That makes sense. When I'm working in north MO, along the Iowa line, you can always tell when you have crossed over into Iowa. The MO road might be light gravel or dirt.....hard to tell which......and in most places just wide enough for two vehicles to pass and rough as a cob. But pass into Iowa and it becomes a big, wide, well maintained thoroughfare. I remember about 50 years ago, Dad and some neighbors used to go to Iowa pheasant hunting......and hunted a combination of road ROW and private land. They always took 50 to 100 pounds of north MO hardshell pecans with them to give to farmers who gave permission to hunt.
In our case, if farmed row crop and no fences, beyond the road bed itself, there is no ROW. Crops planted to very edge of road ditch.
So if allowed, good Justin is taking advantage of it. Some of his best info is found on his scouting videos......shows how his catches have improved by by slowing down and finding all the trails he had been driving past. The lone tree etc. I've got that going on on my place. Coon trail coming to my barn extends to a road crossing past a small pond and lone tree in a pasture fence line. That is across the road and timber over there is home sweet home for the coons during the day.
Driving around, I'm also starting to take notice of where I find road kill. They are crossing the road there for a reason. Most of the time, I can see it. Others......like one the other day with no crop on either side of the road, no buildings and no trees within a half mile. Barren land everywhere you look. Yet there was a dead coon in the middle of the road. No reason for him to be there....but he was.
Last edited by HayDay; 11/16/20 10:14 AM.