Looking for some advice or suggestions. The last couple years, I've hunted (modern rifle) a number of 2-4-year-old clear cuts that are relatively flat, or maybe even slightly crowned in the middle, with an absolute boat load of fresh deer sign in them. But the challenge is being able to see the deer (assuming they aren't all nocturnal, which is a different problem) in and on the edges of these clear cuts because even the 2-4 year growth blocks just about everything at ground level. I've thought a number of times if I could just get 8 or 10 feet higher, I'd basically be able to see and hunt the whole clear cut rather than be unaware of what was going on because I couldn't see as much. Has anyone tried using a reasonably camouflaged tree stand or tree saddle or something else on one edge of the clear cut to get a better view? Seems obvious, but I always think of tree stands and saddles as being a mid-west food plot tactic. Thanks in advance, and oh, the typical clear cut is probably 300 yards wide by about 600 yards long, which just seems to be begging for a tree stand along one of the sides in the middle that best takes into account the prevailing winds.