josephusminimus
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- Sep 4, 2012
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A few posters here seem to have an interest in camping on raw BLM and USFS land. 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. The problem is that the camper doesn't know whether he's been noticed, or hasn't. 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. 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 />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.