Yes it is, If you own a farm with a required amount of acres and it's the only source of income meaning you can't work any where else. The farm has to be working it can't be in the conservation. Also you can hunt a neighboring property if you have permission from that land owner. But if you own 2 properties and they are say 1 mi apart you can't hunt on both only the property where you live
No. Even if you have a have a hunting license, a deer tag and haven't hit your limit, roadkill deer is illegal. Dead deer on the road, call animal services. On your property, bury it.
In Arkansas, it is not legal to use electronic calls to lure deer for the purpose of hunting. Electronic calls are legal in Arkansas only for hunting coyotes. (See: www.agfc.com )
google New Jersey DNR hunting regulations
yes its just like hunting fox and deer
Conservation officers can probably confiscate any deer taken illegally. Since there is no mention of whether the hunter had a tag (license) for a deer for that region or whether it was the appropriate sexor, if a buck, whether the animal had the minimum required rack "points". Even if the animal was legal in all respects it could have been confiscated because of a direct complaint from the property owner, especially if the hunter was on the property without permission when the deer as harvested.If the deer was shot in a legal hunting area and ran onto private property, the hunter is supposed to ask the landowner for permission to remove the deer, before crossing the fence onto private property. (A hunter may cross a fence to insure that the deer is dead so that it doesn't suffer whilethe shooter gets permission to remove it from private land.)Hunters must be aware that any time they cross a fence, they may be exiting a legal hunting areaand venturing onto private property.Fences that have been posted "No Trespassing" make it clear that the fence shouldn't be crossed.If the fence is unposted the hunter could argue that s/he was unaware that they were leaving the legal hunting area.
As long as you don't violate any federal laws or the hunting regulations for your area.
John deer
HB 560 filed 1/25/05 and HB 185 filed 12/2/04 both tried to limit locations of deer blinds next to property lines. Both failed. As long as deer hunting property is being sold in smaller and smaller packages and is advertised as deer hunting property, the chances of passing are slim. Discharging a firearm across property lines is ; however, illegal.
Yes, it is legal. Texas does not permit the use of RIMFIRE guns for deer hunting, but any centerfire is legal. Wh ile it is legal, I personally do not recommend it. Yes, the .223 can kill a deer. It will also wound a lot of deer. It is simply too small to insure a clean kill.
No. Semiautomatic .22 rimfire rifles may be used for small game, but no semi rifles for deer. See link to Vermont hunting regs, and scroll down.
You can get the same amount of thrill by hunting deer or wild birds. Those are both still legal in the UK. In fact, it might be fun to learn a different style of hunting.
Deer hunting was banned in 2004 because the deer were going to be extinct.