Here is thelink to the law I quoted above.
I don't know the piece of land you are talking about, but from your initial post the outfitter is right, not you, not the police and not the mnr.
http://www.ontario.ca/laws/statute/90t21
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Here is thelink to the law I quoted above.
I don't know the piece of land you are talking about, but from your initial post the outfitter is right, not you, not the police and not the mnr.
http://www.ontario.ca/laws/statute/90t21
Ok well let me clarify the setup of this property and see what you folks think , house is tucked back in off the road about 300 ft , long driveway that runs along the popplers out to the road , the popplers are about 500 yards wide by about 2000 deep . And on the opposite side is a field. Only access is from the road and you have to climb a fence or park in owners driveway and walk in . It is clearly maintained , and the reason I ask is because my farm is the exact same setup , popplers planted so I have less grass to cut. And the wife doesn't like looking at tacky no tresspassing signs on the nice popplers trees . So if someone comes and parks in front of my land and walks in they have that right ? Doesn't seem right to me , private land is private land. Whether posted or not
people are notorious for interpreting the laws to suit their own needs. My suggestion post your land you actually won't be looking a tacky no trespassing signs just the back of them and you will make it clear its private. Otherwise be prepared to constantly educate those that might of conveniently missed the fact that its private.
If you have to climb a fence to get on the property its trespassing.
It is very possible that land when not posted and isn't being used looks no different then crown. I am aware of several area that people from this forum hunted land in the past not realizing the land they were on was actually private. So post your land if you don't want someone to mistake it for being private.
The property described is clearly private and a person entering it without permission would be trespassing. If you cross a fenceline, you are obviously trespassing.
What looks like a big loophole in the Act isn't a big loophole at all. It really just lays out common sense. But you will always get people trying to argue they have rights that they don't.