INVEST IN FARM LAND!
This is a very interesting article that I came across that I'd love to share with you. Having SOLD THREE SOUTH DELTA ACERAGES this year, and with a 10 acre parcel presently listed FOR SALE between Ladner and Tsawwassen - staying informed and up to date with this growing market (no pun intended!) is my mandate! If you have an interest in this area of Real Estate, please give me a call! I'd love to chat...
In the red-hot Fraser and Okanagan valleys, that's forcing some farmers to shift to more profitable crops such as blueberries and grapes, and others to shelve expansion plans as they are priced out of the market.Increasingly farmers are competing with urban migrants who are pushing up prices for rural acreage, according to the spring farmland values report from Farm Credit
"People are coming here with monopoly money. It's
"I tried to buy land about a year ago and I was quoted $1.2 million for five acres."
"There is no way I can manage that."
Naramata now has 19 wineries and half the homes in the area are summer homes and vacation rentals, Van Westen said Tuesday.
Farm Credit
Farmland with mature blueberry plantings and land suitable for blueberry production is being gobbled up, with 16,000 acres now devoted to the healthful fruit, up from 12,000 acres three years ago, according to the BC Blueberry Council.
In the
While the average price for farmland in B.C. is about $2,400 an acre -- up from a low of about $800 in 1987 -- McCaughan said it costs anywhere from $45,000 to $95,000 in the Fraser Valley.
Mike Raffan, a 52-year-old former restaurateur, won't say what he paid for Township 7 Vineyards which grows grapes both in Langley and the Okanagan, but he confirmed that his five acres in Langley cost more than $80,000 apiece.
"I would love to have more land but we're just new into the business and it's going to take us a while to accumulate cash," Raffan said. "The alternative is to purchase additional grapes and we're going to have to do that again this year."
However, high grape prices have prompted Ben Stewart to cap purchases and production at Quails' Gate Winery in the Okanagan because he says there is "a disconnect between what the consumer is willing to pay and what the people who are buying this land are asking for grapes."
Based on highest and best uses, he said a realistic price for good quality farmland in the Okanagan is about $65,000 an acre, but some smaller parcels under 10 acres are going for more than $100,000.
"Those are hobby farms at best so the reality is that for agricultural end users, and this includes people trying to get into the business, the thresholds are becoming unbelievable and untenable."
Grape prices in the Okanagan are now quadruple those in
"The whole 'Brand Okanagan' is almost too successful, which is great, but on the other hand, it has definitely put a damper on us trying to expand."
Farm Credit
"Given the economy in
"There is a general shift to higher-value crops like blueberries and greenhouse production because, obviously, you can't produce low-value crops at these land values."
Lower-value Fraser Valley crops that are being sidelined, or at least not expanded, include processing peas, beans, corn, strawberries, and some fresh-market vegetables, said Mark Sweeney, berry industry specialist with the B.C. Ministry of Agriculture.
Most provinces continue to see growth in farmland values consistent with an upward trend since the start of the decade, Farm Credit