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I'd become a cackling, raving, lunatic hermit.
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The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to MrLang For This Useful Post:
AK907 (05-09-2012),Anatopism (05-09-2012),DakotaB (05-09-2012),Mike41793 (05-09-2012)
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I've had a pipe dream like that for years. My dream place would feature:
1) Concrete block house, earth banked on 3 sides. Cuts utility bills and maintenance. Light tubes (nifty things) could be used to keep the inside reasonably bright in the daylight.
2) Much of the gardening via raised beds. You can grow a heck of a lot more per square foot and it's a lot easier on you to pick and weed. For weeding, a good mulch, and even old carpet scraps can be used. Raised beds require less tilling because the ground isn't compacted by your feet, and you can minimize watering and fertilizing. (see rabbits and chickens) Also, as you age, and we all do, it's one heck of a lot easier to plant and harvest.
3) Carefully selected farm animals. A regular full sized cow is overkill for the milk needs of most family, but there are minature breeds. Goats are also a good dairy animal and require far less feed and produce more in line with a family's needs. There are several chicken breeds that are dual purpose--they produce meat and eggs well. Raising beef cattle is a lot of work, but rabbits aren't that bad and they can recycle some garden wastes. Their manure makes good fertilizer too. A big plus with chickens and rabbits is that one person can slaughter them safely and easily. The same cannot be said for a steer. Forget about turkeys. Their main goal in life is to die horribly before you can harvest them. If you want to get into bigger livestock, some heritage breeds of hogs like the mulefoot are good pasture hogs, which reduces the amount of feed you have to buy to produce meat. But you're going to need help to slaughter and butcher them.
4) Carefully selected fruits. Dwarf fruit trees and semi dwarfs bear early and don't grow so large that you can't harvest them easily. Grapes, blackberries, strawberries, (in raised beds) blueberries and the like are easy to harvest. You can preserve them by letting them ferment in a crock then bottling the resultant elixir. Or you can just freeze or can them, which brings about....
5) A large freezer. Ample canning shelves. And if you can swing an outbuilding, a second hand stove outside in that building is a lifesaver--keeps you from having to turn your house into an appoximation of hell in canning season. Canning is terribly hot work.
6) Be very good friends with your neighbors. A few dozen surplus eggs passed their way can reap you melons when yours die, a dressed rabbit might be paid back somehow in the loan of equipment or whatnot. Being a good neighbor always pays off and I don't know how it happens but everyone seems to get back more than they gave.
With 30 good acres, you could have quite a grand little thing going. I'd leave at least part of it as woods. What good is living in the sticks if you can't see 'coons and 'possums and the occasional fox?
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The Following User Says Thank You to Redneck_Crow For This Useful Post:
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Re: What would you do with 30 acres?
 Originally Posted by Inknsteel
Nice house, fully stocked fishing pond, large vegetable garden, possibly raise chickens and pigs... And can't forget the separate building for snakes and rats like muddoc is building... Oh, and a dirt track for dirt bikes and 4-wheelers... 
THIS! LOL. But maybe add some pygmy goats and possible a horse or two .
~Jessica~

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Get a state license to grow Medical MJ...The rest is just details after that
Thomas "Slim" Whitman
Never Met A Ball Python I Didn't Like 
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Slim For This Useful Post:
AK907 (05-09-2012),Mike41793 (05-09-2012)
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 Originally Posted by ChrisS
NC is a great place to live. I hated the weather up north when I lived there, I was in Maryland, West Virginia, and Ohio. Citrus trees wouldn't survive the frost we get here but peach and apple trees do great. I have family not too far from New Bern, in Newport, that have a good bit of land (actually the land I was talking about hunting on) but most of it is wooded for hunting.
Cool beans. Whens the frost in NC and how cold does it get in winter?
Like i said ive only visited in july an august
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 Originally Posted by Mike41793
Cool beans. Whens the frost in NC and how cold does it get in winter?
Like i said ive only visited in july an august
We can get frost from October through April, but normally its from December through Easter. This past winter was extremely mild though with very little frost at all. And no snow where I live. Weather here swings back and forth it can 80 one day and 2 days later low will be in the upper 30s.
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BPnet Veteran
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LoL... I love some of the answers here! To chime in....
I'd clear and fence in about 8 acres, build a small 4-stall barn, and bring my 2 horses home.
Fence in another 5 acres near our custom-built home for my German Shepherds so they can run. And run and run and run.... 
Build a nice insulated and heated pole building with lots of racks and cages for my herps.
The rest would remain natural with trails lacing through for horse-back riding.
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I'd probably go broke trying to pay property taxes... but if I had unlimited funds for my 30 acres, I'd love to have horses and more poultry of sorts. Definitely a big area for the dog to run around, and I would love to have a huge koi pond, garden, and some easy to maintain crops.
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 Originally Posted by ChrisS
We can get frost from October through April, but normally its from December through Easter. This past winter was extremely mild though with very little frost at all. And no snow where I live. Weather here swings back and forth it can 80 one day and 2 days later low will be in the upper 30s.
Looks like im gunna have to go further south than NC then
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