I think those are called land locked or something similar. Unless and
until an owner (or prospective owner) can buy deeded access, it would be
worthless to anyone except perhaps a helicopter pilot.
bp
<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>
On 1/3/2021 4:23 PM, Adam Moffett wrote:
The absolute cheapest land seems to have no deeded access at all. I'm
not sure who would ever buy those lots....but someone is selling it so
therefore they bought it at one time.
On 1/3/2021 6:04 PM, Bill Prince wrote:
I can add another thing. We live on a quarter section that was
divided into 4 approximately 40 acre parcels. Most of the land is not
really "buildable" except for a dozen or so acres on the ridge top.
They carved up the parcels to give everyone close to the same amount
of ridge top space, and then divided the remainder and attached it to
the ridge top home sites. The road easement runs along the south side
of the ridge top. This arrangement worked out pretty well for 3 of
the 4 parcels, as the road easement ended up running along the
boundary between two adjacent parcels except for one parcel. I think
we got the best deal, as we're at the end of the road easement, and
"none" of the road (or the easement) actually runs through or even
along the side our property. However, one of the properties has his 4
acres or so at the top of the ridge, and the remainder of his
property is on the other side of the easement. As a result, the two
of us at the end, drive through his property whenever we come or go.
No big deal to us, but it rubs this guy raw whenever we drive by, as
he sees us as "trespassers" because he thinks of that part of the
easement as his private property.
When the guy gets drunk, he will call the sheriff to report us as
trespassing on his "private" property. Years of entertainment ensue.
bp
<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>
On 1/3/2021 12:59 PM, Chuck McCown via AF wrote:
A good title insurance policy should dig up and disclose all the
gotchas.
Sent from my iPhone
On Jan 3, 2021, at 9:19 AM, Bill Prince <part15...@gmail.com> wrote:
Depending on the terrain, see if you can get your hands on a
parcel map and any benchmarks. Property boundaries can be an issue.
If you can't do that, get a title insurance policy that insures you
against any future boundary disputes. if there is a time limit in
the insurance policy, make sure you understand the implications
and/or negotiate for a longer time.
bp
<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>
On 1/2/2021 9:28 PM, Adam Moffett wrote:
I'm poking around Zillow for a piece of cheap land.
Basically looking for some place to play around in the woods, with
the possibility of building an off-grid camp/cabin in the future.
The pitfalls I'm aware of are wetlands and places with no access.
What else should I watch out for?'
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