> One point is that the NFS may have made arrangements with the landowner such > that some access by the public is permitted. I say this because an official > USFS trail (Crosier Mountain Trail)[1] crosses private land and there are no > signs saying "No Trespassing"
The way may be, but usually the land itself is not. The land is still tagged access=private, and the trail is tagged either access=yes if it is a legal public easement over private land, or access=permissive if there is an agreement with the landowner to allow public to access the trail as long as they stay on trail (but there is no legal right of way otherwise) _______________________________________________ Talk-us mailing list [email protected] https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-us

