Buying woodland ???

Tantalus

Full Member
May 10, 2004
1,065
149
60
Galashiels
yeah tony i gotta agree

I wasnt being entirely serious

there are running costs and other things to consider too

agreeing who is responsible for what would tale a small army of lawyers to administer, or worse................. a comittee :yikes:

i know nobody wants to think of this stuff but.....

what happens if one member dies, goes bankrupt and is forced to sell, gets sick and can not work and can no longer afford to pay their share of the maintainance costs ? etc etc etc

it has the potential to turn into a real legal battle, which specially among a group of friends can leave a really sour taste in everyones mouth

sorry to put such a downer on the thread :cry:

Tant
 

mr dazzler

Native
Aug 28, 2004
1,722
83
uk
To answer your Q Rob, have a look at some of the real estate sites-type in french property or "foret a vendre" word search. I've seen entire habitable farm complexes with 5 or 6 acres of woods about 100,000 euros/£65-70,000 (house, barns, well, stables ect.) Obviously you wouldn't want the buildings, but gives you some idea of relative values compared to here. Sometimes you see a fishing lake (catfish carp) surrounded by woods prices depend on wether you want to build (if planning permission is likely to be granted) location and size, sometimes with small hunting shack lodge. Like Keith Beefy said, its worth getting off the beaten track, theres lots of woodlands especially hardwoods (they burn oke and ashe!!!) friendly respectful people who know a lot about wood etc. Sangliers (wild pigs) in quite a few places. Plenty of Chasser (hunting) culture.
I've seen building land going for £5 - £6 sq meter(not sq ft!!)sometimes plots include woodland. Just find out if "Wimpies" are likely to build nearby in the near future, or motorway or airport!! :roll:
I'm getting a plot next year about 1 1/4 acre behind my property in a village in Normandy, and it'll cost me £1,300. I'm going to plant it out as a small new "wood/orchard"-poplars, ash, alder, and apple (of course!!) Something for me to work on and for the kids to enjoy when I'm gone. :wink:
 

Oakleaf

Full Member
Jun 6, 2004
331
1
Moray
I took tone of thread to be leaning on humorous side, but with a 'hmm lets think about this' element too.

Yes serious matter, yes potential to go very badly wrong and end acrimoniously - that above all else would be the antithesis of what the Forum stands for. Difficult? Given the number of clubs and associations - eg Rugby, Hockey etc that own their own assets, manage them and break up etc this is not quite so out of the ordinary.

Though valid point - unlikely to be a project to see a capital return. But then key aim would be the Bushcraft rather than investment angle. Certainly not something to plough thousands each into. But a more moderate subscription? Either membership dues - or shares.

Not intending to heavily push this or turn thread heavy. Just think this is an interesting thing to kick around and see where it goes. My apologies to the originator for taking this tack if original post was entirely humorous.
 

Keith_Beef

Native
Sep 9, 2003
1,399
281
55
Yvelines, north-west of Paris, France.
Well, I'll have a look in the hunting magazines I've got with me, and try to give you some idea of prices.

But it's very variable, depending (or course) on location, area, water courses, wildlife (game!) accessibility.....


Off the top of my head, I would say that:

- Normany is a big :nono:, too close to London and to Paris.
- South West can be affordable, good climate, and not overcrowded,
- Ardennes / Picardy: a bit close to Paris, a bit flat, but boar,
- Vosges: larch and pine forests, cross country skiing in winter, boar
- South East: mountainous pine forests susceptible to forest fires...


Keith.
 

Kim

Nomad
Sep 6, 2004
473
0
51
Birmingham
I reckon you could end up getting a return on your investment. There are plenty of people out there who would be willing to pay a nominal fee for land to be bushcrafty on, groups, companies, individuals. I'm not sure how regulations re use of the land would work in that instance, but bushcraft is a growing interest field with not enough freeliy accessible space to use.
:?:

Go on Jon-Paul, you know you want to buy some land...

(not encouraging for selfish reasons at all...no siree, not me...
:wink: )
 

Keith_Beef

Native
Sep 9, 2003
1,399
281
55
Yvelines, north-west of Paris, France.
OK, I have found a small ad in the current issue of "Plaisirs de la chasse".

64 hectares of woodland with two rivers and ruins of a small castle in north Dordogne, 150,000 euros. (2344 Euros per hectare)

72 hectares in north Brittany with a stream, 205,000 Euros. (2847 Euros per hectare)


There are other properties in the same ad, but less interesting (more expensive, with farmhouses, fields of oats...)


Keith.
 

Tvividr

Nomad
Jan 13, 2004
256
38
Norway
www.gjknives.com
Guys, you are all looking at the wrong places :nono: :eek:): :naughty:
How about 6425 acres of this place
0084_view1.jpg
0084_view2.jpg

for 857,066.51 £. Price includes 2 dams, 7 boreholes, 2 houses, outbuildings, excellent road network. Well, perhaps not my first choice, but the area looks nice and has a very righ cultural history.

Or how about 2200 acres of this
limpopowater.jpg
limpopoana.jpg

limpopoveld.jpg
204b-herberg1.jpg

for 235,739 £ including the house and this

204b-chalet1.jpg


Unfortunately for Stuart these 50.000 acres has recently been sold
0075_05.jpg
0075_06.jpg

0075_01.jpg

Listed price was 857,066.51 £

Or you could rent land in Mozambique - say 10 x 10 km for less than 1000 £ for 99 years :biggthump

You guys buy the land, and I will run the place :roll: :mrgreen: :naughty:
And oh yes..... I do have a formal educational background in Game Ranch Management and Nature Conservation in South Africa....... although is quite a while since I had practical experience of this :lol:

Check out these, and give me a call :eek:):

www.gameranches.com
http://gameranch.wildnetafrica.com/index.html
http://www.gamefarmnet.co.za/

Current exchange rate is something like 11.6783 Rand (ZAR) to 1 British pound
 

Lurch

Native
Aug 9, 2004
1,879
8
53
Cumberland
www.lakelandbushcraft.co.uk
Tantalus said:
i know nobody wants to think of this stuff but.....
what happens if one member dies, goes bankrupt and is forced to sell, gets sick and can not work and can no longer afford to pay their share of the maintainance costs ? etc etc etc
it has the potential to turn into a real legal battle, which specially among a group of friends can leave a really sour taste in everyones mouth

You'd create a trust. Each individual puts their cash into the trust which then buys and owns the woods, in return the individual gets the use of the woods subject to conditions. No one now 'owns' any part and cannot attempt to pull out cash or ownership.
Maintenance costs can be met by letting out to other bushcrafters on particular days.

No, I wouldn't do it either! :biggthump
 

Moonraker

Need to contact Admin...
Aug 20, 2004
1,190
18
62
Dorset & France
Keith_Beef said:
OK, I have found a small ad in the current issue of "Plaisirs de la chasse".

64 hectares of woodland with two rivers and ruins of a small castle in north Dordogne, 150,000 euros. (2344 Euros per hectare)

72 hectares in north Brittany with a stream, 205,000 Euros. (2847 Euros per hectare)


There are other properties in the same ad, but less interesting (more expensive, with farmhouses, fields of oats...)


Keith.

I was thinking about it too Keith but looking quite hard the prices are pretty much the same as in the UK or even higher. I guess because there is a ready market for the chasseurs. I asked a local agent and he said it was tough to find woodland or forest and most already had local hunters with rights to hunt which I would not want.

There are a LOT of English people who have brought carp lakes etc especially in the N and W and prices were cheap but gone up a lot.

And as you know sorting out the legal position and sorting out the paperwork is often a complete mare :(

Check out Bulgaria :naughty: Belogradchik. 14 acres for £19k and no permission needed to build house!

Maybe Spain (but watch local rights to take land from foreign owners!) or Portugal.
 

Keith_Beef

Native
Sep 9, 2003
1,399
281
55
Yvelines, north-west of Paris, France.
Moonraker said:
I was thinking about it too Keith but looking quite hard the prices are pretty much the same as in the UK or even higher. I guess because there is a ready market for the chasseurs. I asked a local agent and he said it was tough to find woodland or forest and most already had local hunters with rights to hunt which I would not want.

There are a LOT of English people who have brought carp lakes etc especially in the N and W and prices were cheap but gone up a lot.

And as you know sorting out the legal position and sorting out the paperwork is often a complete mare :(

Check out Bulgaria :naughty: Belogradchik. 14 acres for £19k and no permission needed to build house!

Maybe Spain (but watch local rights to take land from foreign owners!) or Portugal.

Yes, there can be hunting rights that you need to allow for, and the price of land can be very variable.

Tvividr's post is interesting, as are your comments on Bulgaria. I was speaking to a chap from Lithuania about buying chunks of forest a little while ago, and the prices sounded good.

But distance, travel costs and unfamiliar local legal systems (or simply arbitrary decisions by local potentates) would put me off some countries. And having an excessively dry climate would spoil some of the fun.

Now that Lithuania, Latvia, Slovenia and Slovakia are members of the EU, maybe we should be looking at these countries...


Keith.
 

tenbears10

Native
Oct 31, 2003
1,220
0
xxxx
That Bulgaria stuff looks great Moonraker. The travel is a bit much from the UK I think. But maybe the price makes up for the distance.

Bill
 

R-Bowskill

Forager
Sep 16, 2004
195
0
60
Norwich
Of course if I could get Canadian citezenship I'd go for a 100 - 120 acre gold claim in British Columbia, Some of them have cabins and equipment with them. A nice placer claim like that either in the hills or on vancouver island would be a good place to spend a copuple of years practicing bushcraft and persueing my other outdoor love....finding gold.
 

Moonraker

Need to contact Admin...
Aug 20, 2004
1,190
18
62
Dorset & France
tenbears10 said:
That Bulgaria stuff looks great Moonraker. The travel is a bit much from the UK I think. But maybe the price makes up for the distance.

Bill
That is true tenbears10 although reading about it a LOT of Brits and others are buying property there already even though it is outside the EU still. Because it is very cheap still, cost of living is very cheap and parts are beautiful. Can't help feeling sorry sometimes for locals in these situations even here in France they complain about prices rocketing like in the UK ( although not as much!). But equally they are very happy to sell at these prices which otherwise they would not get.

I have no idea where it will all end... But I think it is better for people who love the natural environment to get in there than property developers simply looking to cash in.
 

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