USFS and BLM Land Camping Issues

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josephusminimus

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A few posters here seem to have an interest in camping on raw BLM and USFS land.&nbsp; Some have expressed the view that the duration of stays can be stretched beyond the regulatory limit if the person doing the camping doesn't think he's been noticed.<br /><br />This might be true in some circumstances.&nbsp; The problem is that the camper doesn't know whether he's been noticed, or hasn't.&nbsp; After boondocking a lot of years on public lands I'm fairly convinced there's not a piece of land anywhere in the US someone isn't keeping an eye on, feeling some level of responsibility of ownership for.<br /><br />On BLM and USFS lands the official overseers are spread thinly, but the folks holding the grazing leases, mineral claims, other interests, are only a phone call away from the BLM regional offices, for instance.&nbsp; And those folks have a keen sense of 'ownership'.&nbsp; Frequently they'll attempt to bluff the camper into believing they actually own the land you're camped on, or that you trespassed on their private land getting to your campsite.<br /><br />Using a GPS to precisely locate yourself and having a paper BLM 60 minute surface rights map of the area can save a lot of argument, both laid out on the hood of your vehicle, the GPS indicating the longitude and latitude, the map indicating who has surface rights to the spot.<br /><br />State lands are also sometimes a potential, but they have their own sets of rules, permits, etc.<br /><br />I'm starting this thread because I believe this and a number of other issues, tricks of the trade, experiences with USFS and BLM personnel, grazing lease holders, etc, on public lands might prove helpful to the relatively few members here likely to actually get out there and try it.
 
Paper maps Jack&nbsp; refers to&nbsp;may be obtained at the BLM amd NFS officers. The worker/officers have always been helpful to me.&nbsp; I don't rmember if thery were free or not, it has been to many years since my travels.
 
dragonflyinthesky said:
Paper maps Jack&nbsp; refers to&nbsp;may be obtained at the BLM amd NFS officers. The worker/officers have always been helpful to me.&nbsp; I don't rmember if thery were free or not, it has been to many years since my travels.
Thanks Diane.<br /><br />Turns out they've got them digitized, which is new to me. Paper maps for USFS and BLM from the Public Land Information Center:&nbsp; <a href="http://plicmapcenter.org/">http://plicmapcenter.org/</a><br /><br /><br />Digital mining claim density map for Federal lands  https://geo-nsdi.er.usgs.gov/
 
Great info Joseph Thanks! Here in AZ the USFS will be glad to give you there MVUM maps (Motor&nbsp;Vehicle Usage Map) that show you exactly where you can and cannot camp. Don't know if all forests have these, but im sure they will soon enough&nbsp;<img src="/images/boards/smilies/frown.gif" alt="" align="absmiddle" border="0" />
 
Has anybody here stayed on BLM land around Lake Havasu?
 
Just spent 5 months on USFS land near Shaver lake CA... For the serious boon-docker this is an easy task... Same with BLM Land, just dont be part of the herd is all I can stay...
 
...And those folks have a keen sense of 'ownership'. Frequently they'll attempt to bluff the camper into believing they actually own the land you're camped on, or that you trespassed on their private land getting to your campsite.<br />
<br /><br />You make an interesting point.&nbsp; I recall that rvsue (<a href="http://rvsueandcrew.com/">http://rvsueandcrew.com/</a>)&nbsp;was camping somewhere this summer (Montana?).&nbsp; She thought she was on public land but someone told her she was on private property and basically "chased" her off.&nbsp; Kind of makes me wonder now.
 
Good point, know your rights as you know your location....
 
There's something about a family having a grazing lease on several sections of multi-use government land for a few generations tends to lend itself to the attitude.&nbsp; Usually more in the off the beaten track areas.&nbsp; Frequently the ranches have only a few hundred acres [or less]&nbsp;of deeded land, and several thousand acres of public land leased for grazing.&nbsp; The leases are usually a few cents per acre, the land frequently not suited for a lot of cattle.&nbsp; There's been a lot of acrimony and lawsuits during the past couple of decades over grazing lease rights and responsibilities, along with density of grazing requirements imposed by BLM and USFS.<br /><br />When a guy in a cowboy suit or a pair of bib overalls drives up on a four-wheeler and begins the conversation with something in-your-face you never know what you're dealing with, which side of the bed he got up on.&nbsp; Being certain of your precise location is a better-than-average starting place.<br /><br />On the other hand, when a guy in uniform toting a sidearm, wearing a pair of mirror sunglasses and a USFS patch does the same thing, best to just begin decamping.&nbsp; You're on the radar.<br /><br /><br /><br />
 
If you have mining rights to blm, can you still make people get off the land?&nbsp; I thought they just couldn't do whatever you have the rights for.<br /><br />Even if you 'win' the argument with the guy, hes gonna hassle you from then on.&nbsp; I would just move anyway i think, unless they really ticked me off.<br /><br /><br /><br />
 
You only have rights to the minerals in or on the ground,not the whole area.It is perfectly legal for someone to camp on or walk through your claim.
 
DSPS91- I camped one night north of lake havasu. Don't remember how far from town, I also remember someone saying there was camping near the airport. Where I camped it was beautiful but noisy, obvious a favorite spot for 4 wheeling.

The thing I remember most was the total lack of phone service there. Could not get one bar of service with Verizon. That has never happened to me in civilization before. Swankie had the same problem. That was the year we were loosely caravaning from the Q to Pahrump. I think we each ended up taking different routes. Cheri took the L-O-N-G way around instead of turning left at Vegas. We almost had to send a posse out for her! This was before she had Tony the Tiger to navigate for her :)
 
dsps91 said:
Has anybody here stayed on BLM land around Lake Havasu?
<br /><br />Yep Just North of Lake Havasu after the Airport heading north its on your right craggy wash.
 
DazarGaidin said:
If you have mining rights to blm, can you still make people get off the land?&nbsp; I thought they just couldn't do whatever you have the rights for.<br /><br />Even if you 'win' the argument with the guy, hes gonna hassle you from then on.&nbsp; I would just move anyway i think, unless they really ticked me off.<br /><br />
<br /><br />It's multi-use land, generally.&nbsp; Not so much a matter of whether you can run someone off, as of someone running you off.&nbsp; A mineral claim only means you have the right to get minerals off the claim and do the various things allowed by law there, and allowed by USFS and BLM regulations.&nbsp; Same as a grazing lease only grants the lease-holder to graze cows there, and whatever goes with that.&nbsp; Sometimes the lease-holder's 'developed' the stream, etc, which might imply certain water rights.<br /><br />I suppose you do have the right on a mineral claim to get uppidy if someone starts digging around on your claim looking for minerals.&nbsp; I've never known anyone to do it, but I've heard stories of it happening.<br /><br />
 
I think if I'm out boondocking, I pretty much want to be left alone. &nbsp;I also know that I don't want any range cows messing with me, I've had enough of their destruction at my homestead. &nbsp;So if someone wants me off their grazing lease, I think I just move somewhere I can enjoy the whole experience.
 
A common aspiration, wanting to be left alone.&nbsp; I've never been troubled by range cows on public land, but if I were I'd probably run them off or leave.&nbsp; Range cows on public land tend to be somewhat wild, not attracted to campers in the places I've camped.<br /><br />A person ought to do whatever he/she thinks is best, I reckons, under all circumstances including this one.
 
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