How to Pay for Land - Network Leads to Net Worth | Dream Farm w/ Bill Winke

Knowing how to buy land is a definite skill you can learn. Buying land is not like buying most things, where there is a single and usually well defined way to make the transaction. With land, there are lots of ways to structure the deal and being creative may well get you into a piece of land that you otherwise thought was unattainable.
In this episode, I discuss some of the ways to buy land, but just as importantly, Ethan and I talk about the importance of creating a great network. You need people that will aid you in finding a piece of land with good value and then others who can help make that piece yours. Don't think it can't be done. It can. Maybe you have to start small, but the main thing is to get started.
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Пікірлер: 110

  • @hillcountryoutdoors8201
    @hillcountryoutdoors8201 Жыл бұрын

    Don’t worry about video length time, I could sit and listen to this while I drive, work, or just relax.. much more enjoyable and educational than most things on tv right now. Thank you for sharing your journey and trying to help people. Wish you guys nothing but the best!

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks. We really appreciate the support. Good luck and have a great day.

  • @travisirish5468
    @travisirish5468 Жыл бұрын

    For the younger generation to really think about… I had almost 1,500 acres of land in SW Wis I was able to hunt from 16 years old to 30 years old. I’m 35 now and wish I was buying land in my early 20s. I landed a great job right out of high school making to good of money. Your private land you get to hunt that you don’t own is going to come to an end at some point, I promise! So buy early before it’s to late, no matter how good your current hunting rights are right now.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed, plus it is a forced savings plan for those young people (well, really for anyone). Just making the land payment forces a person to save money that they can recoup later by selling the land if they have too. As long as the land appreciates roughly at the rate of the interest you are paying to own it, you are coming out ahead every year. Making money on the bank's money. Good luck.

  • @Polzin28
    @Polzin28 Жыл бұрын

    Please continue this series till y’all have all the information laid out. Awesome informative series! Great Job Bill and Ethan!

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Zach, thanks. We have seven total episodes all edited and ready to go. We should be releasing them every couple of days until early next week, and then I need to get back to the projects of land management and improvement and some more thoughts on how to hunt whitetails.

  • @Polzin28

    @Polzin28

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bill-winke look forward to them Bill. Thanks

  • @midwesternoutdoorsandnatur8272
    @midwesternoutdoorsandnatur8272 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for your transparency Bill. Some would never let go of the details you share, and it speaks to your character.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    I appreciate the comment. I am not sure there are any real secrets now. I hope everyone has the joy of owning hunting land someday. Have a great day.

  • @jimreed3904
    @jimreed3904 Жыл бұрын

    Great series Bill.. I have been fortunate enough graduating college dead broke and living in a trailer park to owning big chunk of continugouse farm and recration land with a farm house, etc.. it really can happen and it does... but it is for sure a process and not an over night process.....with regards to timber, I have found that it is best to do two separate agreements if your land does in fact have timber value 1) do a sale of the land and respective price allocation as such which will go on the deed at closing and a seperate timber agreement to serve as a basis over the years so when you are cutting timber there is no capital gain argument from the irs until you exceed the basis on the timber agreement.. Or if you do roll the entire package of land and timber in your recorded deed price make sure you have a consulting forester appraisal of the timber component at the time of sale to give you some backing in an IRS audit..

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    I know that is the safe approach, and I appreciate that everyone should do that. But my accountant says the timber value present at time of purchase can be assumed as long as you cut it shortly after buying the property. If you cut $75,000 in trees off the farm a year after you buy it, it can be assumed that there was at least $75,000 there when you closed. But, I am sure getting an actual appraisal right after buying a piece is the cleanest approach especially if you plan to take trees over a period of time and need to have that starting point baseline. That would eliminate any question about how much was there when you bought it and how much value was added by trees growing after you bought it. That would all impact how much you can take against the basis long-term. Good insight and thanks for the comment.

  • @afeef745
    @afeef745 Жыл бұрын

    All of us are absorbing the information, not just Ethan. For someone aspiring to own land in future, this is great series. I don’t trust the advise of a lot of content producers on KZread but I find you very trustworthy and honest. Hopefully I can follow your footsteps and buy and grow my farm. Thanks a lot for these videos.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the comment and the support Afif. I appreciate it. You can do it. Just set a goal, make a plan and then work hard to stick with the plan. It does take some real effort, but it is worth it not only because you get a cool place to hunt, but land truly is a great way to cause you to create generational wealth. I would never have worked as hard as I did if I didn't have some kind of goal. Land provided that goal and forced me out of my comfort zone.

  • @jessiereniewicz108
    @jessiereniewicz108 Жыл бұрын

    Great series! I've learned a ton! Thank you

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the comment Jessie. Have a great day.

  • @grantblitch1795
    @grantblitch1795 Жыл бұрын

    Not long winded at all! I’m just a 38yo south Louisiana country boy who wants to learn everything I can. Wish I had a mentor like this.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    This is number four. We have seven total. Will try to release them every couple of days. Thanks for the support.

  • @GetLandWrecked

    @GetLandWrecked

    Жыл бұрын

    I second this. I don’t find the series long winded! Very interesting stuff. 👍

  • @ericbowhunter
    @ericbowhunter Жыл бұрын

    Great information Bill. I never felt comfortable buying land that I couldn’t pay cash for. I’ve owned two 60 acre tracts. I sold one of them. If I wasn’t so scared to borrow through the years, I could own 600 acres now. I missed my opportunity.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed. I don't have any consumer debt and never have, but I never felt that debt related to land (assuming you buy right) is very risky. You can always sell the property if you need to and clear the debt and walk away with the equity. It takes some mental gymnastics to get comfortable with debt of any kind, but land debt is the least painful to carry.

  • @ericbowhunter

    @ericbowhunter

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bill-winke That’s right. I wished I would have learned about that years ago. Keep up the great content buddy.

  • @wesfox1712
    @wesfox1712 Жыл бұрын

    Great series Bill!

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Wes. I appreciate it. We have three more episodes and will release them every other day starting tomorrow.

  • @jacobthompson3791
    @jacobthompson3791 Жыл бұрын

    Hi Bill, I’ve been a longtime listener and have been following your journey since the Midwest whitetail days. I have greatly enjoyed this series so far. I am a small town lender and can attest to your point about wanting to see my clients be successful and grow. The insight you are providing to your viewership is invaluable.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Jacob. I appreciate it. My own experience with small town lenders follows this same course. I have had great success working with smaller banks where everyone knows everyone and the lenders can see and understand my goals and my progress. Keep up the good work. Have a great day.

  • @donwaldroopoutdoors3665
    @donwaldroopoutdoors3665 Жыл бұрын

    Priceless info , it’s worth a lot , thx for sharing ,

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Don. I appreciate it. Have a great day.

  • @bradmartin3112
    @bradmartin3112 Жыл бұрын

    I am buy a farm and really enjoyed the information.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Brad and good luck in your quest.

  • @mikeveine
    @mikeveine Жыл бұрын

    Looks like your land prices have continued to go up in Iowa. Ours plummeted in 2008, and it took years to recover. It didn't really recover until covid. Now it's dropping again.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Land in Iowa went flat from roughly 2008 through about 2011, but then it started trickling up again. It never crashed. In your area, I would give it some time if you are looking at investment property. Wait until it stops going down. It may take a few years. Good luck.

  • @travis2001
    @travis2001 Жыл бұрын

    I find this extremely helpful. I’m 35 and my dream is to own a hunting farm.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the comment. Keep with that dream. Good luck.

  • @scottschaeffer8920
    @scottschaeffer8920 Жыл бұрын

    We need a site where guys that own land for the same purposes(s), can sell, barter, trade, etc.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    That is a good idea. It would take some work to set up, but it would be really popular once set in place. Good idea.

  • @mitchellgenz1373
    @mitchellgenz1373 Жыл бұрын

    Great series, I would add , try to have multiple small lenders in your corner if possible.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Good point. Thanks Mitchell.

  • @robgrubb420
    @robgrubb420 Жыл бұрын

    Sounds like timber value can still be a big player in all of this. I would really like to see more on that Mr. Winke.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Rob, it can be on some properties, for sure, but the days of people not knowing what they have are about over. So you need to understand what is real and what is not when a seller or realtor starts spouting $XX,000 in timber value. That can be a dramatic over-statement. The more you know about that the better. I will touch on it again soon.

  • @JavinMullet
    @JavinMullet Жыл бұрын

    Loving this content. Everyone wants a piece of the pie! So much that we’ve driven land prices so high that it’s not really sustainable to buy land in the MW for farming. Will we ever see this even out one way or the other? If not, are we running our economical system, as we know it, into the ground for our grandkids? Or we just need to make sure they have a piece of the pie when that time comes? Loaded question 😅

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't know the answer to that, Javin. I have talked to a lot of people about this and it doesn't really make sense which would suggest that it won't last. But, I would hate to be on the wrong side of that and sit idly by as prices keep going up. I don't see how anyone can buy farm land at these prices unless they are already farmers with all their equipment and other land paid for. I don't understand people investing in farm land at these prices just to own land for the return. Recreational land also is way over priced based on historical price growth, but that doesn't really have an economic underpinning. In other words, people buy rec land because they want it for recreation and not because it produces a cash flow return (as in farm land). I don't know for sure where this is all going. A big recession would definitely cause a drop. If I had to gamble I would gamble that land prices in general will be the same or less in two to three and the same or higher in five. But that is just a guess. I do think if you hope for your children and grandchildren to own land, you can't wait too much longer to buy. In the end, it is going to come down to supply. Not only are they "not making any more of it" as the old saying goes, but they are actually making less of it as recreational land is being converted to developments every year. I am personally betting with my own dollars that five years out, land will still be worth what it is today, but who knows what happens between now and then. Good luck.

  • @johnlacki1585
    @johnlacki1585 Жыл бұрын

    One heck of a story, great information Bill. You definitely got extremely lucky back in the $300 an acre days. But i'm having a real hard time relating to this in a 2023 land market.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    It's exactly the same now, you just start smaller and probably grow slower. Everything else is still relevant.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    You also may want to be a bit patient right now to see where prices go from here.

  • @nathanmccarthy5532
    @nathanmccarthy5532 Жыл бұрын

    Can't wait to buy something in Iowa

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    The market seems to be easing up a bit. There may be some decent (at least acceptable) value out there in the next couple of years. Good luck.

  • @jasonhaga5412
    @jasonhaga5412 Жыл бұрын

    DANG Bill, you really struck a nerve with the comment about you can only buy your neighbors land once in a life time. My neighbor and I have been going back and forth since Dec about buying 1/2 of his farm (it's my East and South boundary). I was just thinking of telling I'm not doing the deal cause he keeps changing the acreage and price cause he's emotionally attached, but he's 80 and his 4 kids really don't have anything to do with it. Now you got me thinking I just need to make the deal work and close it.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, ten years from now do you really think you will care if you paid $500 per acre too much for that piece?

  • @jasonhaga5412

    @jasonhaga5412

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bill-winke I agree! But this dude is driving me nuts! It started out selling 60-66 acres @ 1,500 last Feb. We toured the place and what he wanted to sell. Came out at 50.7 acres. Told him I would get a lawyer to do a contract and get it surveyed. Called me a week later to say he's not selling now, one of his son's is buying it. IF anything changes, he would call me. This past Dec, he called me wanting to sell cause son didn't want it. Told me on phone to add this 2 acre area on the front end. After taking 1/2 day off to go to lawyer, spending 75.00 on contract drawn up, then sending it to him by email cause him and his wife was sick with COVID, he got mad at me because "I misunderstood" what he wanted. He said he told me 90k for the land. Which he has never told 90K at any point. also some of the other details of the deal he disagreed with even though he was the one to tell me that. Bad part, I've got a survey scheduled for end of Feb (had to beg to get it that soon cause dude was booked out till late summer). So meeting this weekend to try to hammer out the final details of the contract before he goes to TX for 3 months for new grandchild.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jasonhaga5412 That is a tricky one. I would just be really patient in dealing with him and it will likely all work out. If he gets completely unrealistic you will have to walk away again and realize that the land is not actually for sale right now. Good luck.

  • @ryanfarmer5155

    @ryanfarmer5155

    Жыл бұрын

    Do what you have to do to seal the deal, even if it is aggravating. Put on a smile and just nod, buy the land it will never fall in your lap again or his greedy kids will one day want top dollar in a real estate deal that you will have zero control over. Just smile and nod, buy the land however you have to do it. Once it's yours you will see how petty your being. I get it, been there

  • @rfcorreiaiv
    @rfcorreiaiv Жыл бұрын

    This series has been really helpful. Any suggestion when your not a local and from out of state?

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    I have seen that work many times. A lot of landowners aren't locals. I think it is not as good to own your dream farm more than a few hours away because it is really tough to get there as often as you would like. But it is OK to own an investment farm somewhere else. You will need to create a number of contacts in that area to get your needed work done on the property or you will need to have a complete set of equipment there.

  • @rfcorreiaiv

    @rfcorreiaiv

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bill-winke good point, thank you for the advice Bill

  • @aowildart
    @aowildart Жыл бұрын

    Would love to see some discussion on expenses after the purchase. Ie - weed control, fencing, etc. someone once told me owning land is not cheap, even if it’s given to you

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Some of those expenses you can't avoid (like fixing fences if a tree goes down, etc.) but most of the expenses related to recreational land are actually choices. Other than property taxes, there aren't a lot of things you need to do. There are, however, plenty of things you want to do. I will cover that in a future episode. Good suggestion.

  • @stevedenoyer5956
    @stevedenoyer5956 Жыл бұрын

    I would not recommend partners, especially if they hunt. I made a mistake with a brother in law. I haven’t spoken to him in probably 7-8 years. Unfortunately I still own that property with him. It was an investment and it will pay off in the end but the relationship is done.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed. It is rare that partnerships work out long term. That is why I suggest that it is understood going into it that the partnership is just a stepping stone. I would not partner on the final dream farm, but not as big of a deal on the investment properties as it would be well understood right from the start that those aren't long-term holds. Good luck.

  • @stevedenoyer5956
    @stevedenoyer5956 Жыл бұрын

    Great info and gives others ideas on how to do it. Nobody gave me advice, I just dove into it and figured things out. Fortunately I was able to pay cash for my properties. But would have no problem leveraging property or other assets to buy more. I have a neighbor with 160 acres for sale but he wants like 5000 an acre, I paid 2 for mine in 2012. This land is over valued for the area imho.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe it isn't overpriced. You have to look at comparable sales to see what other land is selling for in that area. If nothing has sold, it is much tougher to establish a price, but what you paid for land in 2012 means nothing now. Way different market now. Good luck.

  • @stevedenoyer5956

    @stevedenoyer5956

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bill-winke yes I get that but value has not gone up that much. I’ll look at a few comps and see.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stevedenoyer5956 For sure, that is the place to start.

  • @wcgamer9379
    @wcgamer9379 Жыл бұрын

    Tell them Bill. You gotta want it!

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    It does take sacrifice. That is for sure.

  • @johnpotvin9749
    @johnpotvin9749 Жыл бұрын

    Just found your channel Bill - nice to see you back out here making content again. Missed watching your vids on Midwest whitetail. Out of curiosity, did you ever find that big 7 that you shot a few years back and lost the blood trail on?

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, we found him the next spring. He was not far from the house, just down the hill. At least that is where we found him. I can't say for sure where he died. My guess is that he lived for a few days after the shot - unfortunately. That was a really crappy deal all the way around. A shot I would like to have back. Here is the link to the episode where we found him: kzread.info/dash/bejne/lYJrmbWoY7m7ops.html

  • @johnpotvin9749

    @johnpotvin9749

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bill-winke I lost one a few years ago. Based on the blood trail I did not expect it to go anywhere. The day after I shot it I went out with a blood tracker and the dog jumped the deer and it jumped a fence and crossed the highway. There was no way that deer should have been alive. They are rugged animals for sure.

  • @coleromine3905
    @coleromine3905 Жыл бұрын

    Hey Bill. Did you ever hunt the 400 you took the timber off of to buy the neighbors piece?

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    No, it was actually two pieces: a 240 acre piece and a 160 acre piece. That 240 had a really big buck on it when I sold it. I bet he was pushing 200 inches. I never hunted him even though he was daylight active on camera. I had some big deer on my home place and this farm was an hour away. Plus, I thought leaving that buck for the next owner was a show of good faith. The guy that bought that farm did say the buck gave him confidence that the farm was in a good area and capable of producing big deer. Someone else a mile away shot that buck before the new owner could get to it, but only a few years later his wife shot a buck in the 230+ range! That was a good farm!

  • @kevinfowler6065
    @kevinfowler6065 Жыл бұрын

    Tell us about what is means or takes to”upgrade” recreational land please

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Making it better for deer hunting. Almost every farm I have ever looked at was way down the scale of quality habitat, quality food sources and just overall huntability. By upgrading those things you make the farm worth more. Maybe that also includes making a few access lanes and possibly even building a pole barn/storage shed/sleeping quarters. Though I was always reluctant to actual build something on a farm I intended to sell, thinking the buyer would have a different set of preferences and goals than maybe I would have. Good luck.

  • @johnstewart830
    @johnstewart830 Жыл бұрын

    Hey Bill, you said that if you can work with a lender that you know, it would be better. What if I am buying in a different part of the state or even in a different state for that matter? Is it still a good idea to go with a lender that is local to me right now, or find a small town lender near the area where I purchase the land? Great info....keep them coming!!!

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    John, I would start close to home first, but don't be surprised if they say they don't want to take the risk of lending in a market that far away. A lot of their decision will come down to the relationship you have with them. If you have been a loyal customer, doing a good job with loans in the past, they will likely take more risk by lending in an unknown market than if you don't even know them. But, I would still start close to home and see where that leads. Good luck.

  • @stevenschmidt5712
    @stevenschmidt5712 Жыл бұрын

    In addition to the money you can make from the land you have bought or will buy (timber, farming, CRP) how much of your own money was coming from your monthly salary to pay for the ground you were rolling in to? The average guy like Ethan (and myself some day) is probably very interested to know how much they could expect to be writing a monthly check for. Obviously, once you get that first piece under the belt moving into bigger and better probably gets easier and you can become more creative with how you go about financing it. Thanks Bill!

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    The banks have a standard way to measure that ratio between your income and your debt. Of course, other liabilities (other loans for example) factor in too. In the end they have some kind of multiple. Let's just say they expect your free cash each month to be at least two or three times the loan payment (or something similar). In other words, they build that into the formula they use regarding how much money they will loan you. I don't think our loan payments ever stretched us too much other than 2008 and 2009. With that recessions the advertisers were cutting back so the magazines were buying less pages of edit (if they even stayed in business). It was bad. 2008 was also my first year of Midwest Whitetail and it was taking tons of time and not making any money. That was a very tough year. 2009 was really tough too. It smoothed out a bit from 2010 on - once the economy recovered from that big recession and advertisers and sponsors started spending money again. I was ready to sell the farm in 2009, just to get out from under all the stress. But God spoke to me through a fellow at our church. Long story short, one day in church I spent the whole sermon sitting there deciding whether or not to sell the farm and shut down Midwest Whitetail. I finally decided I would sell and move on - bag groceries at Wal-Mart. Whatever. Anything other than what I was doing. What I was doing didn't seem to be working. I was really burned out keeping everything afloat. At the end of church I was just sitting there when this fellow named Bob came up to me out of the blue and said, "If you shut it down now, you will never be any good to anyone." Then he just walked off. I sat there for a few more minutes just trying to accept that word. I really wanted out. Needless to say, I didn't shut it down. That's a true story!

  • @aaronhendrix6103
    @aaronhendrix6103 Жыл бұрын

    Bill. Do you have any recommendations for a logger in central southern IA? Someone who is trustworthy and does a good job. Thanks for these videos!

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    I never felt really good about working with anyone except River City Hardwoods in Muscatine. But that was many years ago. I am not sure how they are operating now. It would be a starting point, but likely you will need to work with a consulting forester to get a good program set up for your timber. They can handle the sale for you and make sure it is fair and competitive. Good luck.

  • @georgehelzer7569
    @georgehelzer7569 Жыл бұрын

    The one question I would have regarding the timber side, are the tax implications at the end of the year. Is this viewed by the IRS as income? Are there loop holes to dump the money into the land loan and escape some of that? This side of the land buying has me very interested and already thinking about ideas for land that doesnt even exist for me yet lol

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Talk to a good accountant. Mine told me that as long as we cut the timber soon after buying the property that the timber value was assumed to be part of the purchase price and had not "escalated" as the trees grew later. So cutting those trees was basically just taking off what I had already paid for and could be counted against the basis rather than taken as regular income. Again, it pays to talk to your accountant about that and be very specific about the law in that regard. Possibly your accountant would want a "credible source" to create a document that states the value of the timber at the time of purchase as proof, just to be safe. But again, if you take the timber off right away, that value is just assumed. Also, if you can get a bridge loan of some kind, you can use the timber to fund your down payment, if possible. I have never done that, but I know people who have. Good luck.

  • @adamkilgore2902
    @adamkilgore2902 Жыл бұрын

    It would be interesting to hear about how buying land has changed since the interest rates have continued to go up.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Talked to two realtors today representing Iowa and Missouri. Both said land is not selling nearly as quickly now as it was a year ago. Prices are leveling out. Not sure where they go from here, but probably not up. Flat or down is most likely.

  • @bucknuts8824
    @bucknuts8824 Жыл бұрын

    Bill, would you buy the land before buying the equipment to manage the land, or buy the tractor, and other equipment beforehand? Or do you rent equipment? As a first timer, just curious you did it. Thanks

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Bucknuts, I always felt the land was the thing I wanted. The management came after ownership, so I prioritized the land itself thinking that I would figure out a way to do the other stuff later even it meant planting Poor Man's Plots. I will cover those in future episodes of Dream Farm. At a certain point you get big enough that you have to think about buying equipment, but not at first. You can always hire a youngster from a nearby farm to plant your small food plots, etc. Good luck.

  • @georgehelzer7569

    @georgehelzer7569

    Жыл бұрын

    Never buy that stuff before the land. If you pay cash you lose all your DP money. If you finance it, you lose your Debt ratio on purchase power. It would be WAY better to buy the land and then work on what you can. Limit the equipment to what you truly need and will use regularly and not just load up on stuff that's used once every couple years. Pending what you need to have done, it may be way more logical to pay someone to come in and do it for you. Its their equipment and they should have the know how to get it done right the first time.

  • @josephacker5716
    @josephacker57167 күн бұрын

    Have you ever had deals with DNR or forestry or agriculture departments in making money off parcels while those parcels are im your possession?

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    7 күн бұрын

    Only cost share programs that pay me to do certain conservation and habitat practices. You can make a bit of money with some, but mostly you are just getting your money back that you spent. Examples, Timber Stand Improvement, burning, planting trees.

  • @timryan5749
    @timryan5749 Жыл бұрын

    My question is how do you use timber for a down payment when you don’t own the property yet? Does your bank just have to see that value as well?

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    You would have to be creative here too. I have seen it done a few different ways. I think you ideally have a friend loan you the down payment with the understanding he/she gets their money back when you harvest the timber. With the right person, that would work. If all else fails, ask the banker what they think would work. That would be my last resort because they may want the timber value when you cut it thinking it is part of the collateral of the property. This is another reason to work with a friend or small town banker because they will likely take the time to create some wiggle room in this regard. Good luck.

  • @wolfpack4128
    @wolfpack4128 Жыл бұрын

    Your point about "there are always ways..." goes far beyond getting a loan. People make decisions; processes don't. If you're creative and understand what the other party really wants, you can get what you want. A loan, a pay raise, your wife to let you buy a new tractor.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Hmm, I may need to pick your brain on that tractor part!

  • @michaelbruns3870
    @michaelbruns3870 Жыл бұрын

    How do you afford the larger payments when you step up to a larger farm? How much of a payment is too large?

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    Michael, each situation is different. One case might be that you bought a great value (whether because it has good marketable timber on it, or maybe there was something wrong with it that you could fix - landlocked for example, etc.) and then when you sell it you have a lot more equity to play with and can step up to a bigger property by putting more money down and not increasing your payments much. That is the ideal scenario and why it is super critical when building to buy right (stuff with value built in). The other scenario is to find ways to increase your income. That can be tougher for some people, but in general, incomes go up and if you are self-employed the evolution of your business will likely move you in that direction where you just have more discretionary cash that you need to find a place for anyway. Otherwise, you are correct, but again, don't buy stuff that only moves with the market. You want to buy stuff that is undervalued for whatever reason. Yes, I realize that can be tough, but I am guessing it won't always stay that way. There will be some good values again at some point. Not sure when, but I do believe it will happen. Everything has cycles. In our history nothing just kept going up with some kind of pullback along the way. Good luck.

  • @alexpinnow6509
    @alexpinnow6509 Жыл бұрын

    Bill did your network develop through nose to the grindstone or just the general passion for land and 'falling' into similar mindsets of people?

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    I think it probably benefited from my day job of writing for hunting magazines. I met a lot of really interesting people that way. I also learned that the best way to get a favor is to give one first so I tried hard to help everyone I ran across. As they say, the pen is mightier than the sword, so I could make an impact for people and they appreciated it. Soon, I knew tons of people. But also, the shared general passion also helped, for sure.

  • @stevedenoyer5956
    @stevedenoyer5956 Жыл бұрын

    Bill what do you do if the neighbors are asking way more than the property is worth? Do you lowball them?

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    I think you have to pass on it. Just make them a fair offer and let them digest it. If it really is overpriced, no one else is going to pay it either. I guess everyone has their own standard, but I hate paying much more than 10% over market price even though it borders me. Good luck.

  • @stevedenoyer5956

    @stevedenoyer5956

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bill-winke yeah but my offer would be around 3k an acre. Based on the list ? Idk it’s been on the market over 8 months

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    @@stevedenoyer5956 If it has been on the market that long, they already know it is overpriced and will likely look at any reasonable offer.

  • @popeyoungorbust7425
    @popeyoungorbust7425 Жыл бұрын

    I'm at the point where I'm ready to buy some new ground and I need to find a recreational land agent. Can you give tips on choosing one. Will they notify me of land not on the market yet either through themselves or other agents?

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    I doubt you will get preferential treatment without that agent being a friend to begin with. They all have a short list of people who want to know about new listings as soon as they get one. You would be at the bottom of that list, but at least you would be on it. If you are really serious, you will call them, or e-mail them, every week just to check in. Keep it very short, or they will get sick of you. There are good recreational land agents all over the country, but to be honest with you, I have not found many that will actually look for properties for me. They are usually too busy with the stuff they already have in the pipeline to worry about trying to find me something in someone else's listings or something that is off-market. So, while it makes sense to regularly call several in the area where you are looking, at the end of the day, it will be up to you to go through the MLS (multi-listing service) websites and even individual realtor websites to see if anything new has come along. Short of talking with landowners themselves (and people at the coffee shop, etc.) in an effort to find something (that occasionally works but is very time intense), that is your best bet. Again, if the real estate agent is already a friend you have a chance, otherwise it really comes down to your own efforts to turn up something to buy. Good luck.

  • @popeyoungorbust7425

    @popeyoungorbust7425

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bill-winke that's what I kinda figured. Thank you for your time.

  • @ryanfarmer5155

    @ryanfarmer5155

    Жыл бұрын

    What state are you looking into? I could suggest two or 3 in Missouri

  • @popeyoungorbust7425

    @popeyoungorbust7425

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ryanfarmer5155 Thanks for the reply Ryan. I'm looking in the Southwest and South Central Wisconsin area.

  • @jasondiaz7611
    @jasondiaz7611 Жыл бұрын

    I wonder why that logger didn’t buy those properties as you were going through it.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    They tend not to want to tie up their capital that way. They do best when they keep their cash moving - buying logs and reselling them and then moving on, rather than buying land and having to sell it again at some point later. Some loggers do it, but most would rather just deal with the logs and keep the money moving.

  • @Raised-Right
    @Raised-Right7 ай бұрын

    Bill I hope you monetized your channel, if not you should because KZread runs ads on popular channels anyway and they do on yours. Thanks for all the years of videos. Been reading your stuff and watching you since I was 12 and you were shooting the milk river velvet buck on that outdoor channel video with the drurys back in the day and ever since.

  • @Bjackson008
    @Bjackson008 Жыл бұрын

    Financial literacy. Not just for Wall Street.

  • @bill-winke

    @bill-winke

    Жыл бұрын

    There is so much to learn, there needs to be a practical class for normal people on how to make wise money moves. I guess that is what Google is for, but there is still so much background noise around any financial topic that it can be hard to separate good advice from bad. Never stop learning.