Aridas
Crazy Little Green Dragon
Deepstate live map has for some time now shown a small area across the river from Antonivka having been liberated. It did not change much. The area expanded today on the map.
Not great terrain for a Ukrainian offense. I suspect they took that area to prep for a bridge if the Russians are forced to retreat because of a breakthrough.
As a location for an offensive by itself, it is not great. Low wet ground with the main road leading into a town. But it is worth watching.
If you look back some months, the bridge there was a target by Ukraine to cut off the Russians. It took awhile, but they did destroy the bridge. Now the Ukrainians control both sides of the bridge site.
https://deepstatemap.live/en#13/46.6556/32.6995
Unless I'm misunderstanding the situation there and to add a bit more context, that area's been serving as bait and threat far more than anything else. Strategically, Russia cannot intelligently ignore it, because of the threat that it poses to their relatively poorly defended rear and supply lines. Ukraine's both not committed much and not been able to commit all that much, though, so the threat is limited. As bait, Russia's sent in a bunch of attackers to dislodge them, though, and the attackers have been pounded hard with artillery across the river, leading to very disproportionate Russian losses.
When it comes to area controlled, I've seen a number of different assessments following Ukrainian raids, with the link's being small in comparison.
It's unlikely that Ukraine currently has enough forces there to present serious threat to Oleshki, just to the south, either way, though that could possibly have changed in the last couple weeks. The more Russian forces are fixed in place there, though, the better for Ukraine's offense.
Speaking of the offense, as an onlooker, it's unpleasant that it seems frozen in place. So long as Gerasimov's strategy pretty much consists of assaulting entrenched Ukrainian positions to try to retake them and not relying on Surovikin's fortifications unless they're the front line, this strategy of controlling the pace of advance to attrite Russian forces at far less cost to Ukraine may well be smart, albeit not flashy.