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When I'm out hunting or anything else I get agoraphobia if I can't find a forest fairly soon. I have always lived in forested country and am used to it. There's acrophobia, arachnophobia (the worst). Most are mild except for maybe arachnophobia, the only one remotely troubling. I hate cities, can't live in an apartment (I'm sure) and don't like to be seen a lot, especially being "eyeballed" by someone. When I was a little younger and very active most of these were very mild. It all has to do with anxiety level. I don't see how a lot of folks can stand to live in an area where all your see are miles and miles of more miles and miles.
 
I have a Himiway Cruiser. So far so good. Love it!

Need to have warranty work on it then if that goes well I give up it 6 outta 5 stars.

If anyone interested I may get a deal for a buddy or you and I both get an assesory or some premium.
 
They have their use but if one flew over me while I was out hunting with my shotgun I'd shoot the thing down.
See ya in court. Its everybodys forest. When the splatter is blowing our way once the S H The Fan you shoot yer drones and I will take pot shots at the ATV "racers" that make so much dust in deer season they can see t from the ISS

(I wouldn't wanna shoot my sons down, he is real mean bout his stuff and he LOVES to take the drone out for nature photos. Don't get caught
 
In AZ one cannot hunt the same day as flying in any aircraft (including hang gliders and the sort) OR USING A DRONE. Also have outlawed trail cameras. BUT....you can still draw a bull elk tag and pursue same with your Crocket .32 round ball rifle.

As part of my job I use drones. Had to locate a dead cow near a ranch and saved me ALOT of walking through snake country. And per the above love of E-Bike hunting here is my son on his e-bike in unit 8 returning to camp (ya he uses an unmentionable :(
His drone will follow him. He's a pro compared to me!!
There’s Mt. Humphries off in the distance!
 
When I'm out hunting or anything else I get agoraphobia if I can't find a forest fairly soon. I have always lived in forested country and am used to it. There's acrophobia, arachnophobia (the worst). Most are mild except for maybe arachnophobia, the only one remotely troubling. I hate cities, can't live in an apartment (I'm sure) and don't like to be seen a lot, especially being "eyeballed" by someone. When I was a little younger and very active most of these were very mild. It all has to do with anxiety level. I don't see how a lot of folks can stand to live in an area where all your see are miles and miles of more miles and miles.
yup, lived in N. Scottsdale, AZ, a very nice $$$ area for 12/13 yrs. You could look out over the desert and see for 100 miles in any direction. You could have any color you wanted as long as it was a shade of brown! The desert or even the plains are not for everyone! Wide open spaces is exactly that, wide open with NOTHING in in but scrubby desert bush. Most of the desert looked like a "vacant lot " in some major city! I need trees too. Only a few places in AZ have them. Most you go North, keep going until you run into them around Prescot them further up to Flagstaff.
 
And that would be Federal Court to boot, as it is a federal offense. And now that you have told the world there is no claiming mistaken identity. You best rethink that decision.
I agree, why not just wave and smile!! How boring is that. Once teh drone operator knows you know, the drone will move on.
 
In AZ one cannot hunt the same day as flying in any aircraft (including hang gliders and the sort) OR USING A DRONE. Also have outlawed trail cameras. BUT....you can still draw a bull elk tag and pursue same with your Crocket .32 round ball rifle.

As part of my job I use drones. Had to locate a dead cow near a ranch and saved me ALOT of walking through snake country. And per the above love of E-Bike hunting here is my son on his e-bike in unit 8 returning to camp (ya he uses an unmentionable :(
His drone will follow him. He's a pro compared to me!!
How in the world would a game warden know if you'd been in [any] aircraft the same day as your hunt?
 
How in the world would a game warden know if you'd been in [any] aircraft the same day as your hunt?
Same rule in Idaho. Mostly used for when folks fly into the back country wilderness airports for hunting. But we have had folks with drones surveying farm fields for game then if they spot something wait at the fence lines on public land for the game to come out. Unethical.

The question is not if the game wardens know, really it is if you know and fail to follow the rules.

Ethics: Doing the right thing even if nobody knows.
 
Same rule in Idaho. Mostly used for when folks fly into the back country wilderness airports for hunting. But we have had folks with drones surveying farm fields for game then if they spot something wait at the fence lines on public land for the game to come out. Unethical.

The question is not if the game wardens know, really it is if you know and fail to follow the rules.

Ethics: Doing the right thing even if nobody knows.
The word [any] is the key word. A person could have flown commercial that day then caught a bush flight to their dream destination. None of that qualifies as aerial scouting. Just saying. But being truck driver for the last 35 years I'm well aware of cops making a mountain out of a mole hill or flat inventing stuff.
 
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