There are the few that will pass on legal bucks, most will try to take any legal buck and nothing wrong with that, then you have those who shoot and check after it is down and hope for the best. Those are the ones that the WCO's have to concentrate on. You have to understand that many PA hunters were brought up into hunting when we had an embarrassment of deer numbers and they thought that easily getting a deer by going out and sitting against a tree and killing a deer was the way it was supposed to be. They were and are the ones who complained to anyone who would listen that PA was destroying the deer herd when HR kicked in, of course those same people shot as many deer as they had tags for which tells you a lot about human nature and holding back for anything that was bigger than 3 inch spikes was a foreign concept for a whole bunch of hunters. The hunters who knew we had too many deer went along with the program even if they didn't like it because they knew it was necessary and those who young when it started and have spent most if not all of their deer hunting under AR and HR have come to accept it and as you have seen our deer are in better condition. In the 70s and 80s if a 200 lb deer came into a butcher shop people showed up just to see it, now it isn't uncommon. I have lived long enough that I have seen the times when it was only the northern tier, the south central and part of the north west that was where hunters went for deer. Now there is decent deer hunting in all 67 counties in the state. I have also seen the damage to habitat caused by too many deer, browse lines where everything they could reach was eaten except the ferns. Wildlife management is not a perfect science, it takes some trial and error and adjustment but I think PA has gone in the right direction from my observations.