Game bird hunters – ‘don’t forget ‘pegging day’
Game bird hunters – ‘don’t forget ‘pegging day’ to stake out your spot
Fish & Game is urging gamebird hunters to get out now and claim the maimai or duck shooting stand they used last year.
Pegging has to be done any time before 10am on Sunday April 5, 2015 – if hunters are to retain their favourite hunting spot. This rule applies in all 12 Fish & Game regions.
“Pegging your favourite maimai ensures that you are in the best position to harvest birds over opening weekend and have the right to continue to use that spot for the rest of the season, providing you are there within one hour after the opening hour of hunting,” says Policy and Planning Manager Robert Sowman.
“If the stand claimant hasn’t arrived in that first hour, then the maimai is able to be used by any other licensed hunter for the remainder of the day.”
To reclaim your spot for the upcoming season you first need to purchase your 2015/16 Game Bird Licence, which contains your claim tag. The new season licence went on sale on March 22, 2015.
If you are claiming an existing maimai for the first time, you must be present at 10am on pegging day, to ensure your claim is valid and legal. The licence holder claiming the stand must be present in person at the stand to mark it up.
Mr Sowman advises hunters to remember to check regional regulations for variations to species, bag limits and other changes.
He says that for example, That Auckland/Waikato and Wellington have restrictions on shot capacity and Hawke’s Bay Fish & Game officers are asking hunters to voluntarily limit their shotgun capacity to three shots for the coming season.
Hunters are also reminded to check the season and bag limits for the different species. For example, Auckland/Waikato and Eastern Regions will both have short seasons for grey and mallard ducks running from Saturday May 2 to June 1, while other North Island regions’ seasons run for longer.
Wellington’s season runs to June 15 while Northland,
Hawkes Bay and Taranaki regions go for longer – to June
29.
In the South Island, where mallard populations are larger than in the north, the season for them runs for nearly three months from May 2 to July 26.
“As in the North Island regional bag limits vary, so hunters must be aware of regional differences and make themselves fully familiar with the rules and regulations that apply to the area they’ll be hunting in,” Mr Sowman says.
“With the prolonged drought-like conditions over much of the South Island during the summer months, taking the time to visit your hide will also give you an indication of the current water levels.
“Some hunters may find they need to look for an alternative hunting site come opening day, unless we receive significant rainfall in the weeks leading up to opening weekend.”
Hunters in
all regions are urged to take advantage of the longer season
for upland game birds, including pheasants and quail, which
runs from May 2 to August 30 in a number of
regions.
Pegging Information:
Where can I find
all the ‘pegging’ rules?
These are found in
the First Schedule section of the Game Bird Hunting Guide
supplied free with your licence.
Do the pegging rules apply equally to
private and public land?
Yes, BUT if you do not
have landowner permission to hunt on any land (private or
public) then the pegging rules are irrelevant.
On public land that I have a permit to
hunt on, can I hunt from someone else’s
maimai?
Yes, provided the maimai is not occupied
before 7.30am. The hunter who has tagged or pegged the
maimai only has the ’first rights’ privilege of
occupying it until 7.30am then it is open to any other
licensed hunter for the remainder of the day.
When am I allowed to “peg” a
hunting spot?
If you ‘pegged out’ a spot in
the previous gamebird season you can peg your spot any day,
from when the licences become available in mid-March until
before 10am, on pegging day (refer to the First Schedule
section of the ‘Game Bird Hunting Guide’ for pegging day
dates). After 10am on pegging day, any licence holder can
peg any spot not already pegged.
I pegged a
spot last year but hunted elsewhere at the last minute and
someone else now wants to peg it. Can they?
No.
You have the opportunity to re-peg the position before 10am
on pegging day.
Can I peg
up a new maimai on the other side of the river from an
existing pegged maimai but it is only 70m
away?
If your maimai position is within 90m of
the existing maimai, then unless invited to be closer by the
other party, you cannot peg it up. Even if your maimai is
more than 90m away but another person’s safety is at risk,
you should shift. Hunting safely is
paramount.
ENDS