I posted this elsewhere on here in response to another's post complaining about nowhere to hunt. I think it's a subject we all run into so I'm posting this here too. This is just my opinion and I'd like to hear you all's too;
[Quote; The right to hunt and fish does not mean much unless one has a place to hunt or fish. In Nebraska when I was a kid one could hunt anywhere unless the ground was posted, and if one posted his land he was more or less considered a #%^&!. That changed in the late '60's and early '70's when farmers decided that although they hunted anywhere they wanted to as youths they would not accomidate the next generation of youths. The older generations are not always nice!]
My response;
I think there are several reasons for that. It use to be that farms and ranches, and land in general, had been handed down through families and everyone in the area knew each other. Now folks, moving to the country from the city, have bought up many farms and ranches and much of the land in general. They have a whole another mind set than the old timers. Most figure that if they bought the land with their hard earned money then it's going to be them that enjoys it, not someone they don't even know. Also, all too often, when permission is given, it's abused. Many times I've seen one or two people, who got permmission to hunt, bring a bunch of friends who don't have permission. Or show up with a case of beer, get wasted and shoot at every thing that moves including livestock. Teens that think it's permission to bring their buddies and girlfriends to a place to party that their parents don't know about. People that leave closed gates open, leave trash behind, or just disrespect the landowners in every way imaginable. That kind of behavior is more common than not and not the way to make friends of land owners. One bad experience ruins it for everyone and the land gets posted. The owner tells his neighbors and their land gets posted too! Also, if one or two get permission, then everyone that comes after won't. Land will only support so many hunters. My son and I have found that if you aproach a land owner respectively, dressed presentable, offer to help with his chores, offer to share your harvest if you have a good hunt, give refferances if possible, and offer to drop everything and stop your hunt to report anything that the owner should be made aware of, such as ill livestock, tresspassers, fences down, ect., all goes a long way in gaining the trust and respect of a landowner and makes it much more likely to get permission to hunt. Hunting on private land is a privlage not a right.