Good things are always overpriced, 30 years ago wooded land in MN was $200/acre but I was making $6/hour. I grew up on a dairy farm and knew from an early age that I needed hunting land so I started buying and going in debt, yes, land poor, at one time having over 1200 wooded acres. You can be not only house poor but land poor. Ask any farmer. Property only has value when you sell it. If you don't sell you only have expense.
We still own over 600 acres and it is a joy to walk out your back door and go shooting, hiking, ATV riding... BUT my property taxes would fund a couple western hunting trips/year and as I get older (presently 66) it becomes more difficult to properly maintain the land (food plots, tree plantings, trail maintenance, deer stands) If you are not planning on selling and capitalizing on land value increases you could find yourself land poor. Property ownership comes with a maze of complications due to local zoning, trespass issues, liability concerns, weather impacts (will my trees blow down in the next storm). Just consider the cost of buying equipment to do the work on the tree farm. I just bought a skid steer for work on the tree farm, it was over $80,000!
Don't rule out a long term hunting lease or outstate semi guided hunts.
I was a forester with the state of MN specializing in private forest management and now have a 1 man, part time forestry consulting business. I have visited with 1000's of private woodland owners over the last 45 years and most clients have inherited their land or purchased it many years ago. Wooded land values are near $5000/acre presently. Buying at these prices will put most people into the land poor category very fast! Be careful about deciding between what you want and what you need!