Kevin Dill
WKR
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2014
- Messages
- 3,158
As a landowner in Ohio for many years, here's what I've witnessed:
Up until the 1980s and '90s there was a tremendous amount of trespass hunting. Ohio's trespassing laws and hunting without permission were basically ignored and seldom enforced. It was common to see hunters roaming freely and hunting private land as though it was public. Gun season was particularly bad and especially in SE Ohio which held the majority of the deer herd. Hunters would descend on us from surrounding states and elsewhere in Ohio. Every pull-off held a vehicle or 3. Fences were something to cross as fast as possible.
Eventually Ohio got serious about enforcing trespassing and hunting laws. It took a few years but hunters got the message. If you trespass-hunt and are caught, you'll pay a hefty fine before a judge. Landowners (including myself) were able to put a stop to people who treated our land like it was their playground. And trust me...a lot of hunters found it wasn't a cakewalk to get permission from every landowner they wanted to hunt on. "NO" was increasingly the answer as many property owners simply didn't want hunters on their land....or they had family who wanted to hunt there.
Logging and paper/pulp production have long been important in our forested areas of the state. Mead Paper Products began purchasing farms and tracts of land to log and/or plant pines. I recall when there were NO planted pine forests in this area. As the paper company's landholdings increased, so did hunting on their lands...and at no charge. But that eventually changed when Mead began their leasing program here. Initially it was a small percentage of their tracts, but expanded rapidly as hunters enthusiastically jumped in. Eventually a majority of these timber lands became leased for hunting, and were managed by land companies.
It didn't take long for savvy landowners and hunters to get the message. Good deer & turkey hunting land would be valuable and in demand. Landowners increasingly began leasing, and hunters showed up with checkbooks in hand. I know a number of landowners who lease and they only accept cash from their hunters. It's money for doing nothing and (I think) you'd be hard-pressed to find any landowner who wouldn't listen to that song.
The industrialization of whitetail deer hunting arrived here a generation ago. It will not be changing unless hunting as a sport or lifestyle goes into decline. It seems like you're either in the machine or hunting around its edges. I'm lucky to own land and have much surrounding private land I can also hunt. The reality for many is not as nice and they are perhaps forced to choose between paying for better hunting, or struggling to find someplace with no costs. In an increasingly profit-driven world, I don't foresee anything except a continuation of the pay-to-hunt trends we're experiencing today.
Up until the 1980s and '90s there was a tremendous amount of trespass hunting. Ohio's trespassing laws and hunting without permission were basically ignored and seldom enforced. It was common to see hunters roaming freely and hunting private land as though it was public. Gun season was particularly bad and especially in SE Ohio which held the majority of the deer herd. Hunters would descend on us from surrounding states and elsewhere in Ohio. Every pull-off held a vehicle or 3. Fences were something to cross as fast as possible.
Eventually Ohio got serious about enforcing trespassing and hunting laws. It took a few years but hunters got the message. If you trespass-hunt and are caught, you'll pay a hefty fine before a judge. Landowners (including myself) were able to put a stop to people who treated our land like it was their playground. And trust me...a lot of hunters found it wasn't a cakewalk to get permission from every landowner they wanted to hunt on. "NO" was increasingly the answer as many property owners simply didn't want hunters on their land....or they had family who wanted to hunt there.
Logging and paper/pulp production have long been important in our forested areas of the state. Mead Paper Products began purchasing farms and tracts of land to log and/or plant pines. I recall when there were NO planted pine forests in this area. As the paper company's landholdings increased, so did hunting on their lands...and at no charge. But that eventually changed when Mead began their leasing program here. Initially it was a small percentage of their tracts, but expanded rapidly as hunters enthusiastically jumped in. Eventually a majority of these timber lands became leased for hunting, and were managed by land companies.
It didn't take long for savvy landowners and hunters to get the message. Good deer & turkey hunting land would be valuable and in demand. Landowners increasingly began leasing, and hunters showed up with checkbooks in hand. I know a number of landowners who lease and they only accept cash from their hunters. It's money for doing nothing and (I think) you'd be hard-pressed to find any landowner who wouldn't listen to that song.
The industrialization of whitetail deer hunting arrived here a generation ago. It will not be changing unless hunting as a sport or lifestyle goes into decline. It seems like you're either in the machine or hunting around its edges. I'm lucky to own land and have much surrounding private land I can also hunt. The reality for many is not as nice and they are perhaps forced to choose between paying for better hunting, or struggling to find someplace with no costs. In an increasingly profit-driven world, I don't foresee anything except a continuation of the pay-to-hunt trends we're experiencing today.