I'm from the staked plains where every square inch is farmed turnrow to turnrow.
I'm not totally naive as I spent a year in NE OK, for those that are familiar with the area Salina, Kenwood, Rose area.
Spent a few drunk nights in Siloam springs, AR. So I know how things are back in the woods and hollers.
This may be no surprise to you but I find it intriguing.
You have your serious cattleman with the clean pasture and good fences.

Then the farmers from cotton, corn, milo, beans, wheat, canola, you name it

Then there are the creeks and bottoms where the trees grow thick.
No femce or old broke down fences.
Thick grown up trees and brush.
A mail box way back up on the county road, but no sign of a dwelling anywhere. A no trespassing sign a 1/2 mile in the woods. You look around and realize they'd never find your corpse out here so you make a 180 and head back to open country

The diversity is interesting
I'm not totally naive as I spent a year in NE OK, for those that are familiar with the area Salina, Kenwood, Rose area.
Spent a few drunk nights in Siloam springs, AR. So I know how things are back in the woods and hollers.
This may be no surprise to you but I find it intriguing.
You have your serious cattleman with the clean pasture and good fences.

Then the farmers from cotton, corn, milo, beans, wheat, canola, you name it

Then there are the creeks and bottoms where the trees grow thick.
No femce or old broke down fences.
Thick grown up trees and brush.
A mail box way back up on the county road, but no sign of a dwelling anywhere. A no trespassing sign a 1/2 mile in the woods. You look around and realize they'd never find your corpse out here so you make a 180 and head back to open country

The diversity is interesting