I love to hunt; I truly believe I am closer to God when I am sitting in the woods listening to the call of a coyote, the grunt of a mature buck or the gobble of a big tom calling a hen.
What matters most, to most of us is not the product of the hunt but the hunt itself. The time spent in the woods, the time spent enjoying the outdoors, friends and family. I think I’d rather be sitting in a big oak tree with my grandson than anything else I could do.
But to do that we all need a place to go, a piece of dirt we can call ours, a place we can go to get away from all the stress of the daily grind. A place we know the topography, the terrain and the wildlife.
While hunting clubs like http://www.nationalhuntingleases.com/can provide access to vast areas of land for hunting. It’s not your land; it’s not your domain! There are restrictions on what you can do and when you can do it.
Be it Missouri or Kansas, we can help you find your land at your price or sell your land at a fair price. With the resources of the Heartland MLS and dozens of other recreational land websites we can search the entire area for your needs. Sites like www.huntingland.net , www.landandfarm.com & www.cowboy.com which syndicates it’s listings to nearly 100 other sites, give us the power to search and to market to millions on the web.
If you’re looking to sell you recreational property, equestrian property or hunting land we can assist you with that too. Licensed in both KS and MO we will be happy to look for that perfect hunting spot or building lot in the county. Heck; I may even help you put in a food plot or set up your tree stand.
For Kansas hunting permits and fees *click here* . For information on Missouri hunting permits and fees *click here*
Owning land in one state does not necessarily mean you can avoid that states nonresident fees. One must be a resident of that state. Kansas defines that requirement as “any person who has maintained the person's place of permanent abode in this state for a period of 60 days immediately preceding the person's application for any license…” Missouri is a bit less specific.