 I am 2 hours north of Manhattan taking a look at a farm property and guys, just breathing the air up here, I am so excited. That being said, I have no idea how to operate a farm, you know, I'm not really handy and I certainly don't have the money to do it. What I do know is what constitutes high quality animal foods, what to feed those animals, how to raise them and I have unmatched integrity in making people happy and healthy. That being said, the two things I need from you guys are, one, someone that knows how to operate is willing to run a farm, you know, interns that have worked on farms, maybe a family looking to get into homesteading, people to partner with me and work with me, you know, move to New York, hypothetically, you know, live rent free in the housing, pay you guys a salary, work out the logistics down the line. So if you're interested in that, definitely send me an email down in the description below. Two is investors. I've had quite a few people reach out to me and already say, hey Frank, I'll fund the whole farm, I want to invest this amount of money, but I want an idea of how many people are actually interested in supporting this and the goal is to have a publicly owned farm and expand throughout the United States to provide everyone with quality animal foods. So hypothetically, anyone that pays a membership fee, anyone that invests, gets shares in the farm. You know, your $20 membership fee, you get 20 shares, you invest $50,000, you get 50,000 shares, keeping the company publicly owned will allow us to put our profits towards expanding and not compromise the quality of the product. You know, two, three years from now, hopefully, you know, short term goal in the time span of a few years is to, you know, have a New York operation fully up and running, maybe start expanding to California, Texas, being able to ship to all parts of the United States reasonably, and then maybe even moving into, you know, international other countries. Short term goals, we definitely want to do eggs and chickens right off the bat. You know, everyone's feeding their chicken grain, corn, soy, whatever it is. No one has good quality eggs. So our first goal is going to be, you know, raise several hundred, a thousand chickens, get people quality eggs, then we'll start moving into dairy, and then if we have more land, if we have more investors, you know, we'll start looking into animals, wild game, just quality animal foods, as well as things people don't have access to and can't get. So if you guys are interested in investing, email down below as well, interested in running the farm operating, want to help me out, please reach out to me, guys. And as much as I would love to drop everything in my life right now and live on a farm with some smoke and Russian girl guys, honestly, listen, I swear, that would be the one thing I'd want to do. I just have too much of an obligation, you know, with my understanding of nutrition, my knowledge, you know, what I'm doing right now, even with the fitness stuff, you know, reaching more people and helping more people, I have important things to do and, you know, walking around on a farm all day, you know, it seems like a nice relaxing life, but it's not going to happen right now, plus I don't know what I'm doing. I'd have to learn everything and for me to drop everything and learn everything, how to run a farm, do all that stuff, it's just not good with my time. So if you guys are handy, if you guys know what you're doing, engineers, whatever it is, you want to run a farm, this sounds good to you, definitely reach out to me. Investors, anyone looking at supporting this, we'll think of some perks, but either way, you're going to own part of the company, part of the farm, part of the property. We're going to take a look around the property and we'll see what you guys think, but this is just, you know, the first property we're looking at by no means is it set in concrete, but definitely needs to be in New York, somewhat close to me off the bat. New church building across the street. Here's a barn operation with the, there's a silo. Not sure if you guys can really see it, but there's a silo there. They used to have corn to feed the cows. Huge barn, some horse stables in there. This is the residential house. Pretty much a dump, knockdown, the pond. I was really excited for this, guys. If I have like a freshwater spring fed reservoir pond, you know, fresh water every day, jump in the pond, take a swim, hot, cold, dirty, seems really nice to have something like that. A lot of woodland, some pasture land, a lot of garbage lying around, you know, various workshops and sheds throughout the whole property. There's even a chicken coop up there by the house. The land up there is another house. This is subdivided. They were telling me some like really rich guy whose dad made MTV or something, like owns the property over there, like about a hundred acre property, huge house on there. This is some pasture land. It goes up to woodland, but all of the land around here, it has been subdivided into making to houses. So this might not be ideal for agriculture from the standpoint where we're looking at, but there is some infrastructure here for, you know, from an older farm. But I think this was built like over a hundred years ago. So the property used to be a dairy farm. I don't know how many years ago, probably a few dozen right now. And they had, you know, over 50 head of cattle. I think they actually had a hundred head of cattle. That's what those grain silos were for. You know, they had the whole operation set up like this barn. You could put, you know, 50, a hundred cattle in here right now. The manure is handled, hay is handled, everything's managed already. It's four parcels now. It's the farm here. This is the buildings. We're in the farmhouse right now in the house. Right, and here's the barn, another barn down there. And then the one price we have on it, it's just with this one lot, the metal lot, and then for the 750, it's for everything. Okay, so this piece here, so 6.80 acres plus the 20.94 acres is how much? That's for 4.95. 4.95. This is 750, if you put these two lots with it. Now we're gonna add these two lots, which each, this one's 14.45, and this one is 11.35. Right, and that comes up to about 53, I think. Got it. And what type of, this is mostly woodland. Well, this is open until you get up to here. Okay. So this- You get up to here, you've got woods. See the woods in here. And some of this is good for pasture land. You can pasture it. Some of this gets pretty steep for pasture land when you get back up in here next to this parcel. So, right, just so you know, this was designed to build more houses. So what you see here are septic sides. I mean, they're in a million dollar house side, this one is a million dollar house side, this one already. And then the brothers, they bought this at the wrong time. And the owner was carrying a mortgage for them. And finally, they couldn't keep up in it. He took this back. Okay. And that's where we stand now with him. What is this over here? This is somebody else's property up here. That's just- That's a person from New York who lives up there. I think his father started MTV. Oh, okay. So this isn't for sale. This isn't for sale. These are owned by other people. This is- That could possibly be added to it. It's a lot that isn't owned by Gregory, but it's a parcel that I think could be bought. Okay. And there's a house on there, right? No, these are- No house. Oh, no house. These are proposed. The only two houses on it are here and here. Okay. And each one of these parcels have their own access by this private road. See, it comes into here. This private road goes up to here and it goes into here. This private road on this side, which is blacked out up to going into this house, comes up to here and brings off over to here. Okay. And includes this one, this one, and this one. Okay. What are these sheds? What are these symbolizing? These are proposed houses. Proposed houses. Okay. They're proposed houses. Some of this was past your land. You can see that some of it was past your land. Do you know what the herd size was by chance? What did they have, like 30, 40 cows? What the what? The herd size? Maybe we had- Oh, when they had the dairy farm? Yeah. Oh, they had 100 cows or more. That barn is equipped to hold a lot of cattle. There's one stable that's probably 70 and then they had 100 cows here. But they own more land. They own where the church is across the road. They own this up on a mountain. I see. Okay. And this was original boundary line. And this was original boundary line. But they owned all that. There was about a 300 and 300 plus acre farm, 300 plus or minus, I forget now. All right. So what's he paying them taxes for these three lots in the farm? I don't know what you mean without the- Without the exception? Without, just or either way. With it's about 35,000 right now. I mean, with no ag exemption, it's about 35,000. Oh, that's not bad for the house of these three lots? 35,000. Total? Yeah, I think that's- I don't think that's terrible. This house was paying, this house was almost 30 and just for the house? Correct. Well. That was crazy. That's all the taxes are up here? That's the taxes on this house were crazy. Hopefully they got those down. They were close to $30,000. And I think they were going to grieve them. Because I remember that was an issue- I went down the level. It did? A little bit, I think. Are we able to take a look at the barn or? Yeah, yeah. Okay, so these, see the ceiling height here? These are okay for horses. So you have one, two, three stalls for horses. And actually four, this is another horse stall. And then you see the ceiling drop. And so now it turns into cattle. What's the vintage of this barn, I forget? I forgot my sheep. What's the vintage of this barn? The dimension? The vintage. I don't have them down. No, the year it was built. Oh, I don't know. This one was built old. I'll tell you that. Yeah, right? Prior to 1900. This is a 19th century barn. Yeah. The original part here. And there was an addition put on over there. Okay. You pulled the truck right up here? You loaded the truck up here. Oh, wow. What were dairy going on here? Yeah. See, there were 70 or so, 75 would be my guest cows in here. Yeah. Yeah, the cows were all the same. Yeah, for sure. So the green from the silo's comes through here? Well, this was where they walked cows on both sides. This was the drops where the manure went. And then there was clay did out and sanded out here for the manure structure. All the manure went in there and they truck it away. Yeah, they keep all the manure. Do you sell your manure to the organic farm? No. I use it. Oh, you use it personally? I use it on the sale. So we started to dump, you know, on the board. I'm on the board for the first rescue in Dover. And for the first rescue in Dover. One of your guests, and he started selling it to the farm manure get-soul man, of course. This is the way you go into the silo. You've got a problem. I hope you can prove that. Oh, that's how you get into the silo? Right here, I think this one. That one did too. Oh, wow, look how cool that is. That's pretty cool, actually. Yeah. Wait, what did you say? Horse manure, or is it necessarily good for? Horse is not a good digester. So you've got weeds in it. I mean, it's OK, but if you use it around flowers, you think you could be putting weeds. Oh, I see into your heart. Weed steams. Yeah, OK, got it. So do you want to, I think, you're interested in seeing some of the land? It's the drive up here, right? What is it? There's a. Drive up a little bit if you want to see it. Yeah, we could do that. You want to do that? Do you want to hop in my car, Bob? We could do that. You've got a better car to drive across. So this could be all pasture up back in here? You can, well, this can all be pasture land. Some of it's grown up where you need a brush-shog. You can go up in here. I think I've driven up a little ways. I don't want you to. We drove up here once. Right, your car, but. Rebecca brought her BMW up here. Up in here, this is all part of it. There's a meadow up there. Can we go this? Is this still part of it? This is all part of it. OK. OK, right here. You've got to go to your right, and we'll go up on the hill. OK. This is the line. This is the line with the property. There's 125 acres or so up there on the hill. You're looking over towards the Siwon Gunks, and you see a bit of the Catskill. Right here, this is a meadow lot that goes up. As you guys could see, this is a complete dump knockdown. That older gentleman knew so much about the property. He's a real estate agent in this area. And I just don't think this offers any value from a housing perspective, from a barn perspective. I don't think any of these facilities are usable. And to the cost to build something like this, I don't think it's out of the realm of possibility to do it from scratch. To go in here, fix up all of these things, seems incredibly unrealistic. I'm not really sure where this stands from, like a land standpoint and access standpoint, with the ponds, with the woodland, the other parcels that are available. It's already been subdivided. This doesn't seem like an ideal property for what we want to do. I mean, it's pretty close, and I'm sure we could manage to do it on something like this. Let me know what you guys think. As I said earlier, reach out to me down in the emails below.