That is worse, but similar to the situation in the wife's farm neighborhood. There, it is a major creek diagonaling through the area, and a road that split the legal parcels, and the usage has adapted to those barriers rather than the parcel boundaries.?ÿ She and her brother split their parents' land but his cornfield includes 3 or 4 acres of her tract that is pasture on the other side of the creek.?ÿ The road splits her "pasture" so 5 acres of it is in her crop field.?ÿ A 40-acre field has to be accessed from two directions because of the creek. The road was realigned in 1949 and they didn't do deeds to clean up the slivers left on the wrong sides. Add a neighbor who thinks the GIS means he owns some of her field.?ÿ?ÿ
The whole area needs a replat if they ever decide to sell any part without selling it all as one piece, and we may decide to find out how expensive that will be. It's not just theirs that's a mess. A couple neighbors use 2 or 3 acres of each others' land because of the creek.?ÿ Fortunately ours doesn't extend to the abandoned railroad that has piecemeal ownership.
So, inquiring minds want to know how this turned out.?ÿ Did you find the stones?
.... ???? he probably got distracted oogling grannies down at the Piggly-Wiggly....
Rifle season for deer will end on January 12 at that location.?ÿ Thus, will not set foot anywhere near those stones until that date has passed.?ÿ Too many out of state hunters who confuse movement of any kind with trophies.
Rifle season for deer will end on January 12 at that location.?ÿ Thus, will not set foot anywhere near those stones until that date has passed.?ÿ Too many out of state hunters who confuse movement of any kind with trophies.
Yep.?ÿ There was a story on the news last week where someone killed TWO people in their own hunting party.
Have no interest in stumbling onto this situation, either.
Hunter Dies After Being Gored by Deer He Thought He Had Shot and Killed
An experienced Arkansas hunter was found severely injured in the woods Tuesday night, his body riddled with antler puncture wounds. He later died.
The 66-year-old man from Yellville had shot a deer, and made plans with his nephew to field dress the deer’s body together, police told CNN.
When his nephew found him, the hunter was alert and talking, and was even able to call his wife. But he stopped breathing by the time paramedics could get him to the hospital, the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission said.
Officials are not certain that the antler wounds are the official cause of his death, the commission said in a statement. He may have died from other medical issues such as a heart attack, the statement said, but there will be no autopsy.
Injuries resulting from wounded deer are not uncommon, said Joe Dale Purdom from the Game and Fish Commission.
On occasion, hunters may approach a deer thinking it is dead when it is only stunned or injured. Usually, they jump up and run away, sometimes injuring hunters in the process, Purdom told CNN.
But this is the first time he has seen a hunter die after approaching a stunned deer.
Purdom said it is generally good hunting practice to wait 15 to 30 minutes before approaching a shot deer to make sure it is dead.
The victim, who had lived in Yellville for more than 20 years, was an experienced hunter, so Purdom said he doubted that his injuries were a result of poor hunting practice. Instead, he said, it seems to have been an unusual accident.
The wounded buck has not been found, Purdom said.