Showing posts with label farm land. Show all posts
Showing posts with label farm land. Show all posts

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Do You Want a Horse Farm with Acreage

PALM CITYS HORSE TALK

I WANT A HORSE PROPERTY THAT HAS SPACE TO RIDE

How often do I hear "I want a horse farm that has acreage. I want to ride my horse.

Very few properties are available that have all the amenities that equestrian folks want. Most people want to be close to shopping and close to everyday convenience. I have a rare find in Palm City Farms that has all that one might want. It is beautiful, unique, has 15 acres and a beautiful equestrian center. A guest house provides plenty of space for visitors plus a two acre stocked lake full of large bass. More than that there is a large trail riding area just outside the gate and multiple trainers that are within walking distance of the farm. So, what else could one want. Oh yes, it is only 35 minutes from Wellington and located in upscale Palm City Farms, Palm City, Florida.


WELCOME TO PALM CITY, FLORIDA


YES, PALM CITY HAS AN OUTLET TO THE ATLANTIC OCEAN
THIS IS THE WIDE ST LUCIE RIVER THAT IS AN ENTRANCE TO THE OCEAN
SAILFISH WITH SUCCESS


AND THEN THERE IS HOME





Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Equestrian Center for Sale in Palm City Farms, Palm City, Fl

PALM CITYS HORSE TALK...BARNS and more BARNS ALL LOOK DIFFERENT


             
                             


I specialize in equestrian properties and Town and Country living in South Florida. I have seen barns with chandeliers and barns that are suppose to be a barn......I think.... at least it had four walls. My job is so interesting because I do get to see so many varieties of properties in the equestrian world.
Palm City Barn
This barn is located in the equestrian community of Palm City Farms, Palm City, Florida. The design is Dutch Colonial and has an 1800 square foot barn guest house and eight stalls, center aisle for many purposes, feed room, tack, shop, laundry, bath, two birthing stalls,  paddocks, gated,  two acre stocked lake and more. The property has been appraised and has been reduced below its appraisal. For more information, Carol Barron-Cross, Broker, Sunflower Homes and Equestrian, LLC, Palm City, Florida can assist you.  



Friday, February 7, 2014

Looking for a Turn Key, Upscale, HORSE FARM, privacy, and within 35 minutes of Wellington?

PALM CITYS HORSE TALK
HELLO from South Florida.

HORSE FARMS AND HOMES IN SOUTH. Let me introduce myself. My name is Carol Barron Cross, Broker of Sunflower Homes & Equestrian. I sell HOMES and HORSE FARMS and have enjoyed every minutes working with clients buying and selling.   Stop and take a moment and look at this beautiful farm that is available within 35 minutes of Wellington. Wow. This farm has it all. Beauty, utility, privacy, guest home, equestrian center, security, paddocks and free trail riding just outside it's private gate.  It's MLS number is RX10011212 or MLS 373828. Be sure and click on the video. It is a true beauty. Appointment is necessary 24 hour notice.  Listed by Sunflower Homes & Equestrian, LLC Palm City, Florida 34990.

Play VisualTour

Friday, March 22, 2013

Equestrian Estate in Palm City, Florida for Sale

PALM CITYS HORSE TALK 15 Acre Equestrian Property for sale in Palm City Farms, Palm City, Florida. Listed by Sunflower Homes and Equestrian, LLC. Property has just been reduced below appraised value. Take a look at this beautiful estate. Appointment necessary. Contact Carol Barron Cross for appointment.
Play VisualTour
EQUESTRIAN PROPERTY: Priced at 2012 appraised value. JUST REDUCED. This unique property is found in the heart of the equestrian neighborhood of Palm City Farms. Before construction the land had extensive improvements, such as, elevating the grounds, putting in extensive drains and swells. A Florida DOT bridge has been built with pilings and steel beams to connect the five acre homes site with the ten acre EQUESTRIAN ENTER. The construction of major buildings was completed in 2002 but improvements continued until 2004. The main home is CBS construction with Hardy plank over the CBS. All trim is Cypress. The home is elevated above Martin County flood mark and is on a stem wall. The home was designed to look as if it had been on the property for many years. The main home was designed from historical homes in Key West, yet, it has all modern upscale amenities. The 6718 sq ft main home has a grand estate entrance with antique heart pine entrance doors, columns, carved moldings, and an outstanding staircase. An elevator shaft is tucked away in the foyer. A formal living room has transoms, French doors, antique mantel and wood burning fireplace. All floors are Brazilian cherry throughout the home. To the right of the grand foyer is the library. Beautiful but functional, the library has two French doors that open on to the front patio, transoms over interior French door and several shelves, sitting areas, storage and plenty of places to transact business. The library is Birch paneling with carved moldings. The first floor has 12' ceilings with 10' on second floor. The media/family room is a huge, open area that opens into the gourmet kitchen and dining room. The dining room has another wood burning fireplace. The media/family room has several French sliding doors that opens on to the southern and eastern porch areas. The gourmet kitchen has plenty of room for entertaining. The open plan has the dining room next to the kitchen. Beautiful St. Louis brick columns separate the rooms while granite counter tops sparkle around the entire kitchen. The huge pot rack is reminiscent of olden days as the breakfast area is inviting to enjoy meals or sit and chat. Upscale amenities are stainless gas commercial stove, a custom hood, a custom Traulsen refrigerator (four doors opens to the kitchen and four to the pantry area). Two dishwashers, four farmer sinks from France and two large pantries. There is a mudroom, two half baths and downstairs laundry, as well as the second floor laundry. The second floor finds the Master bedroom, his and her closets and master bath. All two guest bedrooms are considered master bedrooms, They are extremely large with both amenities as the master suite. There is an upstairs kitchen equipped for breakfast or snacks. The third floor is a 1000 ft professional gym and art studio. The home has over 3100 square ft of covered balcony space and 38 beautiful columns. The three car garage is extra large for cars or trucks. All garage doors are hurricane proof. The HOME has hurricane shutters. The EQUESTRIAN CENTER has hurricane shutters. The GUEST QUARTERS has three bedrooms rooms, open media/kitchen/dining area with heart pine flooring. Huge porch areas are on the northern and southern side. Both have beautiful views of the estate. The EQUESTRIAN CENTER has eight stalls, tacks room, feed room, huge shop, and drive through (14' ceilings) garage for huge trailers. There are several white cypress cross fenced paddocks with two birthing barns and round pen. There is a pad area for an arena already developed. The property is private, double fenced with electric security gate. Located 35 minutes from Wellington and West Palm Beach International Airport. Shopping within minutes of property. By appointment. Contact Carol Barron Cross.

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Agricultural Investors Take Note

PALM CITYS HORSE TALK 9/15/2012
Farm Land Rush Are prices too high? Are there still opportunities to invest? Experts weigh in. BY MARIWYN EVANS “It’s a feeding frenzy out there,” says Renee Harvey, ALC, of Century 21 Harvey in Paris, Texas. Farmers, private investors, and institutional owners are bidding up cropland prices to record highs, fueled by commodity prices that rose 29 percent in the year ending March 2011, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In the Midwest alone, prices rose 23 percent during 2010, according to the Federal Reserve of Chicago, and have since spiked higher. Total returns for farmland were 2.4 percent in the first quarter of 2011, up 1.3 percent from a year ago and the strongest first quarter return since 2006, according to the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries Farmland Index. The eye-popping prices and impressive returns, in large part, reflect the relative scarcity of land for sale. Amid rising food prices, owners aren’t inclined to sell. “There’s just not much on the market and finding property for buyers takes a lot of networking,” says Ray Brownfield, ALC, of John Greene Land Co. in Oswego, Ill. In fact, the 2010 annual report of the Illinois Society of Professional Farm Managers and Rural Appraisers found that 57 percent of the farmland sold in the state came from estate sales. With relatively few sellers, transaction volume has stayed low, despite liquidity in the market. Data from the Farmers Credit Services of America, an Omaha-based lender, found that transaction volume on crop and pasture land in Iowa, South Dakota, Nebraska, and Wyoming dropped 54 percent in three years from 2,326 sales in the first quarter of 2008 to 1,074 sales in the first quarter of 2011. The appeal is easy to understand. “High-quality farmland can generate a 3 to 4 percent annual cash-on-cash return with low volatility,” says Murray Wise, ALC, of Murray Wise Associates, headquartered in Champaign, Ill. Compare that to a yield of less than 1 percent on six-month Treasuries, and you can see why income-hungry investors love farms. Rising rents have also kept returns high despite higher land prices. In Illinois, for example, the cash rents for the mid-third range of leases on excellent farmland rose from $183 per acre in 2007 to $319 in 2011, according to a survey by the Illinois Society of Professional Farm Managers and Rural Appraisers. More owners are negotiating flexible profit-sharing agreements to capture rising commodity prices, says Winnie Stortzum, ALC, GRI, a land broker and appraiser at Farmers National Co. in Arcola, Ill. Six Keys to Farm Land Value Farmland investment income rests on crop production for much of its return on investment. What makes for a productive farm? Soil quality Water availability and control Fertilizer requirements Topography Percentage of tillable land Proximity to transportation Another draw is land's inverse correlation with the stock market, says Jeff Conrad, president of Hancock Agricultural Investment Group in Boston. “You really saw that in 2008,” he says. Investors worried about inflation like that land is a tangible asset. But even with strong investor activity, there are doubters. Yale University economist Robert Shiller, famous for predicting the fall in housing prices, cited farmland as his “favorite dark horse bubble candidate” over the next decade in a spring 2011 article in Slate. Some investors are already pulling back, especially in the hot Midwest farm belt. “When land reached $10,000 an acre in the first quarter of 2011, it was a mental stopping point for some cash in­vestors,” says Mark Goodwin, Goodwin & Associates in Shorewood, Ill. The U.S. Department of Agriculture is also reporting slight drops in income streams from such major crops as cotton, oilseeds like soybeans, and feed grains for the first quarter of 2011. Part of the challenge is that “the agricultural industry doesn’t set its own commodity prices; that’s done by traders and speculators,” says Kirk Goble, ALC, with The Bell 5 Land Co. in Greeley, Colo. Many agriculture brokers agree that there may be a 5 percent drop in land prices, but “as long as people from developing countries want to increase the quality of their diets and their protein consumption, commodity prices and land prices will remain very strong,” says Mac Boyd, ALC, GRI, of Farmers National Co. in Arcola, Ill. Another factor that mitigates a sharp drop in agricultural land prices is the low debt-to-asset ratios for most farmers today, says Conrad. “Farm debt is the lowest it’s been in 30 years. That’s not the sign of a bubble.” Brownfield agrees: “The average mortgage debt load for farmland purchases today is less than 20 percent.” Many current buyers are coming in with all cash. Those who do use debt are putting 40 or 50 percent down. Does that mean that farmland investment is bulletproof? Not quite. Government policy—particularly anticipated changes in farm subsidies in the 2012 farm bill—could have “a significant impact on what goes in the farm market,” says Stortzum. While subsidies aren’t as critical when commodity prices are high, land ownership would get much riskier without some sort of federal backstop, notes Brownfield. A rising dollar could soften demand, while higher interest rates could pull investors away to higher returns elsewhere. Flexibility Counts Given the high prices and retreats in commodity prices, are there still opportunities in farmland investment? Yes, but only if you’re savvy and flexible, say land experts. Finding willing sellers is the toughest part, since only about 1 percent of U.S. farmland turns over every year, says Wise. His tip: If you do find a farm, be ready to make a cash offer in 24 hours. Other buyer-finding advice: Check tax rolls for absentee owners, who may have inherited farm property and now live far away. Bargain hunting can also pay off. “It’s an imperfect market. Sometimes there aren’t any aggressive buyers at an auction, and the land sells for less than the perceived market,” says Randy Hertz, alc, of Hertz Farm Management Inc. in Nevada, Iowa. Another way to get a better buy: Look beyond the top cropland markets of the central Midwest to somewhat less fertile, but more affordable, land in states like South Dakota, he says. The Mississippi Delta, similarly, hasn’t been bid up as high, suggests Bob Turner, alc, with Southern Properties LLC in Cordova, Tenn. “Prices per acre are averaging $2,500 to $3,500 in our area,” he says. Another option: Focus on commodities that are soft at the moment, like wine grapes and cranberries, suggests Conrad. When these products rebound, land prices will rise, too. A Comeback for Ag The strength of farmland prices is even pulling some undeveloped transitional land back into the farming fold, says Nancy Surak, ALC, CCIM, of Eshenbaugh Land Co. in Tampa, Fla. With prices on bank-owned transitional land down as much as 80 percent from the peak of 2005, “ag may be the highest and best use,” she says. Farmers in the collar counties around Chicago are following a similar pattern, says Goodwin. Those who sold to developers for $75,000 an acre a few years ago are now buying it back for $15,000. “They’ll farm it for five to 10 years and sell it to a developer again,” he says. Much of this land is REO from larger banks, which seem more ready than smaller ones to take write-downs, he says. In some cases, this farming or grazing use is a temporary way to qualify for lower agricultural tax rates. “You can get a fence up and cattle on a property in two weeks and substantially lower your ­carrying costs,” Surak says. Comparably lower prices on build-ready land are also attracting buyer interest. “We sold almost 1,000 finished lots last year, every one we had listed,” says Surak. Homebuilders who have cash as well as regional investors are snapping them up at 40 percent of the average $25,000 replacement cost, she says. Other buyers for build-ready land include state and local governments and local housing authorities, which have used federal Neighborhood Stabilization Program funds to buy bank-owned land for new construction. Even recreational land is getting the farm bug. “The biggest trend in recreational land is multiuse opportunities, including farming, timber, and habitat development,” says Derrick Volchoff, manager of Cabela’s Trophy Properties, a network of more than 250 independent real estate affiliates based in Sidney, Neb. Income helps to offset carrying costs as buyers remain hesitant in a weak economy. Like all real estate, agricultural land prices are ­cyclical—so the highest of today will decline at some point. But as the world’s population grows and needs to be fed, the future looks bright for U.S. farmland and for those who sell and manage it.