MisterHappy
NES Member
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2009
- Messages
- 28,413
- Likes
- 17,601
The best advice I ever got was that any partnership should always have an odd number of people, and never more than 2.
Or: A partnership is a sinking ship.
If you enjoy the forum please consider supporting it by signing up for a NES Membership The benefits pay for the membership many times over.
Be sure to enter the NES/MFS May Giveaway ***Canik METE SFX***
The best advice I ever got was that any partnership should always have an odd number of people, and never more than 2.
I’m in. Seriously we should all just form a non-profit and buy the land. Start our own club and NES militia.So, who’s in?
I’ll bring the beer, dirt bikes, and ammo
So, who’s in?
I’ll bring the beer, dirt bikes, and ammo
Also we should never have any signage that states:I don't think it would be possible for you to bring enough ammo by yourself. Unless you have an 18-wheeler full of it
Ya,as I was typing this I realized it was a bad idea....oh well, bring in the 18 wheelerI don't think it would be possible for you to bring enough ammo by yourself. Unless you have an 18-wheeler full of it
And this is why these things don't work out. Subjective terms like "Really Really Good" mean different things to different people and this changes over time. You would have to list out every reason, being very specific. Just imagine how long this would be and how long it would take to put together. The other option is No Exceptions. Simple, to the point, easy to interpret. But you're all friends, and wouldn't you want to give your buddy a break, what with him falling on hard times. Except someone else in the group doesn't agree... and so the division starts.As a matter of fact, there should be verbiage that causes forfeiture of the initial investment if it goes past 'x' days late on a bill without a really, really good reason.
I investigated this about 10 years ago. I ended up not being able to come to any agreement on basic ground rules, so I bought my own parcel.
My struggle with it....is spending enough time up there, as I have to work more than I'd like to retain/maintain it when little gifts from mother nature like needing 300 dump truck loads of fill to put your driveway back in after a rain storm comes.
So if you're planning it, also plan for a reserve/escrow, because some bills can't wait for a co-owner to pay 'when I get around to getting caught up'.
As a matter of fact, there should be verbiage that causes forfeiture of the initial investment if it goes past 'x' days late on a bill without a really, really good reason.
And this is why these things don't work out. Subjective terms like "Really Really Good" mean different things to different people and this changes over time. You would have to list out every reason, being very specific. Just imagine how long this would be and how long it would take to put together. The other option is No Exceptions. Simple, to the point, easy to interpret. But you're all friends, and wouldn't you want to give your buddy a break, what with him falling on hard times. Except someone else in the group doesn't agree... and so the division starts.
northern Maine you can get a 3,000 acre parcel...at least you could several years ago....
I only say that much because every gun club has been encroached upon by developers and you can see the problems that has created. A shooting range in the middle of 3,000 acres should eliminate any of those types of encroachments.
Ya, 2 hours is a comfortable spot. For enough land I’d do 3, but that’s the limit.but...you have to drive there.
If I push, I can get to our place in NH in 2 hours flat with no stops. Usually, there is a stop at tractor supply/walmart/o'reilly's/hardware store in Plymouth.
I'm 15 miles from civilization when I'm up there. Far enough away.
I've got to imagine a 3000 acre parcel would be 4? 5? 6?? hours.....
And then there'$ getting power, well$ and $eptic to it.
but...you have to drive there.
If I push, I can get to our place in NH in 2 hours flat with no stops. Usually, there is a stop at tractor supply/walmart/o'reilly's/hardware store in Plymouth.
I'm 15 miles from civilization when I'm up there. Far enough away.
I've got to imagine a 3000 acre parcel would be 4? 5? 6?? hours.....
And then there'$ getting power, well$ and $eptic to it.
Ya, 2 hours is a comfortable spot. For enough land I’d do 3, but that’s the limit.
Now we need an airstrip...
This whole idea would make a great reality show. Take a bunch of anti-government folks and have them try to form their own town with the only requirements that there be a common shooting range [and airport?].
Twenty five guys at $1000 each. Form an LLC and buy the land. Shooting range for life. I'm in.
You could call it the 'Free Town Project' or something. Maybe go bigger and try a whole state.There was a serious discussion a few years ago that seemed to have land picked out and an area for a community garden, small scale livestock etc.
But then there would be rules and all the what if's killed it. I don't think it's a bad idea. I'd rather have most people from this group as neighbors rather than some of the crazy libs that are up here.
An easier plan would be for a group to find a town or area they like and then gradually take it over.