If we are talking about early November movement patterns, I like to look at the bigger picture, rather than just looking at smaller tracts of cover.
A buck during the cruising phase of the rut can travel thru a 40 acre patch in a matter of minutes if that patch is just a connector from one river bottom to another river bottom.
Just because the herd isn't jumping that fence on the ridge, it doesn't mean that bucks aren't doing it when they are putting on big miles during that frantic phase of trying to find that 1st hot doe of the year.
Do you see any evidence of a rub line that's within your side of the fence? And I'm not talking necessarily about fresh rubs from the previous rut, I mean old rubs that are several years old. Those old rubs are still clues to perennial movement patterns. Sometimes those old rub lines are really hard to see because the rub may be healed and grown over or the tree is dead and doesn't even look like a rub any longer. Following old rub lines is not always a waste of time. The can lead to fresh sign that you may have otherwise never found.
And crop rotations play a big role in some areas. One Iowa farm we hunted had mind blowing sign in 2011 when corn was the nearby crop. But in 2015, there were beans growing where the corn was and the sign was almost non-existent. The guys from our group that hunted it last season (2019) said the sign was back to normal. The only thing I can figure is crop rotation effected the patterns.
The frequency of deer jumping that fence could be amazing one year and almost non existent the following year. Maybe last year was a down year for travel over that fence. Next fall could be an entirely different situation.