Blog > Land Can Tell When Nobody is Watching
Land knows when no one is watching.
A few years ago, I was meeting with a farm owner who was considering selling he and his wife’s long-time family farm.
We stood along an old fence line. He wasn’t looking at his own ground. He was looking across the fence at his neighbor’s place. No cattle. No equipment tracks. Just weeds growing wherever they wanted.
He said, “Land knows when you quit paying attention.”
It reminded me of a vacant house. At first, it still looks fine. Then paint fades. Weeds creep in. Water finds its way where it shouldn’t. Before long, the place looks tired, even though no one did anything wrong.
Land works the same way.
It doesn’t fall apart all at once. It changes quietly. Fences sag. Water reroutes. Weeds move in. Trees creep out of the draws. It happens slow enough that no one notices.
Until they do.
He told me land responds to presence. To gates being opened. To someone walking it after a rain. When no one’s watching, the land starts deciding for itself what it will become.
Sometimes that’s rest. Sometimes it heals.
But neglect is different.
Neglect is what happens when no one checks the gates.
The hardest land to bring back, he said, isn’t abused ground. It’s forgotten ground.
Because on paper it’s owned. In reality, it’s alone.
“Land don’t need much,” he said. “But it needs you.”
That’s the part people forget.
Land doesn’t ask loudly for attention.
It just changes when it doesn’t get it.
Dennis Prussman,
Premier Land & Auction Group
Real Broker, LLC,

