If you are buying the land in Indiana for recreational purposes you'd be silly not to take advantage of the Certified Forest/Wildlands program offered by the state. It reduces your property taxes to $1/acre but does place some limitations on your use of that land. It cannot be farmed nor can you build on it (at least the part enrolled), any timber harvests must be planned by a certified forester, and there is some paper work to be filed annually. This program does not have an access clause included in it.To actually answer your question....I will not take government assistance, so no. It is a simple equation.
That statement makes the assumption that the farm subsidies you are sore over are doing the same. I can say with a high level of confidence that is not the case with producers in Indiana.Are you and the rest of the country going to pay me enough through subsidies to allow me to do what I want?
RFW is not a program I would endorse in Indiana nor any other state. I doubt it could be structured in a way to work in IN and I do not believe that landowner participation would be very high here. IMO, Indiana is spending money better through their Healthy Rivers Initiative. This program opened up 2800ac just this spring with more slated as willing sellers and funds can be matched up.