Brian Austin
En-Route
After five days in the high country of AZ (a nice 85 compared to 110 here in Phoenix), the wife and I are once again talking about getting some acreage somewhere as a vacation destination that will eventually turn into a retirement home.
Here in AZ, however, the "good" areas tend to have their issues: abnormally high costs (Greer, for example, although the fact that 1/2 the valley is for sale may lower costs this fall), community "cliques" (I don't fit in with some religious majorities in northeastern AZ), water, weather (yeah, desert is cheap...but it's hot), etc..
So where is this land for a reasonable price?
1. Acreage: minimum 80, preferably over 100. Nice tract for runway is preferable.
2. Water: must be able to support a well that won't cost $25,000 to drill (yes, there are wells that cost darn near that much here in AZ).
3. Weather: mild. Warm is okay in the summer and light snow is okay in the winter. Freakish negative temps or hellish positive temps are not acceptable. I'd also prefer a dry climate that is mostly sunny (the constant cloud cover of west Michigan depressed the heck out of me, I've come to find out).
4. Community: open minded enough to acceptable new residents without shunning them if they're not following the same religious or political beliefs but conservative enough to not tolerate anyone straying from the community standards they've already set forth.
5. Fishing: preferably somewhere that has some decent fishing...although I've found you can generally find decent fishing just about anywhere if you look hard enough.
6. Loose women who can keep their mouths shut: okay,okay. Just kidding on that last...as far as you know anyway.
To give you an idea of what I see here in AZ, I've seen 10 acres near Show Low, AZ, meeting most of the above, asking $990,000 (with three houses on it, which I don't necessarily want). I've seen 80 acres of open land surrounded by state land with NO right-of-ways for darn near anything for $135K (when asked, the realtor said that it was prime hunting land but not good for anything else). I've seen 40 acres of "ranchette" property (big ranch divided in 40 acre parcels) for $200K (providing road and electricity). The last was somewhat tempting except it was more toward the desert elevations than I'd prefer.
So, what's in your neck of the woods?
Here in AZ, however, the "good" areas tend to have their issues: abnormally high costs (Greer, for example, although the fact that 1/2 the valley is for sale may lower costs this fall), community "cliques" (I don't fit in with some religious majorities in northeastern AZ), water, weather (yeah, desert is cheap...but it's hot), etc..
So where is this land for a reasonable price?
1. Acreage: minimum 80, preferably over 100. Nice tract for runway is preferable.
2. Water: must be able to support a well that won't cost $25,000 to drill (yes, there are wells that cost darn near that much here in AZ).
3. Weather: mild. Warm is okay in the summer and light snow is okay in the winter. Freakish negative temps or hellish positive temps are not acceptable. I'd also prefer a dry climate that is mostly sunny (the constant cloud cover of west Michigan depressed the heck out of me, I've come to find out).
4. Community: open minded enough to acceptable new residents without shunning them if they're not following the same religious or political beliefs but conservative enough to not tolerate anyone straying from the community standards they've already set forth.
5. Fishing: preferably somewhere that has some decent fishing...although I've found you can generally find decent fishing just about anywhere if you look hard enough.
6. Loose women who can keep their mouths shut: okay,okay. Just kidding on that last...as far as you know anyway.
To give you an idea of what I see here in AZ, I've seen 10 acres near Show Low, AZ, meeting most of the above, asking $990,000 (with three houses on it, which I don't necessarily want). I've seen 80 acres of open land surrounded by state land with NO right-of-ways for darn near anything for $135K (when asked, the realtor said that it was prime hunting land but not good for anything else). I've seen 40 acres of "ranchette" property (big ranch divided in 40 acre parcels) for $200K (providing road and electricity). The last was somewhat tempting except it was more toward the desert elevations than I'd prefer.
So, what's in your neck of the woods?