Or we could quit speculating and guessing and look at the historic record.
The Bledsoe brothers came into the Cumberland Basin and 9 men shot 2600 deer in less than one year!
Casper Mansker shot 14 deer in a 400 yard streach between two creeks in less than an hour.
Phillip Demonbrian's hunters "wiped out" hundreds of buffalo at Bledsoe Lick and left the bones to bleach. One year before the buffalo had been so thick you could walk for a mile on their backs.
In December, 1780, 20 men went up the Cumberland to the mouth of the Caney Fork River and killed 5 bear, 75 buffalo and more than 80 deer.
Being a hunter in the 18th or 19th century was considerably different than being a "broke country boy" in the depression of the 1930s. The depression actually occurred due to the loss of the frontier. There was no place to go and start over, no safty valve.
The frontier hunters seem to have shot the powder when they had it. They started their hunts with plenty of powder and when they ran out they went and got more. The only time I can see that they worried about their noise alerting Indians was when Indian sign was evident or the woods was swarming with them.
If you check the records you will find that snares and makeshift tools have always been the domain of the child hunters in any culture. The children often supply 25% of the protin value in any rural society using their crude devices. During hard times the adults will often fall back on their childhood knowledge to stay alive.
People went to the frontier looking for a better life, not a worse one. Their hardships were usually due to warfare, acts of God, or city bred stupidity.
:m2c: