Make Text BiggerMake Text SmallerReset Text Size 

Polls

Do you prefer overnight events of single day events?
  
Would you like food provided at events (at additional cost)
  
Do you prefer events on holiday weekends?
  
Donate to RIOHVA via PayPal!

Newsflash

Membership Benefits!


Your membership to RIOHVA not only helps our effort to open legal riding in Rhode Island, but now you will be able to save some money at some of your favorite shops.  Some of our sponsors have agreed to provide our members with discounts towards purchases.

See HERE for more details.

Hunting with ATV's PDF Print E-mail

 

 

HOW TO USE THESE ARTICLES AND PHOTOS

First of all, thanks for choosing one of our articles. Feel free to use it on your website or print publication. If possible please pop me a quick e-mail to let me know you are using it.You can choose to leave it without a byline, but if you wish to add one please put;

By Steve Casper, NOHVCC Director of Communications

If any of the articles are too long, feel free to edit for length or send it back to me and I’ll chop it down to order. Also, if your publication is directed specifically towards ATVs or dirt bikes or any other type of OHV, feel free to switch those terms around as you see fit.

 
Many of the photos on this Media Page will work as great illustrations for these various articles so be sure to check them out. If you choose to use any of your own photos as well, we must insist that all riders pictured along with any of our articles are dressed in all the basic safety gear (helmet, goggles, gloves, long-sleeved shirt, long pants, and over-the-ankle boots) and are behaving in a safe and ethical manner. No photo credit for our photos is necessary, but if you wish to please make it;

Photo courtesy of the NOHVCC

* When showing any of the Adventure Trail poster panels, we must insist that the text underneath is always included. The message of the posters could be badly misinterpreted if they are used without the text.

Thanks in advance for your support of the NOHVCC and feel free to contact me at any time if you have any questions regarding these articles and photos and anything else I can help you with.

Sincerely,

Steve Casper

Office; (608)527-4152

Cell; (661)312-3643

NOHVCC Home office; (800) 348-6487

www.nohvcc.org

 

 

HUNTING WITH ATV’s

Along with the great opportunities come some new responsibilities

By Steve Casper, NOHVCC Director of Communications


Over the past couple of decades, ATVs have embedded themselves deep into the hunting culture. They’ve become such an important tool that many hunters now wonder how they ever got along without them. However, the use of ATVs by hunters has also sparked up controversy, and it usually is the result of some riders not following common-sense courtesy rules or fair-chase procedures.

It is of course easily possible to keep other hunters, trail users, and land owners all content with your choice to utilize ATVs in your next big hunt and at the same time maintaining a good image in the eyes of the general public who may raise a few eyebrows when the words “hunting” and “ATVs” are used in the same sentence.

To enjoy a better hunt for everyone, follow these simple rules:

 COURTESY

  • Respect other hunters; don’t drive across their line of sight
  • Keep your noise to a minimum. Keep your ATV properly tuned and muffled to reduce exhaust sounds and emissions. The sound of an ATV may chase game animals away from other hunters. This creates hard feelings among hunters who used stealth and stalking skills to get into a prime spot only to have their efforts spoiled by the sound of an ATV.
  • Operation of an ATV in areas where motorized vehicles are not allowed is illegal and irritates other hunters who have specifically selected their hunting area to avoid motorized vehicles.
  • To increase your chances of success and cause less disturbance to hunters around you, access your hunting area before shooting hours and then hunt on foot.
  • Retrieve harvested big game during the middle of the day (10 a.m. to 2 p.m.) to reduce conflicts with other hunters. Travel off trail only if travel regulations permit.
  • Limit ATV use in and around campgrounds. Be respectful of other campers’ desires for quiet and minimal disruption.
  • Slow down or stop your ATV when you approach others on the trail. When meeting equestrians, approach slowly, pull over and stop, turn off your engine, remove your helmet and ask how best to proceed. Keep scouting to a minimum. If necessary, scout for hunting access on legal trails but don’t penetrate hiding cover. It’s okay to use an ATV for access but “walk when you stalk”.
  • When overtaking others, pass in a safe and courteous manner.

ETHICS

  • Increasing numbers of hunters are actually hunting from their ATVs rather than on foot. This behavior raises concerns of “fair chase” and can reflect poorly on hunting and hunters. While hunting from an ATV is legal and appropriate in some states for certain people with disabilities, able-bodied hunters should “walk when they stalk” to uphold the “fair chase” ethic.

LAWS

  • Be legal and safe. Don’t shoot from an ATV. Instead, use ATVs to access hunting areas or, where permitted, pack out your kill. 
  • Never chase wildlife with your ATV.  It’s illegal and irresponsible. 
  • Know the vehicle-use regulations for the area you are hunting. Educate yourself by obtaining agency travel maps to identify and learn legal routes. Contact the local BLM Field Office, Forest Service Ranger District or State Land Management organization for travel management information before you go. Respect road and area closures. 
  • Stay on existing roads or trails. Cross-country travel on ATVs can create a network of new tracks or trails that cause soil erosion and damage to fish and wildlife habitats. Cross-country travel can also spread invasive species, which can ruin habitat. Do not contribute to resource damage and habitat destruction by creating new tracks for others to follow. When you drive off a road, you leave a track that others will follow and you may be creating resource damage. 

ENVIRONMENTAL AWARENESS

  • User-created trails are often poorly located within riparian zones or on steep slopes creating vegetation and soil impacts. Don’t make the problem worse by continuing to use these routes. 
  • Wheel tracks in wet meadows are like footprints in cement – they often don’t heal. Avoid the use of ATVs in wet areas or during wet conditions. Even though the lighter weight and low-pressure tires reduce impacts, ATVs can still do serious damage to wet areas. 
  • Be prepared to backpack or horse pack game out of areas that do not have existing roads or trails or allow travel off existing roads and trails for game retrieval.
  • Don’t widen single-track trails by forcing your ATV down the trail.
  • Cross streams only at designated trail crossings. Erosion from stream banks and creek crossings can harm survival of native fish. 

 
The National Off-Highway Vehicle Conservation Council (www.nohvcc.org) and Discover Today’s ATV (www.atvinfo.org) have taken the lead in the education of hunters who use ATVs and have several new programs that are currently in the works.