Certainly "hunters" have changed over the last 30 years. For the most part hunters now pertain to mostly deer hunters or water fowl hunters. Deer hunting has grown to the point of high tech equipment to give a hunter the best edge over the biggest buck in their part of the timber. If there is a possiblity of a bigger buck on another piece of land many "hunters" feel it is their "right" to attempt to harvest that bigger buck as long as it is close to legal and ethical. 30 years ago you could go about any where and get permission to hunt and there were very few deer hunters then, especially bow hunters. There were less than 100,000 deer licenses sold in the whole state, now there are about 400,000 licenses sold every year. The only areas that were leased were some of the marsh or pothole land for duck hunting, and no one in their right mind would ever buy a rough brush and ravine filled farm just for deer hunting for even the going price of $200. per acre at that time. There were NO nonresident deer hunters, but there were some NR pheasant hunters. Now because of the mad quest for a big set of antlers we have hunters paying $200. per acre just to lease the hunting rights on some farms. How can that be you ask, because they don't want anyone else to kill their buck that they have named from trail cam pictures and watched over baited sites for a year or more. Their passion is hunting only big bucks because of the miriade of magazines and TV shows tell them that that is what true deer hunters do, so much so that they are disgusted and their season is ruined if they don't kill at least a bragging size buck. These types miss the beauty of the autum woods and what nature brings to them in place of that mega-buck. There is a real sence of entitlement to much of our society today and that certainly extends itself to deer hunting, and the pity, at least to me, is that many of these hunters are now teaching their kids many of the same misplaced beliefs that they have learned from the media and technology driven big profit business of deer hunting.
I better stop now, but you did ask what we thought.
In a few more years, with what is happening with our deer herd, it won't matter much any way, but it is still pretty sad to some of us old hunters who are just happy to get a deer. A long time ago, 30 years or more, my Father-in-Law always said "you can't eat them damn horns any way" and I guess that is one of many things that I really took to heart. :way:
Good hunting to every one!!