A common problem for city and suburban folks, even those who try to be careful and respectful, is how to know when a dirt or other farm road is just too wet or muddy to drive on. They have almost no experience with this.
And there they are, in their super-charged 4-wheel drive pickup trucks which, according to the commercials, can drive through swamps, and push through 4 feet of mud, and climb up mountains made of cinderblocks. They honestly believe it.
So, they just put her in 4 wheel low, and go.
We all know the results: a massively torn up road, with eight-inch deep ruts going all over the place, ending in a pig-pen where the truck, stuck in the mud, wallowed back and forth, and around and around, digging up the road and everything around it, trying to turn around and get out.
This is a tragedy for the the landowner, as he now has to pay to scrape and rebuild the road.
Again, I avoided this by just refusing to let guests drive onto the land. I made them park up front.
If you are not going to be there, then tell them they have to park up front and WALK in. If they are too darned lazy to walk a mile or so into some nice land to hunt, then they don't deserve to hunt at all.
If they are worried about dragging out the animal, then tell them they have to bring a mechanical mule (a small frame on fat bicycle tires, to carry out the animal.) Or, buy one yourself and leave it chained to a convenient tree on your property with a combination lock, for them to use.
If they don't like it, tough beans. No hunting.
Mannyr