Submitted by Griff82 t3_y8vjiz in Pennsylvania

We live in an ATV hotbed up here in the corner of PA. Lots of bar to bar traffic and general nuisance riding on the roads goes on but yesterday two side by sides came through our unposted fenced property and out our driveway. My wife is working from home and went out on the deck to see what was up but they ignored her and continued on their way. I'm pro-hunting and have given permission to one guy with health issues to drive to his stand but I do not want my quiet place to turn into a 4 wheeler high traffic area. We don't have a local cop as we freeload off PSP here, so I'd rather not go down that road because it's a waste of resources. What should I do besides tightening fences? I don't want to post my place because it abuts the Gamelands.

https://www.dcnr.pa.gov/Recreation/WhatToDo/ATVRiding/RidingRulesandEnforcement/Pages/default.aspx

241

Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

Bobtom42 t1_it21kr2 wrote

You can get custom posted signs, just make one that says no ATV/UTVs. I'm wondering if your drive is a trail on some maps. Alot of these maps use AI to generate the maps and they make mistakes.

220

fuckit5555553 t1_it22arp wrote

Just call the police. Btw you pay taxes so you pay for the state police.

18

JohnDeere714 t1_it22cuz wrote

Posted signs will only stop the honest people. Atv Kids (this is a separate Group from the others) these days have no respect for peoples property. If you really want to stop them you’re gonna have to really fence off your property or start cutting trees down to block off the area. They will find a way.

You can’t really raise a fuss about it either without ruining it for the honest ones.

12

srpayj t1_it22zjs wrote

Yes check this. Google maps has lots of private lanes and drives shown in rural PA. I am guessing they are on township maps.

Unfortunately in rural areas you have to mark drives/lanes private and post property. The new method using purple paint makes it a lot easier. Not sure how well recognized that is yet.

136

degilliland36 t1_it2304x wrote

Welcome to Pennsyltucky. In north central PA it's tractors and ATVs...

11

Dredly t1_it231w6 wrote

Honestly, if you are up against game lands and are not posting it, you are just asking for trouble. That is public land, people will have no idea (or care) where your line is

64

MrVantstik t1_it23969 wrote

Get cameras and post signs and then prosecute.

26

HighPitchEricsBelly t1_it23jlh wrote

I love when people say "kids these days". Kids never had respect for where they rode their quads. Back in the 80's we rode wherever we could' private, state land, wherever...

OP, having land that abuts State Game lands is even more reason to post your land. People might not know they crossed into private. Where I live almost everyone posts their property.

53

worstatit t1_it24jcu wrote

State game lands are not open to atv riding. State forests only on designated trails.

55

HelpfulManufacturer0 t1_it252rl wrote

2 options before calling the police. Post your land up with signage. If that does not work, grab a chainsaw and block their access.

148

Friendly_Shopping_63 t1_it25goy wrote

I really think we live in a world where our concerns are just way off. Nobody likes to see anyone having any kind of fun. I’m convinced Pa is home to mostly a bunch of grumpy old men and women.

−59

of_patrol_bot t1_it261tj wrote

Hello, it looks like you've made a mistake.

It's supposed to be could've, should've, would've (short for could have, would have, should have), never could of, would of, should of.

Or you misspelled something, I ain't checking everything.

Beep boop - yes, I am a bot, don't botcriminate me.

14

BillyEnzin69 t1_it264c2 wrote

Just chiming in to say I respect you very much for not posting your private property and allowing hunters. Thanks. The world needs more people like you.

11

mcs0301 t1_it269a7 wrote

So you're argument is "stop being mad when people are inconsiderate pricks".

Nice take. Someday you may own property that you worked hard to purchase and maintain. Let us know how you feel then.

24

mainelinerzzzzz t1_it26ncw wrote

Post your land, it’ll keep 99% of ATVs off your land.

0

pitchforksNbonfires t1_it277tb wrote

Get a camera. Put up private property and no trespassing signs that are plainly visible.

You also might want to talk to a lawyer.

Anyone on your property is potentially your liability. Although those ATV’s are supposed to be registered, titled and insured, it’s likely that some are not.

The DNR website states that all law enforcement in PA are authorized to enforce the Snowmobile/ATV law, including state police.

You might not want to call them, but if there’s an accident or an incident on your property they will need to respond. It’s their job to cover rural areas when there’s no local PD.

There also must be a sheriff’s office that’s in your county.

42

Hib3rnian t1_it27nt3 wrote

Gate the driveway and run a stainless steel cable through your fence posts around your perimeter.

Posted signs are a good idea as well but in reality won't stop them from cutting through your property if they want to, a strong perimeter defence will.

−10

mediocre_mitten t1_it28vzq wrote

>Anyone on your property is potentially your liability. Although those ATV’s are supposed to be registered, titled and insured, it’s likely that some are not

^^ This^^.

IANAL, but almost certain if you don't have visible "Private property, NO atvs (+add what ever else)" signs, then YOU technically ARE responsible for "whatever happens" on said property. Might be worth the few hundo to consult w/property attorney, even if just for liability purposes.

16

CatOfTheDecade t1_it29cdj wrote

I just want to stress this: blocking access with trees or other "normal", visible obstructions is 100% fine. Also do the purple paint thing and follow up with "no trespassing" signs.

There are a lot of SGL near me and in the off seasons I do a lot of hiking through there. There are several property owners, both private and industrial, that abut the SGLs and they are slathered with purple paint and signage. It is impossible to stumble onto their property accidentally.

Whenever posts like this come up, idiots will chime in with "hurr durr, hang a cable or piano wire across the trail, it's private property so legally you can do whatever you want". Do not listen to them. This is illegal. Regardless of whether or not it actually kills anyone, you'll wind up with criminal charges and a SUBSTANTIAL civil lawsuit, which you will unconditionally lose. Your homeowners insurance will not defend you.

126

Canopenerdude t1_it29pnv wrote

> Whenever posts like this come up, idiots will chime in with "hurr durr, hang a cable or piano wire across the trail, it's private property so legally you can do whatever you want". Do not listen to them. This is illegal. Regardless of whether or not it actually kills anyone, you'll wind up with criminal charges and a SUBSTANTIAL civil lawsuit, which you will unconditionally lose. Your homeowners insurance will not defend you.

For context, something that can be commonly assumed to be a 'booby trap' is illegal, no matter if you own the land or not.

88

LilDutchy t1_it2a4xn wrote

Legally, if there’s no barrier to entry and no signage it’s not trespassing until you tell them not to enter your property yourself. At that point if they re enter your property, it’s trespassing. Put up signs and do the purple markers between them. Most responsible ATVers respect that sort of thing.

15

Inert_Uncle_858 t1_it2azsy wrote

Let me guess: Minersville? I heard they recently started allowing them on the roads.

5

JR-Dubs t1_it2dfgh wrote

One of the few things that has stuck with me from law school and preparing for the bar lo these many years ago, is that there is a very low duty of care to trespassers upon your land, but there is a duty to warn of "known, man-made deathtraps", even to people on your land illegally. So, yeah, no booby-traps.

35

pwnedkiller t1_it2eal0 wrote

PA is becoming absolutely flooded with ATV traffic and someday something bad is gonna happen.

4

poserben t1_it2f1lm wrote

As a Philadelphian, I'm shocked at how much I relate to this problem, here it's city streets instead of private property and gamelands, but we have large groups of dirt bikes and ATVs mucking up traffic and scaring people every time the weather is nice. We have a ton of cops, but they're unable or unwilling to do anything about it. Wish you luck.

20

courageous_liquid t1_it2fl94 wrote

> Btw you pay taxes so you pay for the state police.

Nah, that PSP budget is paid for from the motor vehicle fund, which is supposed to be for critical infrastructure maintenance. Municipalities that don't pay for local cops and rely on PSP instead are robbing the state of crucial budget for reliability and safety on our roadways.

8

meinkreuz89 t1_it2huu0 wrote

If you really don’t want anyone to come down your lane go online and order some “Danger radiation Hazard” signs. And post them where they would enter. I had to have them on my work vehicle and when we would work in the city I would put them in the windows and the ticket maids wouldn’t dare go near my vehicle or ticket me when the meter ran out. Worked like a charm for years.

Radiation Hazard Sign

3

lexispots t1_it2i0jo wrote

If your property is close to or abuts PA game lands, put up signs and then contact the state game warden's office. If the riders are hunters they'll stop once they realize they can lose their license for such violations.

2

AteumKnocks t1_it2it0c wrote

When I was a kid my helmet got caught by wire stretched between two trees. If I was standing two inches taller it would've hit my neck and not my helmet/goggles. Scariest thing that's ever happened to me on a bike

26

hhayn t1_it2jwa6 wrote

They’re two totally different scenarios, tho I am not sure which is worse. If I were this guy, I’d be super pissed because they’re driving over my property and it’s pretty much only affecting me. On the other hand, the swarms of ATV and dirt bike riders that we have downtown are definitely much more dangerous.. but danger isn’t localized to my property and I might never even encounter the swarm personally. In both scenarios the likelihood they are armed is high.

Personally, I have no position on either issue because neither has arisen in a way that negatively impacts my life or the lives of anyone I know.

10

JBupp t1_it2kcf1 wrote

Also openstreetmap.org

They let the public edit the database, they have trails, and other mapping software use their data. I've seen and edited out obsolete trail data.

9

JR-Dubs t1_it2kco1 wrote

Setting up booby traps is illegal. No matter what. When I say "known man made death traps", I mean something like the following (which is a case I actually had): A deep, but narrow trench cut on someone's land is covered by high grass that is cut at the end of the season and then the property got covered in snow, making the trench completely invisible. Man walks dog on the property (trespassing), dog got loose, while the guy was chasing the dog he fell into the trench and suffers serious injuries.

If you set up a bunch of punji traps on your property, not only are you going to get sued if someone gets injured, you're probably also going to get arrested, regardless of signage.

This all comes with the admonishment that this is not legal advice and you should not rely on it for anything except, maybe, entertainment purposes.

30

BenderIsGreat64 t1_it2kjsh wrote

If they're riding in the gamelands, call the game commission. Then it's not a waste of resources, it's a utilization of resources.

11

CrzyDave t1_it2n9f6 wrote

They may have been lost or had a reason they needed to get to a real road ASAP. I was up in Snowshoe RTT and got off trail once and ended up on someone’s private road by accident. I got out of there as quickly and quietly as possible. I get lost around my house on my dirtbike all the time. This also happened to me on my mountain bike, and I just had to get to a road since I was miles off course and getting really thirsty. Hopefully this was a one time event for you.

15

mitt02 t1_it2sjz3 wrote

Waste of their time. They will come out tell you to post the property if that doesn’t work then block access and put up cameras. They can’t do anything without knowing who it was catching them in the act.

3

ho_merjpimpson t1_it2skqb wrote

For the vast majority of the state, that is simply not true. ATV's on PA gamelands is actually one of the most heavily enforced things on the gamelands. You do not want to fuck around with that.

15

ho_merjpimpson t1_it2u0bi wrote

i will second this. In many high atv traffic areas there can be unwritten rules between land owners that posted signs are for other uses... hunting, etc... and atv trails are open for all unless specifically posted. for example, in the area we own land, posted signs are essentially ignored outside of hunting season, and between a few dozen landowners there is a huge network of atv trails that goes through all the different properties. during hunting season, we know to stay to our own properties.

now, you put up a "no atv's past this point" sign... well, then things change. that means you dont ride on that property, or down that trail unless you have permission.

so id suggest putting up a sign specific saying no ATV/UTV's first. might you get a couple random morons? sure. but that is going to happen no matter what outdoor activity people are doing. hiking, biking, hunting, atvs...

10

jimmyrocks t1_it2u49w wrote

As someone who works very closely with trail data and OpenStreetMap, please go in to open street map and mark trails that are actually private as private! If you need help, have any questions, or just want someone else to make the actual edits, please message me, or go on /r/OpenStreetMap

11

ho_merjpimpson t1_it2u9na wrote

Safe to say they are talking about state forests. 90% of people use state game, state forest, and state park interchangeably, as for 90% of the people, the differences don't matter..

11

Shilo788 t1_it2ytwz wrote

Nothing like Maine, they are more common in fall and spring than cars as it is the locals enjoying the absence of tourists on the road. I live miles down a dirt road and the four wheelers are past my drive everyday but respect my signs blocking my tote roads to vehicles. My dogs run the property as well so they did discourage people from coming up the drive .

2

Finrodsrod t1_it31l3t wrote

> but we have large groups of dirt bikes and ATVs mucking up traffic

That's cause they're super easy to steal or even buy since they don't require registration, and those dopes probably don't have driver's licenses. It's super easy to out run and maneuver cops on a dirt bike.

2

JacoDaDon t1_it32wrv wrote

Not to be a dick but you don’t freeload. PA has the highest gas taxes in the nation and PSP OT racked up policing places like where you live is where the majority of that tax revenue goes to.

As far as your problem…unfortunately, signage and fencing are your only options.

4

JohnDeere714 t1_it33lqc wrote

Depends on the people who taught them to ride. I’ve ridden with people who asked for permission before even stepping foot on land, picked up trash and fixed things as they went. There’s good riders out there.

I’m saying kids because that’s the issue my area is having is kids tearing up and destroying equipment which is causing land that old timers rode on to get closed down.

0

Crown_Cran t1_it383e1 wrote

Shoot first ask questions later

−3

vogelsyn t1_it3is4q wrote

where are you? mt jewett?

Post it "NO MOTOR VEHICLES"

1

smrtazz101 t1_it3m3x8 wrote

I put signs, and tried all the civil ways. Then placed huge rocks blocking the paths that led into my yard. They just found new ways. What did work however is being in the right place at the right time and horse collaring the lead rider off the back of his quad. At first tensions were high for obvious reasons, then we worked it out. I AM NOT SAYING THIS IS THE ANSWER, just saying what eventually worked for me.

2

ho_merjpimpson t1_it3n6g7 wrote

yeah. its really a silly thing to nitpick in general. OP didnt even suggest that the atv riding was happening on the state owned land, or if the riding is on the state land, that it was being done legally. it was basically a completely non relevant detail.

3

ho_merjpimpson t1_it3no4g wrote

>I don't want to post my place because it abuts the Gamelands.

this is a glaring part of your post that i dont understand. ...but I want to. I guess i just dont get your reasoning. not saying you are wrong, im just wondering what your motivation NOT to post the property is? Is it that you dont want the eye sore of posted signs facing serene wilderness? if so... just focus the signs to where the problem trail is. no need to do the whole propertyline if you dont want to.

3

Waru_ t1_it3npgv wrote

Gl hf

−2

juddasjanni t1_it3ombc wrote

What should you do about it? Go about your business wtf ?

−3

mudclog t1_it3pyhb wrote

Definitely check openstreetmap. A lot of other apps will use openstreetmap data, so if there's a trail on there it will show up elsewhere. If it's your property you can delete the trails or mark them as private.

4

saxmaster98 t1_it3we4s wrote

When I was a toddler, I would tape cd’s to a string and string them across doorways. My thought being that the holes were nipple sized and they’d catch some boobies. I was convinced booby traps were for actual boobies

14

nickisaboss t1_it3xxk8 wrote

I've been curious about this! I've been seeing purple paint EVERYWHERE and have been thinking "there's no way that this is ALL owned by a single person" lololol

3

ChuanFa_Tiger_Style t1_it42i8j wrote

> I just want to stress this: blocking access with trees or other "normal", visible obstructions is 100% fine. Also do the purple paint thing and follow up with "no trespassing" signs.

Also, take pictures of this when you do it. Later, if you put up the obstructions (trees, fences) and some idiot gets hurt, you can say that you marked the trails ahead of putting up the blockades.

6

jaymz168 t1_it43b8h wrote

That's been policy since at least somewhere around 2010-2011, maybe earlier. I remember because where I was living at the time had a lot of dirtbike/ATV activity. The cops chased one, the ATV driver hit and injured/killed a pedestrian trying to flee, and now here we are.

I'll agree that Philly is a total shitshow right now but it can't all be laid at Kenney's/Krasner's feet. PPD has been completely useless for a looooong time. Living at that same place I heard a woman get kidnapped, screaming for her life as her voice faded away with the vehicle she'd been dragged into. I called 911 several times with no answer so I called the police district. Their reaction was literally "what do you want us to do about it?" This was over ten years ago. Around the same time I was robbed at gunpoint west of Drexel campus and the police insisted on filing it as a theft, not a robbery. I can go on and on and on.

edit: and for the record I voted for both of them and I'm really disappointed in them both. I'm seriously disappointed in our city from top to bottom, honestly

9

courageous_liquid t1_it43ns4 wrote

That's fine, then start taxing those areas that want to do that. Wolf was trying to do that but the state wasn't having it.

It's annoying because the rest of the state is footing the bill even more than we already do from a pool of money that's desperately needed. When Leslie was still the PennDOT Sec, she told me PennDOT would need TRIPLE the funding they currently have just to tread water on bridge maintenance (and like 50% of our bridges are structurally deficient as it is).

And now they have even less because some small towns want police and don't want to pay for it.

1

AppropriateWay690 t1_it4b476 wrote

I see more game taken by folks that don’t use atv/utv’s than those that do. You can’t sneak up on game with a loud motor echoing around.

2

ChuanFa_Tiger_Style t1_it4e0xv wrote

Yeah, I mean there are models out there that other states use to manage the law in large rural areas. This isn't rocket science.

But like I'm saying, the problem with making it the responsibility of, say, county sheriffs is that county sheriffs offices end up becoming corrupt as fuck and people get hurt. Imagine predatory sheriffs offices detaining tourists from the city, rinse, repeat.

There's got to be a better way.

1

thisoldbroad t1_it4eq1i wrote

Allentown banned them, but there aren't enough police to enforce the apprehension of riders.

1

Low-Luck-4733 t1_it4ew70 wrote

You can always block them in if you know where the trail ends, wait and talk to them about driving through.

1

Dude-in-the-backrow t1_it4h72f wrote

Some steel, iron or.metal pipes buried in the ground. Cement them in as well as fill them with cement. Have them sticking out at least 3-4 feet, make sure you paint them, yellow or other noticeable color. UTVs are huge now so you can keep them about 2 1/2- 3 feet apart... post the property, purple paint on the trees and tell anyone you see its private. Get some game cameras up to catch those who skirt through....

1

the_real_xuth t1_it4hklp wrote

Nobody said that. But you do need to make it so that a reasonable person (even one who was trespassing) wouldn't fall in it accidentally. Because lots of trespass is legal and sometimes even required.

10

iputmytrustinyou t1_it5rk4q wrote

The spring/summer after my first winter in my house, I had to put up a fence, strategically placed boulders and have trees planted around my property to keep people off.

I opted to forego calling local police or ask people to stop, ect. Dealing with small town folks can be tricky, and every town has their own unwritten social rules. Since I own this home and knew I plan to live here probably forever, I wanted to keep things smooth and not ruffle feathers as the "newcomer."
I was also single young woman at the time. I didn't want to set myself up for any trouble, either. Paying for some landscaping was easiest and seemed natural for a new homeowner to do anyway. I haven't had any problems with people coming on my property since.

2

Mets_BS t1_it8pgra wrote

sadly, there's not a whole lot that can be done about it. The state is starting facilitate it with programs to interconnect public trails and every municipality where I live has passed laws to allow them and snowmobiles on roads. All summer I get a steady stream of side by sides past my house at all hours.

2

breezybackwobble470 t1_itj6xza wrote

🤷‍♂️ its legal people do it regularly. sure you internet lubbers probably think thats wrong but how much do you really care. I say let them rip up the guy who asks reddit what to do's lawn. or he could put up a sign. it might be good to consider maybe theyve been riding there for their whole lives. either way i was very surprised nobody suggested warning shots.

1