BlazerBeam
Active member
It is ruining the outdoors, yes. I wish more people would raise hell about this issue. I wish more would call out these folks who are monetizing hunting and fishing through youtube, podcasts, etc. What is the end result of all this publicity? I know some say that their "why" is to create advocates for public land hunting. But what is the end result of that "why"? Is it to have thousands of people with all the latest gear traipsing around the woods bumping into each other left and right but never harvesting an elk, deer, or catching a fish because there is nothing left to hunt or fish? Or rather, is it to have so many advocates who have been recruited that now in order to enjoy a hunting opportunity you have to wait 5 years to hunt in your own state or pay tons of money and take weeks off of work? It can only be one of those two scenarios. So if you care about preserving the hunting experience, and preserving the opportunities for your posterity to enjoy a quality hunt and to do it often enough that it is a tradition like it has been in your life, then we need to start pointing the finger of blame where it needs to be pointed and hold these folks accountable....Way more fishing pressure on the Erie & Ontario trib steelhead than I've ever seen before (then I see YouTube videos and Instagram posts featuring steelhead and it all makes sense). Everyone is hunting coues deer now - pre social media few people even knew that was a thing.
I've also heard social media is making some of Earth's best kept secrets crowded with visitors.
Is it all cyclical and the interest will die off or will it only get worse?