New property......should I clear all my property lines?

13bonatter69

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Apr 9, 2014
Messages
243
I just bought 120 acres hunting property in Mississippi and want to doze a path all the way around the whole property so that I can keep it cleaned and disked. I will plant some of the path in food plots and have a "safe line" between me and my neighbors
for future burning of the property. My question, is should I doze the path right down the exact property line, or should I leave a "buffer zone" of say 20 to 30 feet between me and all my neighbors and let it grow up nice and think to deter tresspassing keep all the "lookie loos" honest? Thoughts?
 

Afhunter1

WKR
Joined
Mar 30, 2016
Messages
1,066
Location
South Central, PA
Managing a small piece of property is tough, you are not gonna be able to hold deer on it. I’d try to make the center of it as thick as possible with bedding cover and maybe 3 or 4 —-2.5 -acre plots. I like white clover in 3 and a brassic in 1. I don’t think I’d be dozing anything. My biggest success comes from fact that I NEVER go into the bedding area. I wait for them to come out. Usually we kill all our nice bucks in last 10 min of light as they pop out to look around the plot.

Biggest thing is don’t piss off your neighbors cause they will shoot all ur nice bucks at night. Ha ha.
 

KenLee

WKR
Joined
Jun 9, 2021
Messages
2,614
Location
South Carolina
Two thoughts come to mind:
1. If you leave a buffer zone, the neighbors may treat it as it's theirs, acting as your road is the line.
2. If you don't leave a buffer zone and plant it, the neighbors may hunt the line.
Get to know the neighbors and find out what type folks they are. Also find out who they let hunt their property.
Then make your decision.
 
Joined
May 6, 2018
Messages
9,810
Location
Shenandoah Valley
How certain are you of the property lines?

Even after a survey, it might get contested. I have seen it get messy, especially if timber is involved. It's not infrequent for a neighbor here to have something different for a property line, leaving several acres in limbo. When was the date of previous survey?

I leave buffers, but people start to think that's their property since I'm not using it.
 

N.ID7803

WKR
Joined
Nov 25, 2020
Messages
513
Location
N. Idaho
Get a survey, then clear right up to the lines. Offer to cost share the survey with the neighbors, best of both worlds. Surveyed lines are pretty cut and dry as to whose is whose….
 
Joined
Dec 13, 2023
Messages
456
If I had it to do all over again, I'd doze a trail along the boundary fence.
I'm not knowledgeable about any Mississippi landowners laws and rights, so take that with a grain of salt.

I would attempt to make contact with your neighbors. Most are okay, some are quirky.

The clearance along the fence is more to make fence maintenance as easy as possible.
Birds constantly light on fences and poop seeds that sprout and grow. Keep them cleaned up....ESPECIALLY if it's youpon! That stuff will take over a fenceline in a heartbeat.

As for the deer.
It's large enough to hold "some" deer. Since a deer's home territory is normally about a mile square (640 acres), they should frequent your property quite often. It's just a matter of using attractants.
Scratch out some food plots, set up salt licks and feeders if they're allowed.

The deer aren't yours. They belong to the state.
 

Elite7

FNG
Joined
Sep 9, 2016
Messages
57
Farms bordering mine have been surveyed through the years. Each end up being a few feet off from each other. I think dozing along the property line wuld be asking for hard feeling with neighbors from the start. I would give it a few years and see how thing play out then make that decision
 
Joined
Jun 15, 2016
Messages
2,863
What size parcels are around you, how long have they been there, do you know your neighbors, how much do they hunt and where do they hunt, do you live nearby or a long way away, historical deer movement, topography, is the boundary a bedding area, is there already a difference in habitat along the line, etc. I have different approaches to different sides of my property based on these and many other factors. You said you “just bought” it… my advice is to do nothing right off the bat as long as you have access to enjoy the property as is. Just hunt it for a year, try to establish contact with your neighbors and see if they are brown it’s down or managing for age structure. Is it leased or is it the owner that hunts it. Put up cams and get a feel for deer movement. See where the pressure is. I wouldn’t get too aggressive with anything until you get a complete picture, and then once you do, put a plan together that is based on your individual situation.
 
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