You can’t possibly be serious that there is no difference in looking at a paper map with topo or very poor satellite imagery and having an app on your phone with high quality topographical imagery that updates your position in real time.
It’s not even close. If you can’t agree to that then you have never done serious land nav.
I don’t understand why people cannot accept the reality that by making things easier, more people will use the resource; if more people use the resource, the quality of the usable resource will decline.
I use all of the mapping software available to me and I shoot a compound bow, scour the Internet for info, use gps and will use whatever else becomes available. That being said, I know we are collectively shooting ourselves in the foot.
If you hunt because you enjoy wild (or as wild as they can be) places, those days are quickly declining. The situation with property In Texas is about the worst thing that could happen and is a terrible model. Privatization sucks for the hunter, plain and simple.
It actually sounds like you might be the one who has "never done serious land nav."
What year did you finish your surveying cert or complete your carto courses? It was 1988 for me. I learned surveying the old way, with a transit and steel chain. You do know what a steel surveying chain is, right? A paper USGS topo map is like a 3D image to me. So yea, to me, there isn't that much difference between a good paper map and OnX for the purpose of navigation and I don't go anywhere without paper maps to this day. My point was paper maps were the technology of their day that allowed MORE folks to navigate into the hunting woods than could without them. Before all those readily available paper maps, what did people do? I got bi*ched at by quite a few ranchers in NM who wanted to tell me my BLM maps "were wrong" because I was using them to access hunting areas in the 80's and 90's. Different technology, same outcome. Those maps put more people on public lands.
I don't understand why people cannot accept the fact that by more people being comfortable (and safe) hunting EVERYONE'S land, we have more advocates for said land and the hunting lifestyle we hold dear.
As for the situation in Texas, it probably is the worst thing that could happen for the have-nots. But for those who have land, or access to private land, there are a lot of advantages to having control over who has access. I'm not saying I want the whole U.S. to be 98% privately owned like Texas is. Far from it. I was just pointing out to one angry member that he has choices.
It's no different in the West. Thousands of guys/year pay for access to private land or hire a guide. Why isn't the grumpy old man angry about that? They aren't "working" as hard as he is, are they?
This is just another example of hunters eating their own and I just refuse to sit by idly and let it go unchallenged. We all should support one another, even if that means having to find another place to hunt every now and then, or (gasp!) SHARING our public land "spot" with someone else.
This is why I never get too attached to a particular spot. Because I know it leads to his kind of frustration, and I know it's pointless because we're hunting EVERYONE'S land. When I don't get drawn for my first choice unit or when someone already has the campsite I wanted or there are more trucks at a trailhead than I care to compete with, I always see that as an opportunity to go somewhere new and see some new ground, which is a big part of what this style of hunting is to me in the first place. I can't understand having access to millions of acres of public land, and hunting the same places year after year. How boring.