Brian Call, hopefully one day you will read this. Listening to you guys propose different reasons for the dramatic down slide of hunting in the Midwest, I feel you never get to the real issue. Declining Boomer populations, lack of public land, lack of interest are all valid topics, but I will add my 2 cents. It's not waning interest or lack of public access. This is provable across the South form Texas to FL. The problem is the Midwestern states have not evolved their hunting seasons to conform with modern times. Declining are the times when an entire family heads to deer camp for a one week shotgun season. I think the magic formula is abundance x availability. This equals an inviting endeavor. I apologize for picking on Iowa in this next example, but here goes. You can't hunt deer with a rifle in Iowa. You are provided two week long shotgun seasons. The DNR and the residents will have to realize what a slap in the face this is to the hunter. Season structures similar to this are a laughable joke. These states have millions of deer. Midwestern states already have one half of the equation, the abundance. Make the seasons inviting and the problem goes away.