question about high fence property
#1
Typical Buck
Thread Starter
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location:
Posts: 641
question about high fence property
If you purchase a high fence property, can you tear down the fence and make it free range, or are there laws against that because you will be releasing artificially breed deer?
#3
Giant Nontypical
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 9,175
RE: question about high fence property
I'd think it's your property and you can darn well do anything you like with the fence, as long as the land doesn't contain non-native species. But I guess it depends on where you live. Some places don't go in much for landowner rights, I hear, so you should probably do what Arrowmaster suggests.
#5
RE: question about high fence property
People don't buy high fenced property to tear down the fence, too much money is invested in the fencing and the animals contained therein to release them into the wild. It would be much more cost effective to purchase a parcel that does not have afence around it. Just one man's opinion.
#7
Fork Horn
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Palmyra PA USA
Posts: 117
RE: question about high fence property
Tearing down the fence in itself won't raise any issue. But if the property was used specifically for breeding and raising animals, someone could have heartburn over the release of those animals, even whitetails. Check with you game commission, DCNR, or whoever your regulating agency is. In any case, God Bless you for the thought!
#8
RE: question about high fence property
If the animals in your pen are wild (lets say 5000 acres of high fence whitetail) i doubt that tearing down the fence would be a problem. BUT... CALL YOUR LOCAL DNR AND MAKE SURE. THIS WAY YOU CANT SUE ME FOR TELLING YOU WRONG
#9
RE: question about high fence property
My guess is that you would not be able to tear the fence down until the pen raised deer are all gone. When the fence is put up, all native animals have to be driven out. The pen raised deer live in their own little ecosystem where there is a great potential for disease that the wild deer do not have to contend with. Also, most high fence operations have extensive feeding operations, so the deer in the fence are not goign to be well adjusted to natural browse. Definitely check with your local DNR on this one.