Re: Hunters
Posted: Mon Oct 22, 2007 4:35 pm
here is an older shooting zone map that I've had for some time. The boundary's may have changed
Michael
Michael
I believe this is the case for all of Los Angeles County. I do all my informal range shooting in the desert in San Bernardino County.Doug Forbes wrote:Suffice it to say that target shooting is in fact illegal in our local National Forests except in established formal firing ranges.
Trash is always a problem at informal ranges. I don't know why. Sometime this winter I would like to bring a trailer and a couple of buddies to my Secret Spot in the desert to clean it up before it, too, gets closed down.the extreme trash problem and the fact that many people were engaging in dangerous and sustained rapid fire marathons with military weapons such as Ak's, SKS's, M1's, etc. using full metal jacket rounds
I don't wish to step on any toes here, but this can be a problem. My father, who was a cop at the time and so had people shooting at him for a living, gave up deer hunting before I was born because he felt it was unsafe (this was in NorCal around 1960). But years later as a Wilderness Volunteer in San Gorgonio, patrolling on opening weekend, I realized most of the hunters you encountered in the high country were sober and safe, compared to those who were hunting down in the areas easily accessible by car. Most that I spoke with were up on the high trails precisely to get away from the lower elevation hunters.I am an avid hunter (mostly small game/game birds) and fisherman (when I cut a slice of time from my mountaineering & hiking schedule), but I must say that I have at times felt uncomfortable (fear really) when I find myself in close proximity to some of the deer hunters I run into out in the San Gabriels.