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Non-Cattle Specific Topics
Every Thing Else Board
Finding Pasture for lease?
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<blockquote data-quote="Howdyjabo" data-source="post: 509686" data-attributes="member: 391"><p>Thats about the only way to get land leased around here.</p><p></p><p>Used to be lots of land available- so it was a renters market. Fences were the owners responsibility/and decent ones were a requirement. Now fences are the renters responsibility- and some renters are even putting up new fences just to be able to rent land.</p><p> </p><p> </p><p>With land prices so high the kids and widows aren;t sitting on land like they used to. They want money or the land is a headache and its sold. </p><p></p><p>From past experience- if you are going to rent land and put in long term improvements(fencing,water,lime ect) get a long term lease with a buy out clause. We got burnt several times with land getting sold out from under us before we recouped our investments- even good people just don't understand farm economics any more.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Howdyjabo, post: 509686, member: 391"] Thats about the only way to get land leased around here. Used to be lots of land available- so it was a renters market. Fences were the owners responsibility/and decent ones were a requirement. Now fences are the renters responsibility- and some renters are even putting up new fences just to be able to rent land. With land prices so high the kids and widows aren;t sitting on land like they used to. They want money or the land is a headache and its sold. From past experience- if you are going to rent land and put in long term improvements(fencing,water,lime ect) get a long term lease with a buy out clause. We got burnt several times with land getting sold out from under us before we recouped our investments- even good people just don't understand farm economics any more. [/QUOTE]
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Finding Pasture for lease?
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