I spend 90% of my time working pinch points, travel corridors, and transition lines. As Eberhart preaches very strongly, I set up for the secondary cover lines almost all the time, as that's where the mature bucks will pass through. If the pinch is too open, i don't bother, it will not produce bucks in the daylight. State land in Michigan is tough to hunt effectively. Where I'm at, its big woods with mature Oak and pines, or massive expanses of what we locals call short pines, that are developed for the Kirtland Warbler bird. I tend to hunt several swamps in the area that run in adjoining fingers. Pinches and corridors pay off because the deer are very difficult to pattern otherwise. They have food literally everywhere with the Oaks being prevalent in this area. There is no agriculture anywhere within miles.