Teach me public access

Nov 7, 2012
105
0
Iowa
I will hopefully be a first time western hunter in 2013. I have 1 PP for antelope and will be trying to harvest a decent buck. I have recently purchased both a Delorme Gazetteer and a HuntingGPSMaps SD card for my Garmin. I am looking to hunt DIY on public land to avoid any extra trespass fees. I also don't want to be trespassing illegally because I don't know how the roads work in Wyoming. For discussion purposes only, I will use Unit 16 as an example for this post.

UNIT 16.jpg

This picture shows a portion of the southern part of unit 16. North of I-90 and west of the Powder river.
Are the maroon roads public roads or private, or does it depend? Are these two tracks or hard surface roads?

According to the gazetteer, there is an exit to Dry Creek Rd at exit 82. Proceeding west or east will eventually hook up with BLM land. Is it legal to cross the private land on these roads without permission?

Also, the blue and purple routes show roads to access even more BLM land, but once again, these are crossing private land. Is it legal to cross these private parcels without permission?

Also, referring to the gazetteer again, some roads are named roads [Dry Creek Road], some are numbered roads [204, 195 etc] and some roads in other units are FS numbered roads. Are all of these considered public roads? Is there a rule of thumb for whats public and whats private?
 

Eberle

Veteran member
Oct 2, 2012
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Sasakwa, Oklahoma
Solid roads should be improved roads that are typically public roads. A paved or gravel road that is maintained by the State or County will be public. FS, I'm assuming is "Forest Service" road will be public. Trespassing typically occurs when people are driving on two-track roads. A two-track road on a map will look like this = = = = = = = . So if you are on a two-track driving on BLM (yellow on the map) and it crosses private land (white on the map), you will be tresspasing if you continue to drive.
 
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canvsbk

Active Member
Apr 8, 2012
176
0
Michigan
My experience with this very confusing issue is that it's not really as tough as you initially think. The roads on the BLM maps that have numbers in little rectangles are county. Or that's how it seems when you're there. Travel on them as you would a US highway. The zinger for us was the road would have a number on the BLM map and a name on the DeLorme map and be marked totally different on site. The GPS map chip was of great help too. The gas and oil boys have their roads marked pretty well as to whether you're welcome to drive there or not.
 

SouthernWyo

Member
Mar 11, 2011
62
1
The only legal public access roads across private lands are those with an easement or public right of way of some sort that are maintained by a government entity - BLM, USFS, state or county. Any other roads, including oil and gas roads, across or on private are NOT public access.
 
Nov 7, 2012
105
0
Iowa
The only legal public access roads across private lands are those with an easement or public right of way of some sort that are maintained by a government entity - BLM, USFS, state or county. Any other roads, including oil and gas roads, across or on private are NOT public access.
This is great information folks, exactly the discussion I was hoping to get started.
State are usually hwys and interstates.
So county roads are numbers with boxes.
BLM are usually marked with a 4 digit number, like BLM 2305.
FS are marked FR or FT and then a number.

My concern is with a lot of these named roads. Using my Unit 16 example, Dry Creek Rd where it exits the interstate is also marked 204A boxed on the Delorme. Where i have outlined the blue and purple routes going north into BLM and crossing private parcels, the Delorme then shows ==== styled roads while the GPS are solid red lines. Am I to assume these are now 'two tracks'? From how I interpret SothernWyo members post, I can not use these roads because they cross private patches.

How else are we to access the BLM land then? I must say this is extremely frustrating. Large tracts of public land with no good way to get there. For many of us out of stater's, we don't have time to come to Wyoming and scout out places, and more often than not, we cant afford to come to Wyoming every year to become familiar with an area. We are dependent on maps, and that's why I am trying to understand how to decipher them and what the laws are.
 

ssliger

Very Active Member
Mar 9, 2011
900
0
Laramie WY
How else are we to access the BLM land then? I must say this is extremely frustrating. Large tracts of public land with no good way to get there. For many of us out of stater's, we don't have time to come to Wyoming and scout out places, and more often than not, we cant afford to come to Wyoming every year to become familiar with an area. We are dependent on maps, and that's why I am trying to understand how to decipher them and what the laws are.
This is what we call land locked. With your example,the only way to access all the BLM land in your map is by using your own two feet.
 

WapitiBob

Veteran member
Mar 1, 2011
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Bend, Orygun
You need to call the BLM district office directly to confirm whether that road has an easement for public access. Generally, BLM maps with BLM numbered roads have easements and are good for public travel whether they cross pvt or not. BLM can tell you in 60 seconds.
 

buckbull

Veteran member
Jun 20, 2011
2,167
1,354
I believe the sportsman act of 2012 was going to address a lot of land locked land and create easements. It is very unfortunate that it did not pass.

update: The act was going to open up 32 million land locked acres
 

ssliger

Very Active Member
Mar 9, 2011
900
0
Laramie WY
You definitely got to be careful. Some of the landlocked stuff you are just SOL on. If the road to it is not public, you can't just walk across the private land to get there either.
Sorry, I should have clarified myself. What I meant was you would have to walk around the private property, not cross it.
 

shootbrownelk

Veteran member
Apr 11, 2011
1,535
196
Wyoming
I believe the sportsman act of 2012 was going to address a lot of land locked land and create easements. It is very unfortunate that it did not pass.

update: The act was going to open up 32 million land locked acres
The bill didn't pass because the ranching/outfitting industry dominates the Wyoming legislature. The landlocked public land is their personal playground if they have a grazing lease. they have access 24/7/365 but we sportsmen don't.
 

Colorado Cowboy

Super Moderator
Jun 8, 2011
8,328
4,716
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Dolores, Colorado
One of the ranches I hunt and an adjoining ranch have 3 school (state) sections totally surrounded and locked up. Each one is 640 acres (1 sq mile)and the one I don't hunt has an outfitter and yep....its their private playground! Its kinda funny because I have hunted the adjoining ranch for years and because one side of 1 of the state parcel borders the ranch. The other ranch has it fenced and posted. I just climb the fence and go hunting. The outfitter stopped me one year and was really ticked off because I had killed a really nice buck deer that he wanted for a client. When he saw that the adjoining ranch owner had signed my license and I told him it was state land that I had legal access to, he stomped off swearing ti himself.

Moral of the story is you have to know what you can & can't do.
 

Umpqua Hunter

Veteran member
May 26, 2011
3,576
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North Umpqua, Oregon
I think a great business for someone in SE Wyoming would be a helicopter drop service, to drop you into landlocked BLM. I know I would easily pay $500/person round trip for say 2 to 3 guys, just so they came back to pick us back up...lol.
 

shootbrownelk

Veteran member
Apr 11, 2011
1,535
196
Wyoming
I think a great business for someone in SE Wyoming would be a helicopter drop service, to drop you into landlocked BLM. I know I would easily pay $500/person round trip for say 2 to 3 guys, just so they came back to pick us back up...lol.
Hunter, someone did just that some years ago and a fistfight ensued. Not sure of the outcome, but the rancher should have been charged. The guy was clearly legal.
 

shootbrownelk

Veteran member
Apr 11, 2011
1,535
196
Wyoming
One of the ranches I hunt and an adjoining ranch have 3 school (state) sections totally surrounded and locked up. Each one is 640 acres (1 sq mile)and the one I don't hunt has an outfitter and yep....its their private playground! Its kinda funny because I have hunted the adjoining ranch for years and because one side of 1 of the state parcel borders the ranch. The other ranch has it fenced and posted. I just climb the fence and go hunting. The outfitter stopped me one year and was really ticked off because I had killed a really nice buck deer that he wanted for a client. When he saw that the adjoining ranch owner had signed my license and I told him it was state land that I had legal access to, he stomped off swearing ti himself.

Moral of the story is you have to know what you can & can't do.
Cowboy, we have a certain ranch around these parts that is leased by an outfitter and has "No Trespassing" signs posted on a fence that has 3 MILES of BLM ground on the other side. The outfitter & ranch hands try to blow smoke about calling the sheriff, but usually shut up when they see the GPS...but sometimes not. And it's always a hassle, even if you're right.
 

Fink

Veteran member
Apr 7, 2011
1,961
204
West Side, MoMo
I think a great business for someone in SE Wyoming would be a helicopter drop service, to drop you into landlocked BLM. I know I would easily pay $500/person round trip for say 2 to 3 guys, just so they came back to pick us back up...lol.
My cousin flies airplanes, it doesn't take much of a flat spot to land a Cessna, right? Maybe I'll request that he learns to fly a choppa.
 

Colorado Cowboy

Super Moderator
Jun 8, 2011
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Dolores, Colorado
Cowboy, we have a certain ranch around these parts that is leased by an outfitter and has "No Trespassing" signs posted on a fence that has 3 MILES of BLM ground on the other side. The outfitter & ranch hands try to blow smoke about calling the sheriff, but usually shut up when they see the GPS...but sometimes not. And it's always a hassle, even if you're right.
I understand what you are saying totally. I guess if I was in that situation, I would plan ahead and go talk to the county sheriff and get his take on the situation before you climb the fence. Depends on how determined you are to hunt that particular spot.
 

trkytrack2

Active Member
Sep 13, 2011
270
0
Sterling, Colorado
Welcome to the west.....hundred of thousands of acres of public land surrounded by private property and there is no way to access it unless you fork over the big bucks to the ranchers or outfitters. As long as these hoodlums are as powerful as they are in the legislature in their states, it will never change.
 

HiMtnHnter

Active Member
Sep 28, 2012
445
4
Wyoming
The GPS's with the chips are a step in the right direction. However, I have been involved in one case where the GPS was flat wrong and the ranch manager was right. It just depends on what map the chip-maker looks at I guess . . . If we are going to pay that kind of money for a gps and chip, you would think we'd have accuracy on our side . . .

The chopper and plane idea put a new spin on "gas money"!
 

BKC

Very Active Member
Feb 15, 2012
835
163
The high plains of Colorado
I was on a public road that went thru private property looking for access to a section of state land and found the road just went by the corner of this piece of land. I had my truck parked on the road and was standing in the ditch ( 10' from my truck ) leaning on the corner post, which was posted state land. The wire gate at the corner was permanently wired shut and had a length of chain and a lock on it. As I was scratching my head trying to figure out the lay of the land, the land owner told me I was on private property and I said how is that so. He said the fence was his and the ditch was his and the only public land was the gravel road and the state land. I could have tuned my truck perpendicular to the road and backed up to the edge of the road, droped my tailgate and jumped onto the state land over the fence. I don't know how I could have gotten out of there or what I would have done with my truck but It wasn't worth it for 1 section. Now if it would have freed up a ton of land, I would have figured something out. This is a classic example of how public land is tied up, basically our tax dollars NOT at work.