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Finding Hunting Land For Lease

If you’re starting a hunting club, you’re likely looking for hunting land for lease. Hunt clubs typically lease a parcel of land from a private land owner and sell memberships to hunters. The membership fees go toward the year’s lease payments and give the hunters the right to access the land for hunting, and sometimes for other activities.

Leasing hunting land is the most convenient way for hunters to create a club, unless a founding member already owns land outright that he can lease to the club. One of the best ways to find hunting land for lease is to start by simply scoping out the location of land you’d like to use for hunting. The land owner may not be planning to offer his land for lease; in fact, he may never have heard of hunt clubs or the practice of leasing land for such a purpose. So, once you’ve located land you’d like to use, simply approach the land owner with a plan for your hunt club and the land lease. Once he understands your plan, he may be quite happy to lease the land to you, though he had no such plan originally. For most land owners, using their hunting land for lease to a hunt club is a great way to make easy income on land that has been sitting unused.

Before you agree on hunting land for lease with the land owner, be certain that you know how much you can afford to pay for the lease. It’s wise to find your minimum number of hunting club members before locating the land. Sit down with the members and agree on a yearly membership fee that each member is willing to commit to for at least one year. By multiplying this amount by the number of members, you know how much you can pay a landowner for the year’s lease. If the amount you can pay isn’t enough to lease a good piece of property for a year, then you need more members or you need to agree on a higher membership fee from each participant before you secure a hunting land for lease.

Once you know what you can pay, you can approach a landowner with a proposal that includes the lease payment he’ll receive from your club. Most clubs charge each member their yearly fee on January 1, but may pay the land owner monthly. If new members join the club later in the year, after the amount needed to pay the landowner for the year has been collected, their fees are used to fund any repairs or maintenance that the club may have to take care of on the property, as described in the lease agreement.





 

Hunting Land Wi News

Seely on Science: Politics and wolves and a hunt in search of reason - Wisconsin State Journal


Seely on Science: Politics and wolves and a hunt in search of reason
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It was a foregone conclusion that the Natural Resources Board last week was going to approve beginning the process that will end, sometime in mid-October, with a rifle shot and a recreational hunter legally killing a wolf in Wisconsin for the first ...

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Season to hunt, trap wolves a step closer - Milwaukee Journal Sentinel


FOX6Now.com Milwaukee

Season to hunt, trap wolves a step closer
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
AP Madison - Wisconsin is one step closer to a hunting and trapping season for gray wolves. The Natural Resources Board on Wednesday approved a scope statement of rules for a public wolf harvest scheduled to begin in October.
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John Motoviloff: Walker's deer czar wrong on land access - La Crosse Tribune


John Motoviloff: Walker's deer czar wrong on land access
La Crosse Tribune
All Wisconsin hunters need to know this before June 5: Walker's right-hand man on deer policy wants to take away your right to hunt public lands. James Kroll, appointed by Walker as “white-tailed deer trustee” by executive order through last fall, ...

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Trail Camera's allowed on DNR land - WEAU-TV 13


Trail Camera's allowed on DNR land
WEAU-TV 13
The State Natural Resources Board has decided to let people leave trail cameras overnight on pubic land. The cameras are commonly used by hunters on private land for scouting wildlife but until now have been prohibited on Department of Natural ...

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Scott Walker Is Not Alone, Nor a Fan of Deer-Hunting - Esquire (blog)


Esquire (blog)

Scott Walker Is Not Alone, Nor a Fan of Deer-Hunting
Esquire (blog)
Walker's already better than halfway to selling off all of Wisconsin's public lands to private pillage, but Dr. James Kroll, the guy Walker has put in charge of deer hunting, takes things to a whole 'nother level. (First hint that Wisconsinites are ...

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