Is the western hunting bubble bursting? (Or at least shrinking?)

Yoder

WKR
Joined
Jan 12, 2021
Messages
1,678
Most hunters are over 40. The overwhelming majority of young people are soft and hate discomfort of any kind. They also need to be entertained 24x7. I think hunter numbers are going to drop dramatically over the next 10 years. It's going to get better 100%. I'm starting to see it already in PA.
 

DWinVA

WKR
Joined
Jun 17, 2014
Messages
583
Location
SW Virginia
So if we get to a 2008 situation or much worse, food shortages accelerate, people become more desperate, etc. could tag sales decrease but unlicensed “hunters” increase to a point that it becomes a real issue?

I say this because I have a lot of non hunting friends say I’d be set when the crap hits the fan. I don’t buy this because when the crap really hits the fan the rules go out the window and wild game gets decimated.

I hope and pray we never see this.

God Bless.
 

WalterH

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
May 14, 2020
Messages
152
Some info on hunting license sales in the country and filtered for the "western" region.

This data seems to fit what I have heard from a few different sources is that the overall trend in the nation is that fewer people are hunting each year than the last. More people are quitting than taking it up.

What I feel is happening is that people are getting more concentrated in the prime areas at the prime times due to all of the available information out there these days, which contributes to the feeling of more people in the woods than in years past.

The amount of non-res activity increase is also very interesting.

Source: https://www.nssf.org/research/hunting-license-data-dashboard/

hunting license sales.jpg
 
Joined
Apr 28, 2021
Messages
971
Pending economic collapse of the US economy (points and draws least of our problems ) or next generation taking a liking to Bill Gates plant based steaks . I dont see a bubble occurring with what people will sacrifice for the opportunity to hunt western game . I had posted questions regarding a hunters "breaking point " a while ago and it appears some would donate a kidney for a NR tag
 
OP
R
Joined
Nov 26, 2018
Messages
1,268
Some info on hunting license sales in the country and filtered for the "western" region.

This data seems to fit what I have heard from a few different sources is that the overall trend in the nation is that fewer people are hunting each year than the last. More people are quitting than taking it up.

What I feel is happening is that people are getting more concentrated in the prime areas at the prime times due to all of the available information out there these days, which contributes to the feeling of more people in the woods than in years past.

The amount of non-res activity increase is also very interesting.

Source: https://www.nssf.org/research/hunting-license-data-dashboard/

View attachment 524158
Super interesting! Thanks for sharing.

Very interesting to see numbers either stagnant or somewhat down across the board and a 76% increase in NR numbers in the west, most of which occurred 2018 and after.

I think it’s hard to argue that the Rinella/Newberg effect wasn’t real, for good or bad.

Regardless I wouldn’t imagine that will continue to increase given the larger picture across the board. No doubt some of that 76% will stick around the game long term, but I’d imagine a not insignificant percentage will hunt a handful of seasons and move on. By and large those that had an interest have gotten in the game at this point.

Like I said previously, past data doesn’t predict future results, but when the rest of the numbers in the hunting community are down or stagnant and one small segment has a 76% increase, that points to a bubble rather than a sustainable trend.

Just one guys opinion.
 

Team4LongGun

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Aug 4, 2019
Messages
1,763
Location
NW MT
IMO Western hunting is going through what whitetail hunting went through in the 90s with the emergence of Video Hunting and it being "trendy". The changes for the big buck states compounded drastically and has somewhat leveled off but in no way has gotten "better". Land is at a premium and on a lot of levels contributing to the western influx. 5-6 years to draw an Iowa deer tag with about $1000 in tags and points invested. Many people choose to go west instead.
Totally agree-well said.
 

OMB

WKR
Joined
Nov 13, 2019
Messages
347
This is the key statement in this entire thread.

The number of hunters in the US has been decreasing as a total for decades, but we don't get that impression out West because of how many are coming out here to hunt. But, as hunters decrease throughout the country that will eventually translate to the West as well. Recruitment is a real thing and like someone said above, once the fashion of influencers is gone, the next generation will just move on to the next thing. Very few of the younger crowd are growing up with hunting being an instilled part of their lives.
Once these newcomers who view hunting through the lens of instagram, YouTube, etc, find out how hard hunting actually is, they'll be out of the game in a hurry.

What happens when the demand for NR tags does go down? What are the agencies going to do to generate that lost revenue? Increase tag prices = lower demand, and on it goes. Then they will start turning to resident fees and we all know the whining that will cause.

As far as cost goes, there will be a time in the not so distant future where the tag will hit a price that certainly will cause a drop in hunters. How many on here will apply in as many states as they do now if the price hits $5,000 - $10,000 for an elk tag? The price of trucks and sxs's was brought up as an example of people having enough money, well, those are purchases that are financed and is spread out over years, not made on a yearly basis....not a good example.

We might not be at the bubble bursting stage yet but it will be happening sooner rather than later.

Bingo. Baby Boomers make up around 1/3 of all hunters in the United States right now.

A lot of people feel like we're never going to see numbers go down because they see limited draw tags getting harder to draw and guided hunt prices skyrocketing. It's easy to forget that a lot of these Baby Boomers are retiring with historic stock market gains (lots of cash to burn on adventures) and quite a few got into point systems out West on the ground floor.

It's not going to change overnight, but I'm betting hard that the landscape is going to look a lot different in 10 years once that cohort really starts to age out.
 

CorbLand

WKR
Joined
Mar 16, 2016
Messages
7,815
Bingo. Baby Boomers make up around 1/3 of all hunters in the United States right now.

A lot of people feel like we're never going to see numbers go down because they see limited draw tags getting harder to draw and guided hunt prices skyrocketing. It's easy to forget that a lot of these Baby Boomers are retiring with historic stock market gains (lots of cash to burn on adventures) and quite a few got into point systems out West on the ground floor.

It's not going to change overnight, but I'm betting hard that the landscape is going to look a lot different in 10 years once that cohort really starts to age out.
Do you think that the generations behind it won’t fill the gap left as the baby boomers age out?
 

CorbLand

WKR
Joined
Mar 16, 2016
Messages
7,815
Some info on hunting license sales in the country and filtered for the "western" region.

This data seems to fit what I have heard from a few different sources is that the overall trend in the nation is that fewer people are hunting each year than the last. More people are quitting than taking it up.

What I feel is happening is that people are getting more concentrated in the prime areas at the prime times due to all of the available information out there these days, which contributes to the feeling of more people in the woods than in years past.

The amount of non-res activity increase is also very interesting.

Source: https://www.nssf.org/research/hunting-license-data-dashboard/

View attachment 524158
Be curious to see what the data for ~10-17 for the age bracket would be.
 
Joined
Sep 13, 2016
Messages
2,413
Location
Idaho
With the boomers and new adult onset hunters giving up,there should be some decent buys on .06’s topped with Weavers and Creedmoors topped with Vortex.
 

Bobbyboe

WKR
Joined
Feb 3, 2016
Messages
620
Here’s the post I was talking about. It’s a small sample size, but it appears gen z, for now, are not all that interested in western hunting.

 

OMB

WKR
Joined
Nov 13, 2019
Messages
347
Do you think that the generations behind it won’t fill the gap left as the baby boomers age out?
No, I don't. I understand that there's been an explosion in the popularity of hunting the Western states since 2018, and that there's now more information out there for everyone that wants to jump into it. I also understand there's been a huge population migration to some of the Western states, which obviously some % of those are hunters.

But if you look at hunting participation in the Midwest, hunter numbers in most every state pretty much peaked around the year 2000, which coincides with Baby Boomers being in their late 30's/40's and their kids being young hunting age. Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois, etc, all show similar data over the period.

Here's a study from the University of Wisconsin from 2008 (!) where they go into quite a bit of detail on generational cohorts in hunting, interesting to see what they got right and wrong 15 years ago:


This isn't necessarily a bad thing, as I think R3 efforts more than anything have been more "You need to be hunting elk in Colorado, so we can sell you a complete set of new gear and equipment, use code INFLUENCER at checkout" than they have creating meaningful advocates for the resource in every state. But to look at demographic trends and hard data and conclude that 2-5 Gen Z/Millennials hunters will fill the shoes of each retiring Baby Boomer is not supported by the data.
 

Poser

WKR
Joined
Dec 27, 2013
Messages
5,620
Location
Durango CO
Here’s the post I was talking about. It’s a small sample size, but it appears gen z, for now, are not all that interested in western hunting.


Or, maybe they just don’t have interest in forums.
 
Top