Northern Missouri
Rural neighbors here are usually farming
Scotland County is a working agricultural county, so buyers of rural land should expect active farming nearby and understand Missouri's right-to-farm and fence-law framework.
Scotland County sits in Missouri’s far northeast corner, near the Iowa line. The Fox and Wyaconda rivers run through the area. This is farm country. Growing crops and raising animals are normal here, not unusual. So if you buy rural land or a country home, expect real farming next door. That means tractors and equipment on county and gravel roads. It means dust and smells at certain times of year. It also means field work at odd hours during planting and harvest. Missouri has “right-to-farm” rules. These rules protect long-running farms from many complaints. Missouri also has a “fence law.” It spells out how neighbors share the cost of a fence between their land. It helps to learn these rules before you assume a complaint will change a farm next door. Two good places to start are the Missouri Department of Agriculture and University of Missouri Extension. Always confirm the details with the local office.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Scotland County. See every local note for the county on its page.