The art of corner crossing?

Joined
Feb 19, 2019
Messages
499
Location
Central TN
Before I ask I want it to be clear that I am 100% observant of private property rights and would in no way want to trespass intentionally or unintentionally on someones land.

With that clarified, how does one go about corner crossing legally? Hopefully I'll be in Wyoming for antelope this year.
*Can it be done on foot just by stepping over the corner?
*Is a ladder only needed if you have to cross a fence?
*How can you identify the legal boundaries? I assume most corners won't be marked by the private land owners clearly if at all. Mapping apps aren't accurate to rely on.

I've read about corner markers placed by the state. Section corners and benchmarks where section corners are most reliable.
*Is that the only kind of marker you can rely on?
*What does a section corner marker look like?

This is an assumption because I have no experience with it but it seems the vast majority of corners would not be marked. And if not marked then don't cross seems to be the only option.
 
Corners may or may not be marked.
Fences can be not on property lines but where the terrain dictates they be put up.
Get a good GPs and look for the corner markers.
Most GWs are not going to hassle you unless you're way off the corner.
Yes we still have some LOs that will give you grief, know where you are and let them call the GW if they get in your face about it.
I don't think a ladder will be needed, just don't damage the fence.
 
It's legal in Wyoming as of the 2025 Tenth Circuit ruling, SCOTUS declined appeal to step from one piece of federal public land directly to another at the exact corner without touching private ground.

On foot Yes, just carefully step over at the precise point.

Ladder Only needed if there's a fence in the way don't touch or damage it.

Finding corners Use onX Hunt for likely spots, but you really need the physical section corner monument on the ground for it to be defensible. These are usually a steel post with a brass cap stamped with township range section info, or an iron pin pipe. Many are unmarked or lost, so if you can't clearly find and confirm the monument, don't risk it.

Stick strictly to federal to federal corners and you'll be fine. Respect landowners and you're golden for antelope.
 
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