Trespassing is wrong and I am guilty of doing so a couple times in my younger years by sitting on the wrong side of a fence to have a better shooting opportunity at turkeys. I have no excuses, now with age and maturity I understand I was wrong and would take the fine, shut up and move on. I'm also more experienced now and understand that I can do better with less land given the right hunting style. I also have farmers and landowners as friends and understand how they feel about trespassing. I used to think it wasn't a big deal, that no one else was hunting there and no one would know but it's about more than that, for every "respectful trespasser" (which is an odd term, but those are the ones you'll never even know they were there and haven't left a trace/garbage) there are 10 disrespectful ones who will do donuts in their seeded fields, dump garbage, soil, cut grass, etc. at the end of their field, cut a fence to retrieve a deer they just shot with their truck in one of their plots, leave the gut pile and gloves, plastic bags, beer cans, etc. or go onto a pasture and leave the gate open and let cattle escape.
Most farmers (out west) will give you permission to hunt their land if you ask, especially coyotes. Now I can't say the same about Quebec and Ontario, I've lived and hunted there for years. Most landowners will not let you hunt for several reasons: they hunt themselves, they don't hunt and love animals or simply because they're tire of trespassers. Now my favourite were land owners who would give you permission only if you paid them a retarded amount of money to hunt there. I knew a land owner who charged guys 1000-2000$ to hunt deer or turkey on his land, the guy would complain year round about turkeys and deer costing him 20 000$ in wasted crops, his logic, was to charge hunters, who thinned the herd, to recoup his money. I personally disagree with it as I see it as me doing you a favour by harvesting animals that waste you crops, and you doing me a favour my allowing me to hunt. Well whether I liked it or not, it was his land, his rules and had no issues with him doing so.
He would also complain that the hunters he would get on his land were never successful, they were all "rich guys from Montreal" with no experience, who expected a canned hunt. He would get money out of them but 6 guys would shoot a doe or two over a week and that was it. Personally, I hunted his neighbours property for free and between the three of us hunting there we would shoot more turkeys or deer than all his "clients" combined. He eventually allowed us to hunt his property for free during turkey season only, he realized what 2-3 experienced hunters can do compared to 5-6 unexperienced ones, we would all bag our two toms, taking out 6 toms a year compared to the other guys who didn't really know what they were doing and shoot one or two.