Last I looked there was No minimum acerage for a wildlife exemption
As mentioned, there can be. Counties set their own size requirements for ag exemptions and can have a different size for wildlife than the ag exemption.
As mentioned, there can be. Counties set their own size requirements for ag exemptions and can have a different size for wildlife than the ag exemption.
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If you pull up wildlife exemption across the entire state there is no minimum acerage requirement however on other 1-d-1 ag qualifications there are county specific minimum acerage
Ive sold quite a few home/land packages (home on 10 acres) and I would say that most of the homeowners like the idea of the 10 acres but rarely ever use more than 5 acres. The maintenance of the land really falls off after the first year.
I live on 50 acres and absolutely love it. Wouldnt have it any other way.
If you pull up wildlife exemption across the entire state there is no minimum acerage requirement however on other 1-d-1 ag qualifications there are county specific minimum acerage
I'll just throw my county, Grayson, out there then. Ag minimim requirement is 10 acres. To convert that to wildlife, the minimum requirement is 12.5 acres. There is no state minimum because the counties set the minimums, both for ag and for wildlife.
Wife and I are looking for a small parcel to build our forever place. We aren't looking for too much, as we aren't wanting to be mortgage broke.
She wants house, shop, couple heifers, few goats, and chicken coop.
I want house, shop, and a 1/4ac to 1/2ac pond.
What size property yall think this could be feasible on? 2? 5? 10?
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At least your wife wants a couple heifers and not you. Some women aren’t too understanding. Size all depends on neighbors. I would rather have your wishlist on 5 acres with good neighbors than the same on 15 with meth labs and trailer parks adjacent.
At least your wife wants a couple heifers and not you. Some women aren’t too understanding. Size all depends on neighbors. I would rather have your wishlist on 5 acres with good neighbors than the same on 15 with meth labs and trailer parks adjacent.
Absolutely. Hard to get away from the latter though
We’ve lived on several different sized properties and I’d say 25 is the minimum, 10 acres with everything you listed will get small pretty quick. Obviously it depends on what’s doable financially but I’d definitely go bigger than your thinking if you and your wife like to be outside doing things.
Last I looked there was No minimum acerage for a wildlife exemption
It depends on the county and the range. Williamson County, last I checked, stopped doing an actual minimum number other than for bees and instead go by carrying capacity. Where I'm located, they told me I'd have to have enough land for 2 full animal units. Since I grow more rocks than plants, it would take about 26 acres. On the other side of I35 from me or on improved pasture, that number is about half.
Bottom line, check with your county and they'll set you straight.
We have a little over 2 acres currently with a dozen chickens, pig, couple barn cats, and one bird dog turned lazy pet. I also know I can't avoid horses forever since my wife grew up riding.. Our dream is 25-50 when the kids are grown to live on. I'd like a bigger place but don't want the land to be the only thing we spend our time on. I know that will evolve over time.
I am doing it on 6.5acs. Already have had a 1-D-1 wildlife exemption for the last 9 years. Will be removing a half acre from exemption for a home site. I have a nice wooded area, an area to shoot(already spoke with neighbors about where) and the deer are plenty and hogs are invading. A little more land would be nice, but this size land and my income seem to fit pretty good. Good luck, I hope you find yours. The exemption is so important.
I'll just throw my county, Grayson, out there then. Ag minimim requirement is 10 acres. To convert that to wildlife, the minimum requirement is 12.5 acres. There is no state minimum because the counties set the minimums, both for ag and for wildlife.
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This being said, you can commingle properties for purposes of ag valuations. I believe the term my local assessor uses is "common use". I'd assume this applies to wildlife too. I'm checking on that locally.
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