Your Field Guide to Farmland ownership and Country Living
Because whether you buy it, inherit it or marry in to it, living the simple life isn’t as simple as it seems.
There’s a Lot More to Farming than Just Growing Things
Agricultural land has the potential of being a long-term investment, a tax haven, a family retreat, a second home, or an additional income. Or it can be a marriage-breaking, feud-starting, bankruptcy-inducing, attorney-enriching screw-up with multi-generational consequences. Deciding if owning a farm is right for you is one of the most impactful decisions you’re likely to ever make.
If you’re looking for instructions on how to raise things, this isn’t quite the right place. There are a lot of good books out there on crop and livestock production. (We’ll include some recommendations on our “Resources” page.)
This is a place for those who are new to a rural living, or are considering rural living. It’s a place for those who marry into farms, or maybe inherit one. It’s for people who may want to farm in the future, but are most likely raising kids and developing careers right now. It’s for those who are looking out twenty years ahead, seeing where they are, where they want to be, and where they want their families to be.
We’re here to help you ask the right questions, so you can get the right answers.
How Working Lands Work
There are so many things you should be aware of if you’re thinking about buying, owning and managing farmland. Because it breaks down into three really, really, really big pieces.
Financial, Business and Legal
What is land use? Should I place my land into a conservation easement? Where can I find an accountant who understands agriculture? Should I lease out my land? We can help you with answers to these questions and more.
Technical and Practical
How wide should my driveway be? Where should I put it? What are the fencing laws in my state? What’s that piece of farm equipment? Why are their cows so loud?
Cultural and Historical
Why are those oncoming cars flashing their lights at me? Why are they always moving those tractors up and down the road? Why won’t they hurry up? And why won’t they plow my driveway?
If you read this blog, and use some of the information you gain here and decide that you’re really, truly ready to own farmland, then we’ve done our job. And if you read this blog and decide that a lake house is really a better option for your family, we’ve done our job as well.
Because nobody wants their farmland dream, to become a farmland nightmare.
Shippin’ Up To Dublin – Part 2
About five years ago, Scott mentioned that we should go to Scotland for our 25th wedding anniversary. His statement was more of a kind gesture than anything that would ever resemble reality, as likely to happen as finishing the basement. We talked about it with a few...
Shippin’ Up to Dublin – Interlude
As a part-timing, semi-self-employed, participation-trophy-wife, E-350 driving working mom, I was often available to chaperone field trips with our younger children (the older two don't know how lucky they had it). The kids' school, and their teachers were well aware...
Shippin’ Up to Dublin – Part 1
Ireland wasn't first on my list of anniversary vacation destinations. I'm not even sure if it was second, or third. Yeah, I was part Irish, or so I thought, but Scotland was at the top of my list, and had been ever since I can remember. So when Scott and I started...
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