I think everyone should give Alaska a look if they are thinking of relocation. Arguably Alaska is the most gun-friendly state. There is more public land here than in all other states combined (128 million acres of state land, over 50% of all US Dept. of Interior land, two largest national forests, etc.) There is no state income tax and no state sales tax. The town I live in happens to have a sales tax however. I live in a house assessed at about $200,000 and the property taxes are about $2,000. In-state H&F licenses are free for anyone 60 years of age and older. In most game units a $25 brown bear tag is required but so far as I can recall all other tags - deer, elk, caribou, goat, sheep, bison, muskox, black bear, wolf, etc. are free for residents. On the coast (more coastline than all other states combined), anyone can efficiently fill their freezer with salmon. Like anywhere there is no shortage of aspects here to make anyone unhappy, and I think Alaska has more people coming and going proportionately than any other state (so many people evidently find good reasons to leave) but especially right now when federal government control and intervention seems to be growing at a rate not seen except during the Civil War and during WWII, Alaska appears to be a good vantage point from which to watch all the fun. And Alaska could always use more people who like to shoot guns and hunt and fish. We are so uncrowded that I have never seen anyone wearing bright colors hunting, and when I meet someone hunting or fishing it is rare enough (except on the local duck flats) that I always stop and talk with them. Yes, Alaska suits me quite well.
You made that sound pretty good! Now, why don't you tell them how much it cost to hunt all over the state? Explain that there are VERY few roads, and the animals are spread out, and i do mean spread out... That any place easy to get to, someone is already there. That the places you can walk to, someone is already there, probably with horses.
I hunted all over Alaska for 25 years, and i can get to more animals more cheaply here in the mid west than i ever could there. You can easily spend 6 or 700 bucks (or a LOT more) just getting to a hunting spot. That means spending big $ every time you want to go hunting for a specific animal... These days, there are drawings for some tags, and size limits on what you can shoot too...
Here's a pict. of what happens when the coast is opened to salmon netting in a place a person can drive to. My buddy sent it to me a couple weeks ago, as he still lives there...
Here's the note he sent with it,
Another pristine Alaskan wilderness experience! People dip netting red salmon at the mouth of the Kenai River last weekend…..
They ran out of permits, they had only printed 30,000. Had to print 15,000 more. Each permit is good for 25 salmon for the head of the household plus 10 more salmon for each additional member of the family.
Anyway, there's nothing wrong with moving to Alaska, just know what it's REALLY like, and it "isn't" like what you read on line 99.9% of the time...
BTW, last time i checked, it cost $500.00 for a "resident" muskox tag...
DM