I hated going to the check stations, however they were an excelent way to keep track of the herd and keep honest people honest. I talked to our game warden last year about the new rules and he said the only people it will benefit are the poachers.
The biggest problem with bow hunters are the guys who are only half serious about it. You know the guys, they go out to their stand five minutes before shooting time, take the quickest route, fidget on stand, get bored,are afraid to walk out in the dark, and pay no attention to wind direction. They mostly grew up gun hunting, where these tactics got them deer, with so many deer around and so many hunters in the woods in seven days of hunting they usually killed something. Bow hunting is completely different, the woods you screw up in October will be void of deer by November if you use the above tactics. You can spook deer from their beds once or twice, more than that and they will move on, you can leave scent around the woods a few times, after that the deer move on. When I'm bowhunting I treat the woods with kid gloves, I'll get a little agressive during the rut but I always vary stand locations and how I approach the stands and am very careful not to spook any deer that I see. This has worked for me in the past, some years I am still seeing deer on the last day of season.
Cherokee
I have two tags for the late season, a land owner firearm and an antlerless muzzleloader. I will decide later in the season how I will hunt, this morning I saw seven does feeding in our picked bean field. If they hold their pattern I will sneak out after they bed down, probably an hour after dawn, maybe later and try to sneak up on them in their beds. If they bed off of my property I will wait until afternoon when they come back out to feed. I will use a creek for entrance into the woods so they won't see me. Hopefully there will be snow on the ground and a 10-15mph wind. Late in the season everything depends on food, find where the deer are eating and set up that pattern. I have a big advantage living on the farm I hunt, it's only 40 acres (20 is tillable) but I take deer off of it every year, some big bucks too.