Lloyd, I wish I had your patients. You took the time to answer a lot of peoples question and made perfect since doing so.
I have been on self guided hunts in Alaska. It is a hard hunt and brutally cold there. I got my Caribou on the 3rd day. Do you want to know the hardest part of that hunt. It was packing that Caribou back to camp about 1 mile away. You are so right about peoples perception of fenced and free range hunting. Like I posted before, I have high fenced hunted 2 times in my long life of hunting. I don't see anything wrong with it. I hand hunted harder on them two hunts than I did on 90% of my yearly deer hunts. I live in small Delaware, public hunting land is not very abundant and if you don't own land or know someone that does, you are out there on public land with all the other guys. Fortunately I have 2 farms to hunt, I also have my 20 Archers to hunt in West Virginia. I could call myself the great free range hunter and walk all the land I hunt on, and find a deer to shoot, but it may not be the one I want or I just may push the deer to the next farm for someone else to shoot. But it does not take long to walk 20, 40 or 100 Archers. So I guess my title of great hunter is out the window, because I did not hunt an area big enough to be called hunting.
What the guys from Montana, Colorado, Wyoming etc tend to forget is, a lot of use fellow hunter don't have access to vast open ranges and public lands to hunt. The other thing they tend to forget is the cost of going to the West to hunt big game. Non-residents get the big shaft and gouged when they come to hunt. It is very difficult of us to go out West and scout for game in the preseason, we can't just hop in the truck and drive there on the weekend.
Sure I could move there, but I like it where I am at and have a great job. The bottom line here is, we all have different opinion of hunting and we all have different styles of hunting. But for the love of God, why can't we as hunters quit criticizing others for the legal method of hunting?