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Post by batman on Sept 22, 2020 17:58:47 GMT -6
Sad news the owner decided to offer the land to the farmer who rents it first , and he decided to purchase it. If someone can tell me how a guy who gets foreclosed on 2 years ago and looses his house is able to then get a loan to buy land im all ears. Lease the hunting rights. You will be light years ahead financially.
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Post by nhmountains on Sept 23, 2020 4:54:53 GMT -6
Sad news the owner decided to offer the land to the farmer who rents it first , and he decided to purchase it. If someone can tell me how a guy who gets foreclosed on 2 years ago and looses his house is able to then get a loan to buy land im all ears. Sorry to hear that Lee. Keep the faith. You’ll find something.
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Post by Freeborn on Sept 23, 2020 5:39:45 GMT -6
Sad news the owner decided to offer the land to the farmer who rents it first , and he decided to purchase it. If someone can tell me how a guy who gets foreclosed on 2 years ago and looses his house is able to then get a loan to buy land im all ears. Why not approach the person who is going to buy it and tell him you will buy it and rent the ag land to him. If your willing to commit to an agreement with him then he gets the land without capital and you get the hunting rights and rental income.
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Post by Tooln on Sept 23, 2020 5:57:30 GMT -6
That sucks. Hopefully you'll come up with something. Freeborn haas a good idea. Or maybe you can lease the hunting rights from him unless you were looking to build on it.
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Post by MoBuckChaser on Sept 23, 2020 6:10:28 GMT -6
There is land all over for sale. Try another one.
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Land loans
Sept 23, 2020 7:13:21 GMT -6
via mobile
Post by Sandbur on Sept 23, 2020 7:13:21 GMT -6
There is land all over for sale. Try another one. I have never leased for deer hunting, but it just doesn’t appeal to me. Owning gives better control and you can do more permanent things like planting trees. Poof and a lease can be gone in a year. Leasing is fine for those that just want to hunt and not manage the land , especially on a long term basis.
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Post by MoBuckChaser on Sept 23, 2020 7:16:46 GMT -6
There is land all over for sale. Try another one. I have never leased for deer hunting, but it just doesn’t appeal to me. Owning gives better control and you can do more permanent things like planting trees. Poof and a lease can be gone in a year. Leasing is fine for those that just want to hunt and not manage the land , especially on a long term basis. Leasing will be the only way to deer hunt private land if you can’t buy it in mn soon. It will be a rich mans sport if it isn’t already.
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Post by smsmith on Sept 23, 2020 8:21:08 GMT -6
I have never leased for deer hunting, but it just doesn’t appeal to me. Owning gives better control and you can do more permanent things like planting trees. Poof and a lease can be gone in a year. Leasing is fine for those that just want to hunt and not manage the land , especially on a long term basis. Leasing will be the only way to deer hunt private land if you can’t buy it in mn soon. It will be a rich mans sport if it isn’t already. It pretty much is already around here. Not much public land and what there is gets pounded by the locals early in season. Maybe if Uncle Joe or Grandpa Bill own a farm with some wooded/swamp acreage you can finagle a hunt for cheap. Not many local guys younger than their mid/late 40s can afford to buy a chunk of land just for deer hunting.
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Post by sd51555 on Sept 23, 2020 8:43:29 GMT -6
I have never leased for deer hunting, but it just doesn’t appeal to me. Owning gives better control and you can do more permanent things like planting trees. Poof and a lease can be gone in a year. Leasing is fine for those that just want to hunt and not manage the land , especially on a long term basis. Leasing will be the only way to deer hunt private land if you can’t buy it in mn soon. It will be a rich mans sport if it isn’t already. It already is. I'm scampering my hot ass off to keep up. My place is as about as affordable, awesome, and mediocre as a 40 could be, and I still get apoplectic about it from time to time.
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Post by Freeborn on Sept 23, 2020 9:34:00 GMT -6
Leasing will be the only way to deer hunt private land if you can’t buy it in mn soon. It will be a rich mans sport if it isn’t already. It already is. I'm scampering my hot ass off to keep up. My place is as about as affordable, awesome, and mediocre as a 40 could be, and I still get apoplectic about it from time to time. apoplectic?? Angry?
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Post by sd51555 on Sept 23, 2020 9:40:48 GMT -6
It already is. I'm scampering my hot ass off to keep up. My place is as about as affordable, awesome, and mediocre as a 40 could be, and I still get apoplectic about it from time to time. apoplectic?? Angry? Yes, or indignant.
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Post by Catscratch on Sept 23, 2020 10:33:41 GMT -6
Happened here when KS opened the boarders to non-residents. There are still a few old guys letting locals hunt for asking. They tend to be old-school men who made money and don't need anything. The rest of the ranchers lease out to hunters, they need money. It's unfortunate for kids. I've known a lot of kids who quit hunting when grandpa leased out his land and the neighbors place was leased by outfitters. Very few youth in the low income class hunt anymore, not like it was 15yrs ago anyway. KS is 98.1% private. Not a lot of opportunities for those without money or strong contacts. I'm part of the problem if I'm honest about it. I own land. I take kids hunting often. There have been a few times that an old guy who used to hunt the place asked to come back and they were told "sure". The kids from the church will always have a pond to fish. I turn away strangers though. No interest in someone I don't know stomping around my house and land.
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Post by leexrayshady on Apr 4, 2022 7:31:12 GMT -6
Well update to this post, we just closed with the farmer who had bought the land that we wanted. Wasn't the whole thing but we were able to get just over 13 acres of the non tillable from him, will have a few more spots to hunt, and will guarantee no one ever builds behind us. Do have an easment on the south for access from that direction. here is how it connects to our land with the house and how it connects to the total hunting land
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Post by Bwoods11 on Apr 4, 2022 7:33:01 GMT -6
Wow, that is impressive. How many acres total now?
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Post by leexrayshady on Apr 4, 2022 7:43:33 GMT -6
Wow, that is impressive. How many acres total now? Just shy of 300
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