Anonymous wrote:Agree that you need to think about what’s drawing you there. (I don’t think it’s the horsey infrastructure, because you probably would have said so.) It can’t be the restaurants or shops — there’s only a few blocks of “downtown.”
Where would you want to live? If you want a small place in town, you’d probably connect with the locals fairly quickly. If you’re dreaming about a huge rural spread, think carefully about whether you’d permit the hunt to ride through (a great way to make friends and influence people), or agonize endlessly about their liability insurance and close off your land (sigh). Or are you thinking of some McCraftsman on 3-5 acres, in a subdivision of the same? That’s pretty much the antithesis of what the area is trying to preserve.
I actually disagree with the comments about the “downtown.” It has several restaurants, breakfast places, etc. The Safeway. It would be a great little town to live in if you wfh. You could walk to everything you need day to day.
If I were in the market for a house in one of those horrible developments in “Aldie,” I would much rather live in Middleburg.
But I would really only want to live out there if I were super rich and had a horse farm.