Hunting preserve definition

Hunting preserve means land where a landowner keeps preserve whitetail as part of a business, if the business’s purpose is to provide persons with the opportunity to hunt the preserve whitetail.
Hunting preserve means property and facilities either privately owned or leased for holding, rearing, releasing, or processing captive-raised game for the purpose of hunting, for a fee, over an extended season.
Hunting preserve means land where a landowner

Examples of Hunting preserve in a sentence

  • Single Family Dwellings Hunting preserve Wildlife refuge and game preserve Publicly owned and operated trails, recreation, parks, and other similar services.

  • Antlerless or antlered deer taken under the authority of an antlerless deer permit issued under subsections (4) or (5), of this rule, non-native deer, deer killed by a motor vehicle, deer harvested under permits issued pursuant to Chapter 68A-9, F.A.C., and deer killed on a Licensed Game Farm or Licensed Private Hunting preserve, shall not be subjected to bag or possession limits shall be included in the daily bag but the aggregate daily bag of antlerless and antlered deer shall not exceed 2.

Related to Hunting preserve

  • Stormwater management planning area means the geographic area for which a stormwater management planning agency is authorized to prepare stormwater management plans, or a specific portion of that area identified in a stormwater management plan prepared by that agency.

  • Stormwater runoff means water flow on the surface of the ground or in storm sewers, resulting from precipitation.

  • Stormwater management planning agency means a public body authorized by legislation to prepare stormwater management plans.

  • Clean ballast means the ballast in a tank which since oil was last carried therein, has been so cleaned that effluent therefrom if it were discharged from a ship which is stationary into clean calm water on a clear day would not produce visible traces of oil on the surface of the water or on adjoining shorelines or cause a sludge or emulsion to be deposited beneath the surface of the water or upon adjoining shorelines. If the ballast is discharged through an oil discharge monitoring and control system approved by the Administration, evidence based on such a system to the effect that the oil content of the effluent did not exceed 15 parts per million shall be determinative that the ballast was clean, notwithstanding the presence of visible traces.