I finally got a chance to watch your videos this afternoon. Great job on an good topic that everyone wants to know more about. When people start their preseason scouting and can't get good bucks on camera they assume their aren't any bucks there. But deer just don't move much in the summer or late summer for lots of reason. They have plenty of food and know where the water is and have no pressure so they just won't move. I have had cameras running on feeders for 2 months on 400 acres and only had one bachelor group. My acorns started dropping last week and now I have 4 bachelor groups. This is why your video showing scouting these hard wood bottoms for trails and food is so important. I am still surprised how many bow hunters can't ID a white oak at a 100 yards much less standing next to one. You need to make a video on how to ID different oaks before the season starts. Your video on in season scouting showing that hunting pressure overrides the need for a foods source has change their pattern again was good and shows a need to be active during the season. I hunted public land for the first time last year and studied my maps and went in and setup and had does using the trail I was on that afternoon just no bucks. My biggest problem with public land is not a lot of options and not understanding all the rules. I hunted Tuskegee and call the lady and she said National Forest didn't have any special rules just get off the road 150 yards and follow state laws. Also none of my buddies will hunt public land because of the bad rap that only aholes hunt public land. At my age and being single it's not a good idea to hunt without a partner to keep up with me. If I have an accident no one will miss me until I don't show up for work and then it would take forever to find me. I use the Virtual Sign In Board on the farm so even if I hunt by myself at 9:00 everyone knows if I haven't checked out and they know where I'm at. I notice it looks like you are doing your scouting and making these videos by yourself. Maybe in your next video you could talk a little about the need to have a plan in case something happened to you while you are on public land. Safety first.