting this land i get a note on my truck window that said get the xxxx out have a problem call xxxxxxxxx well i have a short temper and this set me off i went to the man i bought the land from and talked to him and it turned out his neighbor was a game warden and he came over to listen to the phone call to this person when we called and he was told he was mistaken the guy got very hateful saying he had the land leased and there was no way i owned it well then the game warden took the phone announced who he was well the other guy just hung up of the warden then said hed be paying them a visit thats the last i heard from the supposed leaser well skip ahead 1 year i was standing behind my truck getting ready to head to my stand when some one taps me on the shoulder this guy informed me i was on his land i asked who he was he said dont worry about it just get out when i informed him of who i was and that i knew he didnt own the land because i did his tone changed quick apparently he owned a piece of land across the way from me he then had the gall to tell me to call before i used my entrance road to my land i said im not going to do that and that he needed to leave ive not heard from him since
Every time I go to my local WMA, there is always some other vehicles around. I am too busy trying to get on a bird to find out who they are and to run them off.
About 7 years ago I was set up about 80 yards from the back corner of the 400+ acre lease that my best friend and I held for 12 years at a tree farm where I worked in my spare time. I was talking with my buddy on the radio headset. He was set up about 450 yards away from me and we had a fired up gobbler between us who was ripping the woods up with gobbles. Since the bird was moving around and might possibly give either one of us an opportunity, we decided to hold our positions until the bird moved beyond us and keep each other informed where it was going. The gobbler was moving closer to him and he said he could hear a crow over the breeze that the gobbler was answering constantly. Then he said over the radio that it was a sick sounding crow, but the gobbler seemed to like answering it. His next transmission was asking me over the radio what I was doing sneaking around near him. I told him that I hadn't moved & it was somebody else. He switched his radio to where I could hear everything he said as he approached this trespasser.
It was a guy in his early 20s who said he must have gotten turned around and crossed onto our farm by mistake (impossible). He also said that he lived about 50 miles away and had been dropped off by his cousin, who he was visiting and whose gun & camo he borrowed. The young guy just started walking away from my buddy, who snagged the radio headset cord on a limb and jerked the radio from his pocket. The young guy saw his chance and ran back towards my direction as my buddy reconnected the radio. The gobbler had busted at the commotion and gone quiet, so I guessed which trail the trespasser might travel on & I hid beside it. Before long, here he comes trotting along the trail. I stopped him and he bowed up on me telling me that I was trespassing on his grandfather's land (another lie) and I'd better get the H#!! off it, NOW!. The land I leased had been in the same family since the late 1700s and I worked and hunted there long enough to know exactly where every inch of property boundary was.
I asked the trespasser his name (since this was supposedly his grandfather's land), but he wouldn't tell me. Right then, I switched the radio over to the property owner's frequency, who happened to be working in his shop on the farm that day. I unplugged the headset so the trespasser could hear the land owner's response when I started describing the trespasser. Before the land owner started talking, the trespasser took off running towards the nearest property lines, but also through some of the nastiest briar patches on the property. The land owner jumped in his truck and started riding the roads near the property. Pretty soon, the land owner saw the young guy come out of the woods and the land owner asked where he'd been hunting. The young guy lied to him as well, saying the he'd been in the creek bottom that ran to the river. The landowner said the guy's leafy suit was ripped to shreds, his face and arms were scratched and bleeding, and he was sweating like he'd been chased by a pack of hounds. We never saw him hunting anywhere near there again.
Jim
Jim
i had one hunt, me and a buddy in our group were archery hunting deer.. my buddy was in a stand about 150 yards away.. we hunt with walkie talkie's for safety reasons.. well, i am sitting in stand and i have about 7 big doe's come in and bed down about 55 yards from me.. so i watch them and play the waiting game.. then i notice the deer jerk their heads around, jump up and run off.. see , what i thought, was my buddy sneaking down the trail, bow in hand, trying to sneak up on the deer.. called my buddy on the talkie and chewed him out.. "i am still in my stand he says". oh shoot, got down and tried to catch up with the guy but he was gone.. pretty sure i know who it is, the guy that hunts the land around ours.. we have had issues with him and his group before... one of these days we'll catch him red handed, then watch out
As a habitual trespasser I take offense to this thread.
Trespassing can be a problem out here in the west, as well, but here is another perspective on it. We have just as many problems with landowners and outfitters trying to keep the public off of public lands. We have those folks who will post public lands as being private and confront hunters about hunting on public lands that they are trying to bluff people into thinking is privately owned.
Almost every public hunter I know has had one or more experiences with people claiming they are on private land when, in fact, they are on public. If you hunt out here in the west, you should always obtain land status maps of the area you are hunting to avoid being harassed by people doing this.
I've had a guy try to blame me for trespassing on his place on this forum! After a chat he apologized and also admitted to me that he was the person that I caught on my trail cam on our side of the property! Do people not realize that you can pull up a map of property online and it tells you the property owner? Your phone can also be used to gps your location to know that you are on the right place.
Quote from: GobbleNut on April 08, 2015, 05:52:50 PM
Trespassing can be a problem out here in the west, as well, but here is another perspective on it. We have just as many problems with landowners and outfitters trying to keep the public off of public lands. We have those folks who will post public lands as being private and confront hunters about hunting on public lands that they are trying to bluff people into thinking is privately owned.
Almost every public hunter I know has had one or more experiences with people claiming they are on private land when, in fact, they are on public. If you hunt out here in the west, you should always obtain land status maps of the area you are hunting to avoid being harassed by people doing this.
I agree, I've seen this too many times. Oh man, I get steamed about this. It is stealing, really. That and landlocked public lands. I had a really great quail hunting canyon in SW New Mexico get landlocked on me. Hard to get to, but really pristine and holding Gambels and Scalies. The former land owner allowed passage to gain access. The gate is padlocked now.
It happens in the East, too. I knew a crew in high school that actually went to the expense of buying POSTED signs to re-label a small bit of WMA.
BTW, one of my honey holes on public often has me killing one while sitting under a posted sign. They posted a little over onto the public side and arranged the signs to make it looked like their line cut off access. They even tried spreading corn along the line one year, I guess to scare people off. I had to have the warden go talk to them about bait and turkey season. At least they post it, though. Most lines lack the signs hereabouts. Strange to me, but I guess if locals hunt free on weekdays anyway, why bother? :TooFunny:
we have a problem of people tresspassing and stripping the bark off of elem trees,they suposedly sell it for a lot of money,anyway theres some land that this older vietnam vet owns,he only allows me and one other guy to hunt his property,and we kinda keep an eye on things as hes getting up in years.one day i go in there and there is trees stripped everywhere,i tell him and the other guy about it,this makes the landowner extremely mad,and hes the type that would actually shoot someone doing it cause he plain dont care.that week the old man loads up two differant ar's and rides from his house on a 4 wheeler,hides the 4 wheeler and sits up a little brushy blind and plans on getting them,there is railroad tracks that join the property,here comes two guys up the tracks with bags,one of them sees the trees and they walk up to them looking up at them,the old man stood up with the ar and tells them they have peeled there last tree and some more choice words of what he was getting ready to do to them,they start begging him,telling him they were mushroom hunting and didnt do it,they had just seen them and was wandering what had happened,when the man walked down to check to see if they were lying about having mushrooms,he ended up knowing them.the ole man told me that he had almost shot 2 inocent people,and he didnt go back to try to catch them,the next week me and the other guy that are allowed to hunt were down in there,we hear people talking,we sneak up and theres 2 guys peeling the trees,we step out with a gun pointed on them and asked them what they are doing,they didnt know what to say,we gave them the choice of we could call the law or the ole man,they chose the law.they were released a week later,these 2 had been in trouble for everything under the sun,they were ordered to pay the old man several thousand dollars in restatution set up in payments,he got maybe two small checks and they quit paying,they are now in jail for theft,and child support,drugs and a bunch of other things.if i was a tresspasser i would kinda be scared,you never know when you may be on someones land like this ole man,there isnt a doutb in my mind that if he had caught them in the act he would have killed both of them,they are plenty of people around here just like him.
Once you get past the first few signs it's good going, just you and the posted signs :funnyturkey:
Quote from: Gooserbat on April 06, 2015, 11:20:50 PM
I usually have my wife drop me off but only on a dirt road and always at least a couple hours before daylight. I usually use a crossbow so I don't make noise. Once I kill a bird I call her on my cell and have her pick me up at one of three predetermined pick up spots. One word of caution is always watch for electric fences in the dark. I've not been busted yet so to say I do it well would be in order.
There's really no point in waking her up early. Just park your truck and raise the hood. Leave an empty quart of oil under the hood and leave your flashers on. Your good to go where ever you want!!! lol
Quote from: Chilly on April 09, 2015, 09:41:04 AM
There's really no point in waking her up early. Just park your truck and raise the hood. Leave an empty quart of oil under the hood and leave your flashers on. Your good to go where ever you want!!! lol
And when you come back, your battery and all 4 wheels are gone.... :TooFunny:
Anybody remember the old TK and Mike hunting comedy videos. They carried around "G" stickers to put on the "No Hunting" signs to make them say "Go Hunting". Funny stuff back in the day!