I fully agree with this point. I have accrss to hunt waterfowl and practice with my bow on 40 acres right on the edge of city limits where I live, that is five minutes from my house. I met the guy this past year who archery hunts on that property (I don't hunt there as I just practice there and hunt several hours away). We got to talking and he stated that he used to hunt on a farm where my house now sits in a residential area built 25 years ago. He talked about how much has changed and how he has had to keep moving further from his place to keep hunting. Soon the place I hunt and practice will be developed as well and I will need to change my ways.That may be true, but there's some important differences that don't get discussed. Older relatives of mine that hunted in the 60s-80s mostly went after small game around family farms. A lot of eastern areas didn't have the same big game opportunities we have now, sure, but I think there's been a large shift from kicking up rabbits around your neighbor's farm edges towards "big game or nothing". How many posts are there on here from brand new hunters going straight to rifle mule deer or archery elk? So comparing the same total number of hunters from decades ago isn't exactly an equal comparison on the landscape.
Land has changed too. That same volume of hunters used to be more spread out across lots of smaller parcels, family farms, and woodlots. How many of those places have been paved over for subdivisions? Or "farmed by inches", to the point there's no edge habitat for quail and pheasants anymore?
IMO, the number of hunters may be the same, but they're packed into less area and focused more on big game seasons than in the past.