Too Much Public Land Is ‘Landlocked' by Private Property. This New Program Is Helping Hunters and Anglers Access It
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience.
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience.
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience. Generate Key Takeaways
Access to public lands is one of the biggest challenges facing hunters in the West, where millions of public acres are 'landlocked' — that is, surrounded by private ground, making them legally unreachable to the public. Some of those barriers were removed Wednesday, thanks to a new public access initiative led by Infinite Outdoors.
Based in Casper, Wyoming, Infinite is often likened to an Airbnb service for hunters and anglers. The app-based platform connects paying sportsmen with landowners willing to lease out access by the day, and it now has more than a million private acres enrolled across 16 states. The Access Granted Initiative is the company's first step into the public access arena. Infinite uses funds from its paid memberships to compensate landowners for providing access to a public-land area, while the users themselves pay nothing. Outdoor brands HUSH and Primos are also supporting the program financially.
As of Wednesday, around a dozen properties in Colorado and Wyoming had already signed up for the program, unlocking more than 45,000 acres of new access on BLM, state, and national forest lands. The program has been widely supported by fish-and-game agencies in both states, which have long worked to provide more public access through their own programs, along with land swaps and conservation easements.
'For decades, there has been debate around why there are millions of acres of public land that the public cannot access,' Infinite's founder and CEO Sam Seeton said in Wednesday's announcement. 'We built the Access Granted Initiative to fix this issue, using our own funds and industry partnerships to tear down the invisible fences and let people experience the land that was meant for all of us free of cost.'
Hunters and anglers will be able to take advantage of the new public access, but the program is also open to backpackers, boaters, and other public lands users. Photo by Infinite Outdoors
All public land users have to do is go to the IO website and download the app, find a parcel they want to access, and book their dates, free of charge. The new program isn't limited to hunters and anglers. Mountain bikers, climbers, and other outdoor lovers can take advantage of the new access, too. Infinite will, however, limit the number of people who can use a particular access point, and the number of days they can utilize it — just as it does on its private membership platform — in order to prioritize conservation and keep game populations healthy.
Infinite calls the new initiative 'a game-changing move' for hunters and anglers in the region, who can now legally access millions more acres of previously (and questionably) inaccessible public ground due to a 10th Circuit federal appeals court ruling in March. That monumental court decision confirmed the legality of corner-crossing, the act of stepping from one public parcel to another when those parcels meet at a common corner with two private parcels in a checkerboard pattern.
Read Next: Appeals Court Rules That Corner Crossing Is Legal in at Least Six States
There are still, however, plenty of landlocked and very isolated public parcels where corner-crossing your way in is out of the question — but where a willing private landowner could theoretically give sportsmen an entry point. These are the doors that Infinite's Access Granted Initiative is working to unlock.
'There's nothing more frustrating than knowing public land is right there yet having no way for the average person to legally get to it,' Seeton said. 'We are passionate about our public lands being public.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Microsoft reclaims top spot, Omada IPO, Vail trims outlook
Market Domination co-host Josh Lipton tracks today's top moving stocks and biggest market stories in this Market Minute. Microsoft (MSFT) stock opens at a fresh all-time high, reclaiming the title of world's most valuable company after surpassing Nvidia (NVDA) in market cap. Omada Health (OMDA) makes a strong Nasdaq debut, as the company cites strong growth momentum. Catch Yahoo Finance's full interview with Omada Health CEO Sean Duffy. Meanwhile, Vail Resorts (MTN) tops third quarter earnings expectations but trims its full-year EBITDA outlook due to a $9 million charge tied to a CEO transition. Stay up to date on the latest market action, minute-by-minute, with Yahoo Finance's Market Minute. It's time for Yahoo! Finance's market minute. US stocks rising as the S&P 500 flirts with that 6,000 level. The move higher comes amid a better than expected jobs report for May. Tech giant Microsoft opening at a fresh record on Friday, shares hitting a new all-time high above $470. The company also surpassing Nvidia's market cap, taking back the spot as the largest company in the world. Amana Health shares rising in its public debut on the NASDAQ. Shares opening at $23 a share, higher than its pricing of $19 per share. CEO telling Yahoo! Finance that they felt a pull to come into the market and love the growth they are seeing in the business. And Vail Resorts topping earnings estimates in the third quarter, but trimming back on its full-year outlook. The ski resort operator slashing its total reported EBITDA forecast, which includes an estimated $9 million one-time charge related to the company's previously announced CEO transition. And that's your Yahoo! Finance market minute. For more on what's trending on Yahoo! Finance, scan the QR code below us. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Jobs report lift, Tesla stock rebounds, Lululemon sinks
Yahoo Finance host Madison Mills tracks today's top moving stocks and biggest market stories in this Market Minute, including Tesla's (TSLA) rebound this morning after erasing $153 billion in market value due to CEO Elon Musk's feud with President Trump and Lululemon Athletica (LULU) cutting its full-year forecast over tariff pressures. Stay up to date on the latest market action, minute-by-minute, with Yahoo Finance's Market Minute. Time for Yahoo! Finance's market minute. Stocks are jumping, the S&P 500 breaking above the 6,000 level for the first time since February on the back of that stronger than expected May jobs report. President Trump taking a Truth Social to celebrate the data and call for the Fed to cut rates saying, quote, "Go for a full point." Plus, Tesla is rebounding from Thursday's slump as investors hope for a cooldown in the feud between Trump and CEO Elon Musk. The the online dust-up initially leading to a more than $150 billion wipeout of Tesla's value. And Lululemon shares sinking after the retailer cut its full year profit guidance citing higher tariff-related costs as well as increased markdowns. Number of analysts slashing their price targets on the stock while maintaining their ratings including BMO Capital, Needham and TD Cowen. That's your Yahoo! Finance market minute. For more on what's trending on Yahoo! Finance, you can scan the QR code below to track the best and worst performing stocks of this session. Connectez-vous pour accéder à votre portefeuille
Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
Investors are already looking to July's jobs report — or even August's
Friday's jobs numbers will provide the latest glimpse of how a high-tariff regime and the uncertainty surrounding trade policies will influence unemployment figures. But like several other key indicators that look backward in time to help us steer through the present, it's their future datasets that will reveal a fuller picture. For the labor market, those numbers may not arrive until July or August — a time by which many investors hope a new tariff regime will already be established. By subscribing, you are agreeing to Yahoo's Terms and Privacy Policy A curious hallmark of this stutter-step trade policy shift, with its dealmaking and delays, is that the effects of a "Liberation Day" initiated this spring won't be meaningfully felt until deep into summer, or perhaps longer, no matter how Friday's data stacks up. 'While we think it is still too soon for the jobs report to capture the adverse impact of trade policy — that impact will show up in the employment reports for July and August — the overall cooling trend suggests that employment and wage growth will be insufficient to completely absorb that impact,' wrote RSM chief economist Joe Brusuelas in a note on Thursday. Resilience has been a keyword of the US economy in the COVID era. And it has applied just as well to the early days of the trade conflict, reflecting a trend of layoffs remaining low and business activity holding steady. But as my colleague Josh Schafer reported, data points on hiring and manufacturing this week have shown signs of slowing as tariffs make their mark. Analysts aren't forecasting a collapse in the labor market. But the concepts of hesitancy and paralysis are gaining traction as employers realize a reasonable strategy during this moment of uncertainty is to do nothing. And lest we forget, the labor market had been cooling prior to the trade war after quarters of restrictive policy as the Fed's higher-for-longer interest rates curbed inflation. But a prolonged hiring pause can have repercussions too. "We are approaching an inflection point, where the concerns of stagflation can seep into the greater market narrative," said Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer at Northlight Asset Management. "We are seeing dropping productivity and slower growth, while also seeing signs of higher (or sticky) inflation," he said in a note on Thursday. Waiting to see how tariff policy shakes out can itself produce negative signals. But what might seem like an unspoken, collective hiring freeze could just be the prudence of managers biding their time, and as the job openings showed us, companies are taking advantage of the minimal cost of merely being ready to hire. The flip side is that a state of calm in the data could be masking the pain to come, functioning like a convenient illusion. Either way, the market — and the Fed — are once again left to continue their wait for more data. Hamza Shaban is a reporter for Yahoo Finance covering markets and the economy. Follow Hamza on X @hshaban. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data