Definitions of Terms Used
2010-2011 Hunting Regulations
Bait: any feed or edible enticement.
Baiting: the direct or indirect placing or exposing of bait so
as to attract or entice wildlife to an area where hunters
are attempting to take them. An area is considered to be
baited for 10 days after bait is removed.
Big Game: black bear, deer, wild turkey and boar.
Bow: a longbow, recurve bow, or compound bow that is
hand-drawn, hand-held and held at full draw without the
aid of any mechanical device. Triggering devices or release
aids are legal.
Concurrent hunting: hunting of the same and/or other
species during a legally prescribed season.
Hunt: to chase, catch or take wild birds or animals.
Life-threatening condition: a terminal condition or illness
that according to current diagnosis has a high probability
of death within two years even with treatment with an
existing generally accepted protocol.
Modified bow: a longbow, recurve bow, or compound bow
that has been modified to hold the bow at full draw to
accommodate a physical impairment of the user.
Nonresident: person who does not meet the requirements
of a resident.
Permanently disabled in the lower extremities: an
individual who is permanently and totally disabled due
to paralysis or disease in the lower half of the body, which
makes it impossible to ambulate successfully more than
two hundred feet without assistance.
Possession limit: game taken in WV which is in any way
under the hunter’s control. Example; the total of all game
in a car, truck, home freezer, commercial food locker, or
any other storage place.
Private lands: lands owned by an individual(s), partnership,
heirship, club, organization or company and/or not
qualifying as public land.
Protected: no open season. Hunting at any time shall be
illegal for protected wildlife.
Public lands: State or Federal lands owned, leased, licensed
to or under the control of West Virginia DNR for wildlife
management purposes.
Resident: a person who has been a domiciled resident
continuously in West Virginia for 30 consecutive days or
more immediately prior to the date of application for a
license or permit. This includes members of the U.S. armed
forces stationed outside the state who were West Virginia
residents at the time of entry into the service and full-time
students of a college or university of this state. Nonresident
students of West Virginia colleges are not eligible to apply
for lifetime licenses. Absentee ownership of land in West
Virginia does not constitute legal residence.
Resident landowner privileges: apply to West Virginia
residents who own land in West Virginia, their resident
children and parents, or resident tenants when hunting
or trapping on their own land. Resident tenants must
permanently live on the land.
Small Game: all game and furbearing animals, and game
birds except big game. Does not include coyotes. |