Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents have a hobby farm. It is managed by a farm manager and 4-6 men. The outlay for payroll and regular equipment maintenance is roughly $500-600,000 a year. This is on top of any other unusual outlays (another field truck, another tractor, replace the barn generator, reroof the stock barn). It is a complete money suck. On the other hand it provides a huge amount of pleasure to them and it is hard to argue with that. They do not live there fulltime so these expenses are all on top of their regular expenses.
This is so helpful, thank you!! -OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have to ask then you should probably spare yourself.
Jeez Louise people I’m not submitting offers. It’s clear that none of you has the answer or you would just give it instead of lecturing me on chicken prices.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents have a hobby farm. It is managed by a farm manager and 4-6 men. The outlay for payroll and regular equipment maintenance is roughly $500-600,000 a year. This is on top of any other unusual outlays (another field truck, another tractor, replace the barn generator, reroof the stock barn). It is a complete money suck. On the other hand it provides a huge amount of pleasure to them and it is hard to argue with that. They do not live there fulltime so these expenses are all on top of their regular expenses.
This is bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:My parents have a hobby farm. It is managed by a farm manager and 4-6 men. The outlay for payroll and regular equipment maintenance is roughly $500-600,000 a year. This is on top of any other unusual outlays (another field truck, another tractor, replace the barn generator, reroof the stock barn). It is a complete money suck. On the other hand it provides a huge amount of pleasure to them and it is hard to argue with that. They do not live there fulltime so these expenses are all on top of their regular expenses.
Anonymous wrote:My parents have a hobby farm. It is managed by a farm manager and 4-6 men. The outlay for payroll and regular equipment maintenance is roughly $500-600,000 a year. This is on top of any other unusual outlays (another field truck, another tractor, replace the barn generator, reroof the stock barn). It is a complete money suck. On the other hand it provides a huge amount of pleasure to them and it is hard to argue with that. They do not live there fulltime so these expenses are all on top of their regular expenses.
Anonymous wrote:My parents have a hobby farm. It is managed by a farm manager and 4-6 men. The outlay for payroll and regular equipment maintenance is roughly $500-600,000 a year. This is on top of any other unusual outlays (another field truck, another tractor, replace the barn generator, reroof the stock barn). It is a complete money suck. On the other hand it provides a huge amount of pleasure to them and it is hard to argue with that. They do not live there fulltime so these expenses are all on top of their regular expenses.
Anonymous wrote:If you have to ask then you should probably spare yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP, thanks. I’m thinking of this more as a luxury project, and 10 years feels about right. I like to daydream about moving to the country and while I was out near Round Hill recently I watched a small army of guys with mowers turning into a small farm and it made me wonder. Like I can guesstimate what it takes to maintain a big house and an acre in Bethesda, but not a small farm property. I thought maybe someone here would share a benchmark. I’m not trying to make a profit from goats.
I grew up on an 11 acre hobby farm in Round Hill. It is a ton of work.
Right so assuming I have 11 acres including a garden and some small animals and I don’t want to do much of the work. Am I talking 3 employees? 1 full time and a bunch of contractors? $100k/year or $300k/year?
For 11 acres- 3 employees!? you have no idea
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP, thanks. I’m thinking of this more as a luxury project, and 10 years feels about right. I like to daydream about moving to the country and while I was out near Round Hill recently I watched a small army of guys with mowers turning into a small farm and it made me wonder. Like I can guesstimate what it takes to maintain a big house and an acre in Bethesda, but not a small farm property. I thought maybe someone here would share a benchmark. I’m not trying to make a profit from goats.
I grew up on an 11 acre hobby farm in Round Hill. It is a ton of work.
Right so assuming I have 11 acres including a garden and some small animals and I don’t want to do much of the work. Am I talking 3 employees? 1 full time and a bunch of contractors? $100k/year or $300k/year?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP, thanks. I’m thinking of this more as a luxury project, and 10 years feels about right. I like to daydream about moving to the country and while I was out near Round Hill recently I watched a small army of guys with mowers turning into a small farm and it made me wonder. Like I can guesstimate what it takes to maintain a big house and an acre in Bethesda, but not a small farm property. I thought maybe someone here would share a benchmark. I’m not trying to make a profit from goats.
I grew up on an 11 acre hobby farm in Round Hill. It is a ton of work.
Right so assuming I have 11 acres including a garden and some small animals and I don’t want to do much of the work. Am I talking 3 employees? 1 full time and a bunch of contractors? $100k/year or $300k/year?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP, thanks. I’m thinking of this more as a luxury project, and 10 years feels about right. I like to daydream about moving to the country and while I was out near Round Hill recently I watched a small army of guys with mowers turning into a small farm and it made me wonder. Like I can guesstimate what it takes to maintain a big house and an acre in Bethesda, but not a small farm property. I thought maybe someone here would share a benchmark. I’m not trying to make a profit from goats.
I grew up on an 11 acre hobby farm in Round Hill. It is a ton of work.
Right so assuming I have 11 acres including a garden and some small animals and I don’t want to do much of the work. Am I talking 3 employees? 1 full time and a bunch of contractors? $100k/year or $300k/year?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is OP, thanks. I’m thinking of this more as a luxury project, and 10 years feels about right. I like to daydream about moving to the country and while I was out near Round Hill recently I watched a small army of guys with mowers turning into a small farm and it made me wonder. Like I can guesstimate what it takes to maintain a big house and an acre in Bethesda, but not a small farm property. I thought maybe someone here would share a benchmark. I’m not trying to make a profit from goats.
I grew up on an 11 acre hobby farm in Round Hill. It is a ton of work.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP, thanks. I’m thinking of this more as a luxury project, and 10 years feels about right. I like to daydream about moving to the country and while I was out near Round Hill recently I watched a small army of guys with mowers turning into a small farm and it made me wonder. Like I can guesstimate what it takes to maintain a big house and an acre in Bethesda, but not a small farm property. I thought maybe someone here would share a benchmark. I’m not trying to make a profit from goats.