I have an 850+ acre farm in SW Virginia thatI use exclusively for hosting veterans, first responders, and their immediate families for some R&R, decompression, family time, and alone time in the woods.
We use Canvas Map from HuntStand as our "go to" mapping app, after having tried HuntStand and onX side by side for several months as we mapped and marked our infrastructure (trails, stands, blinds, food plots, etc.). HuntStand consistently had more up-to-date imagery and property-owner information than OnX, which is why we selected it over its competitor.
The ability to (relatively) easily get a hard-copy map printed out via HuntStand is a nice bonus feature. The first couple of years I used a very basic outline of the property boundaries for the map, and went back and updated it with paint markers and DIY printed labels from our $16 Amazon label maker. It worked for awhile, but when the opportunity came to get this at a significant savings, I opted to buy a hard copy of our current layout of the farm.
My only two complaints are that even though I had unselected the trail camera layer, it ended up on the final product just the same. I selected the layer, and wanted our harvest-information layer included, and it didn't make the final copy.
Not all that big of deal, but with 850 some-odd acres, the cameras aren't permanently locked into their current locations. We also pull our cameras out of the woods once the antlers drop and we can't tell who is who, which gives us a chance to clean the cameras, format all of the cards, yank the batteries, and keep them out of the woods until summer when we can start to tell who is who again, where they are hanging out, as well as how they're getting there. This also changes come fall, and even mid-season. Sometimes a couple of moves happen for some cameras in a given season.
Since most of our guests are just that--guests--most of them do not know what is what, or have any knowledge of the property prior to arriving, so having a hard-copy visual to give them the lay of the land is very helpful. It's also useful for explaining fields of fire, any circumstances that would prevent a shot from being fired in a certain direction from a certain point/location, and a layman's understanding of how to find a main trail, or worst case, find their way back to camp should that need arise.
Having the current camera locations on the hard-copy map isn't the most visually appealing aspect, and having to explain that it does not accurately display camera locations every single time we have a new person or group hunting our farm (which is a couple of times a week during peak season) does get a little tiresome. With 60-some-odd cameras in use, they seem to be everywhere, and it isn't quite as clean (uncluttered) of a map as I would have preferred.
Still, for the price, I'm happy with what we received, even if it did include a layer I had not wanted included and is missing a layer I had selected and wanted included. It hangs inside our shade structure (20x30-feet open-ended carport) so our visitors have the ability to study it and compare it to what's on their phone via the HuntStand App so they have a better understanding of important locations and features of the property, especially if they are driving/riding themselves from the hunt camp to their hunting location(s).
Once we wrap for this season, and the cameras are down, I may go in and clean up some of the other layers and try printing another version since the camera locations will no longer be on our current digital map.
Map is hanging just below the euro mount, and gives everyone a chance to get a visual reference for where they'll be, anyone nearby, Property lines, etc.