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-   -   Any of you have camps, or property other than where you reside? (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/737282-any-you-have-camps-property-other-than-where-you-reside.html)

fastfredracing 03-04-2013 04:32 PM

Any of you have camps, or property other than where you reside?
 
I'm going to look at a little 5 acre tract of land this week. I have this dream to have a little piece of land where I can do whatever the hell I want. Shoot guns, ride quads/ dirt bikes, hunt, burn things, build things ,and really just a place to go to get away from it all. Maybe build my dream home there someday, who knows.
I cant really see any down side. We will pay for this in cash, taxes are dirt cheap, and you know what they say about land.

HardDrive 03-04-2013 04:35 PM

Does the place I stash the bodies count?

ckelly78z 03-04-2013 05:00 PM

I already have a 10 farm where we do alot of the things you mentioned, but It is surrounded by farm ground and a busy county road.

My wife mentioned buying a piece of ground over in the hills (about 60 miles from home) where we could put our 30" camper on a cement pad and build a 20'x40' metal barn roof over it with no sides. We could have other campsites for our friends and family, with a big fire pit in the middle, and walking trails down to the river and lake where fishing, and drinking beer will be the primary forms of entertainment.

aigel 03-04-2013 05:04 PM

I have friends with properties. Much better. Nominally free to use and I can go to different places.

My main problem would be that I have to go to the same place over and over and over.

G

Jim Richards 03-04-2013 05:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HardDrive (Post 7309185)
Does the place I stash the bodies count?

^^^this. Oh, wait...:cool:

Baz 03-04-2013 05:12 PM

I thought that's what the beach at night is for !?!?

:)

manbridge 74 03-04-2013 05:25 PM

Sorry to be the one to crash your dream but it'll never happen. Soon drones will be watching everyone and "doing whatever the hell one wants" won't be on the menu.

Gogar 03-04-2013 05:28 PM

Be careful! If you build on your "Camp" and shoot guns pretty soon they'll call it a "Compound." Then it's all over but the cryin'.

;)

TimT 03-04-2013 05:42 PM

I live on Lawn Guyland, own a few acres in rural Vermont, and recently closed on a property in Merida,Mexico, I am also paying rent on a place in Chaoyang, Beijing

My place in Vermont is the only place would use my guns without an afterthought

Am thinking of buying a place in Costa Rica...

Guess I am doing better than I thought

vash 03-04-2013 06:22 PM

ours is pretty much useless. 16 lots in Ruidoso NM. residential area..very very rural.

cant shoot on it. water needs a well. i will build a cabin on it one day. i will name it MAN LAND. i think. unless my wife hates the name.

Nostril Cheese 03-04-2013 06:35 PM

Got me a dump hole out in the woods.

steve185 03-04-2013 06:58 PM

i have 20 acres on the Bay of Fundy, highest tides in the world. I plan to build a camp there this summer.

GWN7 03-04-2013 07:08 PM

1/4 Section lake front with 1/2 mile of sand beach. I can shoot guns naked and jump in the lake when I want to.

Racerbvd 03-04-2013 07:33 PM

We have 110 acres in upstate NY that has been in the family since my father (R.I.P) was a little kid, surrounded by farm land & mountains:D
There is a 200 + year old farm house that we would stay in, wood stoves & spring water.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1362457986.jpg




Quote:

riginally Posted by HardDrive
Does the place I stash the bodies count?
Down here, we just feed them to Gators & hogs..

VincentVega 03-04-2013 08:16 PM

Quote:

We have 110 acres in upstate NY that has been in the family since my father (R.I.P) was a little kid, surrounded by farm land & mountains
There is a 200 + year old farm house that we would stay in, wood stoves & spring water.
Wow, dream of mine.

Quote:

I'm going to look at a little 5 acre tract of land this week
Good luck, sounds like a cool idea.

Quote:

I cant really see any down side.
Check out the area closely. Pending constuction, road changes, zoning, polution.... make sure you can get out of it.

I would love a place where I could just check out once in a while. My last place was ~.17 ac, this is just over 1ac, next place needs to be at least 2-3ac. Strange how that works. Get off my lawn!

KevinP73 03-04-2013 08:32 PM

Yep. It's just a little under 1.5 wooded acres in Kingston Washington. It has 80' of no bank waterfront on Puget Sound.

RWebb 03-04-2013 08:37 PM

I share ownership of over 640 million acres. I am always looking to camp on it.

LWJ 03-04-2013 08:51 PM

Sort of. Wife's family has a nice farm on a river with a lodge and large kitchen pavillion. We just sent out invites for approximately 160 people to hang out with us this summer. Should be fun! (Note to Pelicans - It is about 10 miles from Mustang Paul. Never seen him but then I don't play pool.)

They also have a wooded homestead. I camp there with my boy and some friends.

Own it? Nope. Use it? Yes. Best possible situation!

Jrboulder 03-04-2013 09:00 PM

A friend and I have been talking about going in on some land in Wyoming for this very purpose. Maybe build a little gravel runway some day.

fintstone 03-05-2013 02:36 AM

From my perspective, 5 acres are not really enough unless you have some shared land nearby that you can use. Adjoining relatives or friends property or a national forest is bonus.

My family used to have a rural cabin...but every time you went to it, someone had broken in and stolen everything. Wood stove, fridge, even pump from well. Sometimes windows, doors, and other building materials. Finally tore the building down and it is primitive, but even so, every time you go there, others have been camping, cutting trees, dumping trash, etc. put up a big gate and they just hitch a couple if trucks up and pull it down or take a chainsaw to it. Unless you use it often or have someone watching it for you...it is sometimes more difficult than it is worth.

Groesbeck Hurricane 03-05-2013 03:45 AM

20.5 acre tree farm with a mobile home on it.... No one knows much about it because it is densly wooded, tree farm.

5 acres is a bit small for high power rifles. think about travel distance of your rounds, backdrop, responsibility for each round you fire.

I set our ranges with burms in the back to trap projectiles. The real problem is if someone starts shooting high. We have alot of little rules about shooting so as to maintain safety for everyone involved. Then there are the Wife's horses who come running to the shooting to see what is up and if we are passing out any food. Silly horses.

wdfifteen 03-05-2013 04:49 AM

I don't have anything like that anymore. Maintenance took all the fun out of it. Take care of the house all week, go to the land and by the time I ran the snakes and critters out of the house, fix this, paint that, sit back to relax a minute and it's time to go home.

72doug2,2S 03-05-2013 05:02 AM

The family has a 60 acre farm in MD. Like Patrick said, there is upkeep, mowing, weeding, broken things, and a place not lived in falls apart quickly. Someday I may inherit some of this property. It is a great thing to have, but once you own it it will be difficult to justify taking vacations anywhere else.

You don't live there.
You pay the property tax.
You do the all the maintenance.
You want to go somewhere else for a Holiday? Not likely.

Tobra 03-05-2013 06:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HardDrive (Post 7309185)
Does the place I stash the bodies count?

Not unless you own the property. If you do, I encourage you to reconsider your disposal methods. Byron has some good suggestions.

As for me, nope, just properties with houses on them.

Mark Henry 03-05-2013 06:55 AM

23 acres, ATV trails, pond, fields, woods, heated shop, garage, 30 minutes from 3 towns, > hour from Toronto. Walking distance from trout and salmon fishing and another 500 miles of ATV trails....

But I guess it doesn't count, because I live there;)

Downside I go through a sheet load of fuel.

BK911 03-05-2013 08:25 AM

I agree with Mr. Henry's approach.

When looking for land/cabin to spend weekends on, I decided to purchase something within an hour from work so I could live there. Kinda like vacation every night and weekend.

Found a decent house on 19.2 acres almost completely surrounded by state park.

50 minute commute sorta sucks, but at least it is in an antique Porsche through TN valleys.
And the extra 20 minutes or so on the way home is no big deal when I pull up the driveway and start vacation mode.

fastfredracing 03-05-2013 08:58 AM

Thanks for the replies, and advice guys. I agree, 5 acres is somewhat small, heck. we live on 3 now. But this place is in the middle of nowhere, and surrounded by 450 acres of land owned by a cell phone tower company. Nearest neighbor is over 1/4 mile away. Fairly close to two state recreation areas, and within 1.25 hours of our home.
We just found out that a large housing development is going in right smack in our front yard, so our quiet little country existence is about to change. They are supposed to break ground this spring, and just this morning, I saw a bob cat starting to clear some land on my way to work. Bailing on work early today to go have a look. My lady is already both feet in . We can pen a check for this, and the taxes are $45.00 a year. Has two streams, one spring, and electric. I am excited to go look around. The current owner, has moved to alaska.

intakexhaust 03-05-2013 09:25 AM

I highly suggest to CYA depending on the state. When you have land only and rarely used or visited, expect to find squatters, trespassers, hunters - even poachers, ATV riders cutting trees making trails, strangers on horses (who might tell YOU - THE OWNER of trespassing - no kidding!), make sure you have solid liability insurance. Times have changed... they have rights you know... arrrgh. Just posting NO TRESPASSING signs doesn't count. To have a little seclusion, 100 acres minimum is needed. Good luck and enjoy

Drdogface 03-05-2013 09:49 AM

Yeah, got 20 ac about 45 min from home on a lake. Built a log cabin back in the 80's, now has a barn, solar power system, shooting range. Too hot in much of the summer to enjoy it but love it all the same.

oilcan 03-05-2013 01:45 PM

You can't go wrong building a place 5 ac or more if it's remote enough. I built near the nat'l forest in N.W. Pa 25 yrs ago and am so glad I did. It's especially good for your kids/grandkids like no other experience. It promotes independence/curiosity. We started small, but since then we've had power extended + a well/septic added. Those are necessary to get the women involved. Re: break-ins- We were broken-into 20 yrs +/- ago. I placed a cable/lock over the drive & the thieves are too lazy to haul out the booty.Good luck.

fastfredracing 03-05-2013 03:37 PM

Just got back, this place was a no start for us. We were stoked ,because the last 10 miles of the trip took us through some of the most beautiful Pennsylvania farmland that I have seen in a while. Not to mention it was actually a nice sunny day here for a change.
The guy mentioned that he was using the land for agricultural purposes before he moved. He had hundreds of 5 gallon buckets, and large plastic planters filled with soil, and it was all tucked away on one corner of the property somewhat well hidden. If you ask me, it looks like he was growing some weed.
Any how, the way the land was laid out would not work for our purposes, but , we will keep looking. I have been watching for a while , and now that the weather has broke, I will start going to look at more places.
A little photo of some typical Pennsylvania farm country to give you an idea of how scenic this area was. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1362530137.jpg

Drdogface 03-05-2013 03:44 PM

Nice. When I bought my land I used a book to guide me thru some differences in rural v urban property buying. It was a great resource for me and if it's still in print you might benefit from it. Forget the writer but title is 'Finding and Buying Your Place in the Country'. Quite a few things about country property are different.

Well...here it is ! http://www.amazon.com/Finding-Buying-Your-Place-Country/dp/0793141095/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1362530685&sr=1-1&keywords=finding+and+buying+your+place+in+the+co untry


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