Another hunter has a tree stand near the eastern edge, so I can't approach it from that direction. I'm not going to be "that guy" because it's hard enough hunting public land. If I mess up a hunt by accident, that's one thing. But I won't hunt where I know somebody else will be. The northern approach
would be the same situation. The western approach is thick, thick, creek bottom and I'd spread my scent everywhere trudging through that. Thus my stand is on the southern side, on the side of a steep ridge, which happens to be really the only "funnel" going past it. There's two directions of travel for deer, with a third deer trail coming towards me squeezing though the thick stuff and the western edge of the actual kudzu patch.
So I'm overlooking a deer trail T intersection. My approach comes from the south through a hardwood/pine area and is a total cakewalk.
But I have to hunt this in the morning because of the thermals. Toward dark my scent would shoot downhill and I'd be busted for sure. The only other time would be right in the middle of the day with a north wind - which is very common so that's good. I'm pretty excited about this spot. Now that my brush blind is finished, I won't have to return until the season opens. But being public land I can't control who else scouts near it.