Just running out the door, but here is a thought or two; first, CRP isn't public land, so it is important, but only if you can hunt it...yes, it does produce birds which move around, but you know what I mean. Historically, as CRP has come out in favor of farming, say in the last 5 years or so, that trend has taken place where the farmer can in theory make more from farming...lots of CRP came out in the E part of the state, where land is more fertile. Course, $8 corn is $3 now, so CRP may be looking better now. Anyway, 10 years ago I always thought areas around the Missouri were probably hard to beat...Mobridge, Gettysburg, Faulkton, Pierre, Chamberlain...still good. The James River takes you through some areas that have been good...Aberdeen, Redfield, Huron, Mitchell...you know, 30-40 miles either side of the river...lots of land was put into CREP...even down around Freeman, South of I 90....it had done well, it was a newer stand of grass, which helps...old CRP loses its virility after 8-10 years...but here's the deal, the drought this year did cause lots of CRP and CREP to be cut...so that changes things. If I were randomly picking a place to go, and was gonna live with it, I would go up around Lemmon...Grand River National Grasslands...I even spent $15 this spring and bought a map of that through the forest service...hunt sharptail, too...again, impacted by the drought, but so was lots of SD...SE SD wasn't as much, or the I 29 corridor...pretty good precip...Like I said...CRP is private land, and it has been shrinking a lot in the past 5-10 years...and then this year lots of it was allowed to be cut...so it will be hard getting on CRP if you don't have access...look at the SD GFP interactive map that shows public lands...walk-in, GPA, WPA, School Lands, etc...lots in the NE, N, NW...some in the SE...