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North Central Indiana | 100 was obviously an exaggeration. Just saying what looked crazy and like an impossible task would’ve been done on a larger scale in hindsight.
If you buy at 20 and work until you’re 60 that’s not a bad life. Leave it to the heirs if they want it, sell it at a reduced rate to the heirs if you want some liquid cash, sell it all if no one wants to farm. Much rather be doing this than working on a factory floor hoping to move up to some sort of line manager position and riding that out until I’m 65 or sitting at a desk in a cubicle, or hanging drywall, or driving a delivery truck, or any number of other things. Or buy it at 40, work until 60 and sell it for twice what you paid. No one says you have to actually pay it off. As long as land continues to appreciate as it has since the beginning of time you have the control of it to do what you want as long as you own it | |
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