Of course.But you have to work around the minimum distance from occupied dwelling laws as well.
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Of course.But you have to work around the minimum distance from occupied dwelling laws as well.
Run some wires or fencing on metal stakes under the water at intervals going down. Will catch a bunch of lures.proceeds to fish, and yes casting towards his expensive boat.
A friend bought a place up in Maine, NW of Portland on a decent sized lake. Come Summer, the neighbor has his sailboat put in and anchors it to the float literally midway offshore from my friend’s shore. When the wind turns the sailboat, it blocks access to his dock.
He asks the neighbor if he might dock the boat to one of the floats in front of his own shore and the neighbor says the formers owners said it was OK, but moved the sailboat. But still sometimes moors it in front of his shore. The last thing my friend wants to do it get in a pissing match with a neighbor as they are otherwise frIendly. Yet to be resolved this 2nd Summer.
Our SoNH neighborhood was a segment of property a NH native landowner had sold for development, 1/2mi into the woods off 114N at the Bedford/Goffstown border. Our first year, we saw a truck parked in front of our house. Later, a few guys in orange camp come walking through our backyard from the abandoned fields behind our house, also owned by that NH family, down our driveway and head for the truck. I politely let them know I don’t want them walking on my property and that it’s a private development, so they can’t park here either. There are No Trespassing signs at the field edge facing the field at the stone wall marking my property boundary. They get all pissy, saying the landowner gave them permission to hunt here for the past 20 years, it’s a public street, etc., and drive off. I call an officer with our PD I know with the plate number, who says they’ll have a chat with the guys.
The next week, the truck is back, so I call the officer back, who confirms that the owner was advised on trespass, so the PD come out and waits for them to issue a summons. Last I saw of them.
People can be real dicks…
Having had two lake houses my take away was the people with the least amount invested took up the most room.People think, "well that one guy told me it was ok once so I've got rights forever." No. No you don't.
Almost exclusively, these people never have and never will own any sort of property. They are perpetual users and assume that they can use what they want when they want. Ugh.
So, basically, Claymore range?Occasionally someone will get a little close to shore w their boat than they need to be
i first heard of this law, while salmon fishing up in New Brunswick. up there the land owners with riparian rights, who own basically the shoreline to halfway across the river, if their land borders the stream, and some own both sides, having exclusive rights to who can fish there.Tell party boy to eff off....
Of course you should also check local laws...but for the most part, this.....
Littoral Rights - What are Littoral Rights vs Riparian Rights? -
Littoral rights refer to the legal use and enjoyment of the shoreline for land that borders a pooled body of water like a pond, lake, or sea.daytradrr.com
Littoral rights refer to the legal use and enjoyment of the shoreline for land that borders a pooled body of water like a pond, lake, or sea.
Littoral land refers to land that borders a pooled body of water, such as a lake, ocean, or sea. This differs from riparian land that borders a flowing water source like a river or stream. Littoral rights are generally concerned with the legal use and enjoyment of the shoreline. Littoral proprietors are occupants of land that border these bodies of water. However, individuals do not have title to or ownership of the water.
Nevertheless, property owners whose land adjoins bodies of water have a reasonable right to the use of the water, but the water is not theirs. Therefore, there are limitations to what a property owner can do with that water.
In NH they own the land under the water, but they don't own the water.i first heard of this law, while salmon fishing up in New Brunswick. up there the land owners with riparian rights, who own basically the shoreline to halfway across the river, if their land borders the stream, and some own both sides, having exclusive rights to who can fish there.
Also good for cutting the feet of children and catching nice lawsuits against you.Run some wires or fencing on metal stakes under the water at intervals going down. Will catch a bunch of lures.
There was a local story about someone placing submerged pvc pipes at a popular cliff diving spot on Otis reservoir, with the ends cut at 45 degree angles.Also good for cutting the feet of children and catching nice lawsuits against you.
What the hell is this caddy shack.....The Mom’s were all dealing with crying kids. The Dad’s were all discussing whether the pool filter would get the blood out. They decided a chlorine shock and filtration would do it but the Mom’s demanded a complete drain, hose-down and refill. The story only gets better with time…
This is true! And also leave the most trash when they leaveHaving had two lake houses my take away was the people with the least amount invested took up the most room.