Guys, the land is privately owned. Even the land under the Mississippi River is somebody's land, according to MS law. But the law says when the water is on that land between the natural banks, it is the public's right to use the water. The water level will rise and fall depending on many things. You can use it when it's low and you can use it when it's high, so long as you stay between the natural banks and in the water.
To me, that means if I touch the bottom or a willow tree, I'm trespassing. If that's not the rule, then anyone can come in and cut the timber or deer hunt between the high banks when the water is not up to the high bank. The water is public but the dirt or anything attached to the dirt is still private. So if you can get into the backwater without touching the bottom and without touching a tree and your decoy weights don't touch bottom, you're on public water and you're OK.
Wading in the water, decoy weights or boat anchors touching the bottom or touching a tree in the water has been declared a normal part of the hunting process. No, you cannot cut down trees or hunt from the dry land. It is also illegal to hunt deer from a boat in MS.
The question is......Is the land from the red line to the river privately owned by someone who is paying taxes on that land and spending time and money improving it, or is it land owned by the government?
All of the land is owned by private individuals. Even land up under the Big river that barges pass over every day is somebody's land. But it is land between the natural banks of the old river channel (or existing river channel) and when flooded, the public has a right to use the water.
If you will go back and reread my posts, I said that as long as you are
in the water,
between the natural banks you are okay. You cannot be on the dry land between the natural banks and you cannot be in floodwater outside the natural banks.
If all oxbows and bayous of the state of Mississippi are public
I never said all bayous were public. Straight Bayou isn't public, Silver Creek isn't public, Jackson Bayou isn't public. Tippo Bayou runs right through Tallahatchie NWR and Tippo is public. I don't know how it can be public, but can be restricted by the Feds. I'll have to double check on that because the portion that runs through the refuge is part of the public waterway declared by MDEQ.