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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Waterfowl & Other Winged Interests
Selling of duck blinds...
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<blockquote data-quote="Headhunter" data-source="post: 5044241" data-attributes="member: 652"><p>I kind of see your point, but if someone draws the permit in a completely fair draw, I don't care where or what the tag or draw is for, unless the law says it is non transferrable, I don't care what they do with it. There is a reason why we supposedly live in a free country, well we used to.</p><p></p><p>And it seems to me all they have to do is make duck blind draws non transferrable. People can still blind hop, but "ownership" belongs to who drew it and those that signed on. To me it would be hard to sell if you can't claim the blind as your own. </p><p></p><p> Actually how does that currently happen anyway? When a blind is sold, does the buyer become the "owner" as if he drew the blind? </p><p></p><p>Seems like that would be easy to enforce.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Headhunter, post: 5044241, member: 652"] I kind of see your point, but if someone draws the permit in a completely fair draw, I don't care where or what the tag or draw is for, unless the law says it is non transferrable, I don't care what they do with it. There is a reason why we supposedly live in a free country, well we used to. And it seems to me all they have to do is make duck blind draws non transferrable. People can still blind hop, but "ownership" belongs to who drew it and those that signed on. To me it would be hard to sell if you can't claim the blind as your own. Actually how does that currently happen anyway? When a blind is sold, does the buyer become the "owner" as if he drew the blind? Seems like that would be easy to enforce. [/QUOTE]
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Selling of duck blinds...
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