Nice Christmas announcement. Congratulations. Referring back to an earlier post about starting grass for a runway over the pipeline, I made a late planting of soybeans over the first Keystone pipeline right of way immediately after they closed the trench. Because of compaction from equipment the crop appeared stunted all season but nearly produced half a crop any way. The summer rains settled a few spots over the pipe and some holes developed. Be careful on your runway to check for those. They will be centered in the right of way right over the pipe trench. For this reason groom your strip to one side of the center line or the other. Most here granted them a 60' wide permanent easement with a temporary additional 50' during construction. If you granted the entire 110' wide and they cleared trees on all of it for you, it would be the best situation for a strip and easy to place the strip to one side or the other. (At least for the first few years of trench settling.)
On my property they had to saw the trees down in the dead of winter then come back to doze stumps in the spring. If they had waited till spring and just dozed them over they would have had migrating song birds nesting in those trees and it would have stopped the whole construction process till the protected birds flew.
If you want to make some extra flying money contact the pipeline and see if they need a pipeline storage yard in your area. I leased them another 30 acres just for that at the same rates. There was one here about every 40 miles. They will look for access near a county road with good drainage. Both the right of way and pipe yard were rough to drive over when they left even with farm equipment. The final smooth job was left to us.
First 50' pipes stored across plastic covered earthen berms of pipeyard. Engine generator/magnet picking off of a steerable rear axle trailer that allows it to stay on the road in corners and intersections.

I have no clue why the picture stuck this time. Photo size?