I don't own land but I very much dislike people doing that sort of thing because it pisses off landowners and makes them less likely to allow hunting on their land.
I'm the city-raised child of urban working-class immigrants from U.K., didn't get into hunting until I was in my thirties. The first fellow who mentored me took me to Crown land and to private land for which he said he had permission. He didn't mention that the law allows us to hunt on private land that isn't posted, I just assumed permission was required. Later I would go hunting with an older friend, he explained that to me. He's a road-hunter (much older than I am, though I don't think that's the only reason he hunts that way.) I prefer to hunt alone, afoot. I enjoyed going with him when we didn't get a chance at anything, still got to see a lot and hear his stories, didn't have the uncomfortable feeling that even if the law says we can go on someone's land, they might prefer that we didn't.
Both of these mentors made it clear, and this seemed self-explanatory to me, "you don't shoot an animal in someone's crop, you are going to have to walk or drive over the crop to retrieve."