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Good point. That might make it harder or even impossible for an angry trespasserWhich is why my next property will be owned by a trust. Much harder to determine who is involved.
to find your home if you don't live on the property. But it doesn't stop them from putting up retaliatory booby traps or starting a fire in your woods the next time there is a dry spell and a serious wind. In addition there is actually a legal issue. If a road or trail has been used by the general public for years it can be claimed that it is a public access whether your deed says anything about it or not. The trail in the video looks very heavily used. My guess is a good case could be made that it is an established public access.
I know of one community in the Adirondacks where most of the woods and ponds and lakes were owned by rich guys from NY city. And those who labored on their "camps" and properties were locals. However, there was a balance of power and respect. If a rich NY city absentee owner behaved overly arrogantly or abusively towards locals, his camp tended to be "struck by lightning" when he was gone. That is burned to the ground for causes unknown. "Camps" might be anything from real camps to mansions with helicopter pads. One I visited was a simple open three-sided wooden shelter. But it was on thousands of acres of woods with deer and bear and a stocked trout pond with several canoes. Another was an entire island if several hundred acres on a lake with a full several bedroom house with a guest house, a dock and boat house and motorboat, guideboat, and canoes.
When deciding how to protect your property rights its important to avoid actions that are so extreme they inspire desire for revenge. Requiring people ask for permission to use in writing is a good idea because it confirms your property rights. Allowing the public to use without permission can establish a legal public access, so is to be avoided.