Nameless Range
Well-known member
Trends are bothersome and we should pay attention to them, but also not mistake them for the current state of affairs and the many babies in the bathwater.
I think if you follow the trend line of any “average” person’s access to Private lands, be it through friendship, work, public access programs, etc - the ratio of hunters to acres of private lands they have to hunt has been decreasing for decades.
I think increased money, more flexible options for landowners, shorter seasons, and being far more punitive to bad behavior, could all be things that would slow the rate of descent down. I don’t know if anything will ever reverse it, but I don’t equate that with all hope being lost.
I know some of the original participants in block management, and I am good friends with landowners who do not participate. It’s not for everyone, and that doesn’t mean there’s anything wrong necessarily. It’s still an incredible program.
I think if you follow the trend line of any “average” person’s access to Private lands, be it through friendship, work, public access programs, etc - the ratio of hunters to acres of private lands they have to hunt has been decreasing for decades.
I think increased money, more flexible options for landowners, shorter seasons, and being far more punitive to bad behavior, could all be things that would slow the rate of descent down. I don’t know if anything will ever reverse it, but I don’t equate that with all hope being lost.
I know some of the original participants in block management, and I am good friends with landowners who do not participate. It’s not for everyone, and that doesn’t mean there’s anything wrong necessarily. It’s still an incredible program.