Miss River Huntin
Miss River Huntin
When the Louisiana season closes on Jan. 2, will it be illegal to hunt on that side of the river. Would a boat blind (floating boat) be legal or all hunting activities illegal when you cross the imaginary state line?
Laws vary by state. But as a general rule, if you can navigate the water (from a traditional normal water level) and you stay in your boat at all times, you probably are legal. If you get out to wade or retrieve a bird, you could be violating the law. Also, I would assume you are launching from the MS side.
I would check with local game and fish on both sides to confirm this.
I would check with local game and fish on both sides to confirm this.
-
- Veteran
- Posts: 269
- Joined: Wed Oct 26, 2005 7:21 pm
yes....on some lakes with reciprocal agreements you can hunt either season with your residence license/stamps, but you have to hunt in the area designated as that state where the season is open....example, I can hunt Eagle or Chotard in Louisiana with a Ms license while Louisiana is open....I can't hunt the Ms or Louisiana side that would be closed at any time with either license....
ST.
ST.
Millenium Mallard
Magic Mallard wrote:yes....on some lakes with reciprocal agreements you can hunt either season with your residence license/stamps, but you have to hunt in the area designated as that state where the season is open....example, I can hunt Eagle or Chotard in Louisiana with a Ms license while Louisiana is open....I can't hunt the Ms or Louisiana side that would be closed at any time with either license....
ST.
This is correct.
Do you eat duck meat?
But as a general rule, if you can navigate the water (from a traditional normal water level) and you stay in your boat at all times, you probably are legal
I believe thats wrong. You can launch in MS, then run WAY up the White River from where it dumps into the Mississippi river...although you've never set foot out of your boat, you are in Arkansas plain and simple.
If the season is CLOSED in that state, in this case he's asking about Louisiana, then it's closed in that state no matter if you launched your boat in Alaska and came all the way around South America and up the Mississippi river, or launched on the Mississippi side and ran just across the river. Once you get inside the boundaries of that state, the season is CLOSED. The imaginary "line" if you will is going to be somewhere out in the middle of the river where you're not going to be hunting anyway. There's no way you'll convince a judge you "thought" you were in Mississippi when you're hunting on the west bank of the Mississippi river which is where I would venture to say most of the Louisiana property along the Mississippi river is located.
It's better to have it and not need it, than need it and not have it.
- Kenny Boone
- Veteran
- Posts: 290
- Joined: Tue Nov 12, 2002 8:26 pm
- Location: Vicksburg
I think your right dutch dog, if the season is closed in that state you can not hunt in that state's water. If say Mississippi season is closed and Louisiana is open I have hunted Louisiana water by launching my boat in Mississippi water and been checked by the feds and was legal with a Louisiana state stamp. Just my 2 cents worth, but I would not even get close to the state's water that is closed.
the Louisiana season isn't closed on Jan. 2. It's closed now (from Dec. 2) until Dec. 15, then it's open until Jan 27.
http://www.wlf.state.la.us/hunting/seasons/migratoryandwaterfowl
http://www.wlf.state.la.us/hunting/seasons/migratoryandwaterfowl
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Ahrefs [Bot] and 17 guests