Looking at More CHEAP Land Park a Camper On (LEGALLY!)

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SUV RVing

SUV RVing

23 күн бұрын

In this video I explore some surprisingly cheap acreage with surprisingly great mountain views!
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DATE FILMED: Early April 2024
► Adventure Know-How: adventureknowhow.com/
► The SUV RVing Website: suvrving.com/
► The SUV RVing Facebook Group: / suvrving
GPS COORDINATES, etc.
** Property #1 general area: 37.17772, -105.49477
** Property #2 general area: 37.35586, -105.68976
** Property #3 general area: 37.36598, -105.35314
** Property #4 general area: 37.44408, -105.31030
** Campsite: 38.10254, -105.77845
OTHER LINKS
** Gear I use: suvrving.com/gear
** SUV RVing the Book: amzn.to/2SUrtme (Affiliate link)
** The blog: suvrving.com
** Instagram: / suvrving
** My other KZfaq channel: / tenkaraaddict
This video is all about looking for cheap land in the San Luis Valley of southern Colorado!
#cheapland #realestate #camping

Пікірлер: 644
@marcmeinzer8859
@marcmeinzer8859 22 күн бұрын
I owned land near the first parcel for ten years and finally decided to donate it to the Catholic homeless shelter in Alamosa, CO. The problem with Costilla county is the fact that although you could be on a borderline nonexistent dirt road with no neighbors next to a cattle ranch where tons of cow manure get deposited on the ground each year the county engineer will most certainly not grant you an exception to their ridiculous building codes which eliminated provisions for outhouses with 400 gallon pump out tanks in favor of forcing everyone to install a store bought septic system with tile field and drill a well to run it even though a composting or incinerating toilet would really make more sense considering the water table there which is not really conducive to running flush toilets. They will however allow you to live in a quonset hut which is nice. Then also it is simply too cold during the winter considering that this is the highest alpine valley pretty much anywhere and goes down to 40 below Fahrenheit during the winter. I got 5 acres for $3,000. And no, it wasn’t worth hanging onto. Were I convinced that I really needed to move off grid I’d just buy a used sailboat at this point, probably in Washington state and then motor up the inside passage to anchor out somewhere in the panhandle of Alaska which is surprisingly warm during the winter considering how it is warmed by the Humboldt current. I no longer trust building departments much of anywhere hence the current fascination with sailboats.
@stanbyme7874
@stanbyme7874 21 күн бұрын
Excellent!
@dixielambrecht7009
@dixielambrecht7009 21 күн бұрын
Thank you for the warning
@MsRotorwings
@MsRotorwings 21 күн бұрын
Yeah, 40 below would be a dealbreaker.
@jasonlightfoot4145
@jasonlightfoot4145 20 күн бұрын
I'm buying a sailboat for overwintering 🤙I absolutely love my SLV property but the winter temps are too much, and I was raised in Vail Colorado. That inside passage is next level beautiful done it a few times, going north and south.
@asktheanimals
@asktheanimals 20 күн бұрын
Agreed. I suspect outhouses aren't allowed due to the underground aquifer being so close to the surface, & flush toilets aren't a good answer either. If done correctly, above ground mouldering & composting systems utilizing passive solar are particularly well suited for the SLV. Problem is, most people don't know how to do it correctly, thus the counties aren't willing to allow it. I know people there who sneak it in after they bit the bullet on a septic. Properly composted humanure is great for trees & shrubs. Depending on the cattle ranch, if good managed grazing is being practiced, they are great to live near or with.
@trishrobbins9942
@trishrobbins9942 22 күн бұрын
San Luis Valley used to be sooo beautiful. But has been chopped up into small lots. The lack of building code has created a mess of shacks and falling down RVs and piles of tires and trash. Be warned: the wind blows like crazy and it gets extremely cold. Water is a big issue. There’s a reason it’s been historically empty.
@1ACL
@1ACL 22 күн бұрын
Very true.
@SUVRVing
@SUVRVing 21 күн бұрын
Yeah, there's a reason the land is so cheap! But people make it work. Thanks for watching, Trish.
@laurareeves6332
@laurareeves6332 20 күн бұрын
Decades ago I bought a lot in this area. I owned it for about a decade and even put a small cabin on the property. From my experience, I have one bit of warning. Be prepared for continuous break-ins and vandalism by the locals.
@trishrobbins9942
@trishrobbins9942 20 күн бұрын
@@laurareeves6332 A close friend had the same experience. Every time he visited his cabin a piece of the structure would be missing, like the front door, all the windows, the front steps, etc.
@Unit8200-rl8ev
@Unit8200-rl8ev 20 күн бұрын
​​​​​​@@laurareeves6332Saint Lois is the Patron Saint of Thieves, and, as the Parish Priest of Saint Lois Church, I welcome all thieves of every Denomination to come to the Church with their booty as offerings, which I will gladly fence for them, if they will make an offering to the Church, in God's Holy Name. And be sure to visit our Resale Shop in downtown San Lois, which specializes in construction supplies, housewares, and auto parts.
@davidk6668
@davidk6668 22 күн бұрын
I don’t know why you would want to buy property when you can camp in any National Forest or BLM land for 14 days at a time and go where the weather and access works. That is my approach.
@stanbyme7874
@stanbyme7874 21 күн бұрын
My thought too. Even if I could build a shed & come back I’d worry the shed would disappear. I like moving around. Neighbors, kids, etc bugging you? Give a friendly wave & move on down the road❤
@mayploy6869
@mayploy6869 20 күн бұрын
it’s getting harder and harder to do that now because more people are ruining it for the rest of us and restrictions getting tighter, more annoying people around trashing a place etc…
@brianasamuels
@brianasamuels 20 күн бұрын
Because they shut down a lot of land during Covid. You can expect that they will be doing more of that now that they know that they can control people in such a manner very easily.
@TL-rh1lf
@TL-rh1lf 18 күн бұрын
@@mayploy6869 that's usually how it goes... can't have nice things
@hampstar
@hampstar 18 күн бұрын
2 many murderers
@zopi9
@zopi9 22 күн бұрын
Wasband and I own 12 acres near Mesita, a bit south of San Luis. It's big and empty out there and has a prehistoric feeling to it. The sky is immense and especially spellbinding at night. If you do land in that area, don't leave for too long as all of your belongings will be stolen, including fencing.
@stanbyme7874
@stanbyme7874 21 күн бұрын
😳
@doingmoreoutdoorswithvivia7310
@doingmoreoutdoorswithvivia7310 7 күн бұрын
Exactly! See my comment above. My parents lived there for a while.
@stanbyme7874
@stanbyme7874 21 күн бұрын
Love these videos. Greatest part is people who have live/bought there commenting.
@MSTBASSMAN
@MSTBASSMAN 21 күн бұрын
Many commenters have mentioned the horrible winters, and some have mentioned the winds. Both are HUGE reasons to not buy anything in this area. The winds are unrelenting for long periods of time, and it is not an exaggeration to state that they will literally drive you crazy. There are reasons that this land is so inexpensive, and you should pay heed. I bought a house in a small town of 500 people in remote southwest Colorado and lived there for seven years, because I thought that removing myself from civilization would be the answer to my problems. It was not.
@tomfitzsimmons6535
@tomfitzsimmons6535 20 күн бұрын
Amen.
@paulas_lens
@paulas_lens 17 күн бұрын
I have learned, place, does not change who I am.
@bryanmathew2079
@bryanmathew2079 14 күн бұрын
Ya it Be a CoLd LoneLy PLace & **who knows What Laws are Comming iN This State Of DispensaryS GaLore.
@billharris7235
@billharris7235 21 күн бұрын
A good visual for an acre is a football field, which is 1 1/3 acres.
@mauimixer6040
@mauimixer6040 20 күн бұрын
Thanks, very useful 😊
@user-jb6oe7yk3w
@user-jb6oe7yk3w 21 күн бұрын
I know this wasn't the purpose of this particular video, but the museum in Fort Garland is actually super interesting, its an intact fort from 1858, built just a decade after the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo that made the San Luis Valley a US territory. The fort was commanded by Kit Carson and was the setting for some interesting civil war history. A lot of people breeze right past it because it doesn't look particularly impressive from the outside, but there are intact, 160 year old adobe structures on the grounds, and some great interpretive displays on the Buffalo soldiers and other area history. Its a really good off-the-beaten-path stop during a visit to Great Sand Dunes
@SUVRVing
@SUVRVing 21 күн бұрын
Good to know! Thanks for sharing 👍
@deb7518
@deb7518 19 күн бұрын
Tidbits like this are why I always read comments. I love it when the locals chip in with extra info.😊 Thanks!
@PulpParadise
@PulpParadise 19 күн бұрын
@@deb7518 depending on the channel, the comments are sometimes the best part! (@SUVRVing I'm not talking about your channel here.)
@m532198
@m532198 21 күн бұрын
AS an SLV resident, I suggest driving the dirt roads after a rain. They can get soft and mushy-muddy.
@VideosOffRoad
@VideosOffRoad 22 күн бұрын
Having to get a permit to camp on your own land seems...weird, and a bit tyrannical. #Commierado
@slimpickins2371
@slimpickins2371 22 күн бұрын
They are telling you it's not your land.its theirs. A permit is paid permission. Why can you only do it if you pay for permission? This is physiological tyranny
@whatarewedoingouthere
@whatarewedoingouthere 22 күн бұрын
Arizona has similar rules in most counties. Pretty sure Texas does as well.
@donEvans27
@donEvans27 22 күн бұрын
Think government services and it makes more sense
@VideosOffRoad
@VideosOffRoad 22 күн бұрын
@@donEvans27 Think property taxes and it doesn't.
@howardlowry6412
@howardlowry6412 22 күн бұрын
Agreed!
@anoushkaperkert933
@anoushkaperkert933 22 күн бұрын
I live in the SLV. It's arid, dry and inhospitable. I was charmed by the mountains when I first moved here, but the high desert climate at 8000 feet makes it a challenging place to live. Relentless winds in the spring - it gets so dusty you can't even see the mountains. Relentless mosquitos in the summer, which makes hiking nearly impossible. Dry air that affects your skin, eyes and your breathing. This is still a beautiful place with dark skies and wonderful quietness. But I am looking to move to greener, friendlier pastures soon.
@johnganshow5536
@johnganshow5536 22 күн бұрын
Interesting outlook that only someone that lives there would know. I want to visit it though because of all the UFO sightings.
@anoushkaperkert933
@anoushkaperkert933 22 күн бұрын
@@johnganshow5536 Good luck! 12 years and not a single UFO sighting for me 😊
@MusicByJC
@MusicByJC 22 күн бұрын
@@anoushkaperkert933 That is because the aliens erase your memory after they have abducted and probed you.
@nomaderic
@nomaderic 22 күн бұрын
I watched a documentary not too long ago of people who live in this area and they all said much of what you just said. Also they said there are tons of restrictions as far as what you can do on the land
@1ACL
@1ACL 22 күн бұрын
I agree with you. It's rough here.
@curtdrahn8522
@curtdrahn8522 22 күн бұрын
As a long time investor and Realtor, Appraiser, I would offer just one bit of advice. Make an offer of about half of the asking price just to see how motivated the seller is. Then work up from that offer. I have made some pretty amazing buys in the past, some way below the 50%. I would also remind you that you should plan on doing some fire protection on the property, you are in an area that a wild fire could happen. I personally would start on the last one. Purchase what you can afford even if you have to stretch the budget a bit.
@danparker1976
@danparker1976 21 күн бұрын
I sincerely agree..I offered 10k on a piece of land that was being offered up for 25k..I ended up getting the land for a little over 10k when I paid taxes etc...they don't make anymore land is what I've always been told
@SUVRVing
@SUVRVing 21 күн бұрын
Good tips! Thanks Curt.
@michelleharrell8452
@michelleharrell8452 21 күн бұрын
Thankyou for that information.
@censoredeveryday3320
@censoredeveryday3320 21 күн бұрын
Do you recommend even offering 50% on normal houses? Seems like most sellers would just laugh and ignore it
@NalaDoowtrop
@NalaDoowtrop 20 күн бұрын
Dirt don't burn.
@alanboulee5453
@alanboulee5453 21 күн бұрын
A year ago I bought 7 acres in central Tennessee for $87k near the town of Linden. The only restriction is you can't put a single wide house trailer on the property. It's on the top of a forest covered mountain. So far I've added a parking place for my motor home and a RV pole for electricity. I may add a well and sceptic in the future.
@Chad-gr3rz
@Chad-gr3rz 22 күн бұрын
Costilla County has some prohibative rules on water and septic systems on all that cheap land...be advised!
@SteveAustin-jp3ev
@SteveAustin-jp3ev 34 минут бұрын
Correct , a crooked county
@imc4357
@imc4357 18 күн бұрын
That’s interesting. We drove last week from Oregon to the area you were in to look at bare land. We ended up purchasing a 40 acre lot outside of Monte Vista. It was important to us to have blm/national forest access within a short distance from the property. Luckily we found one that has a vast trail network to explore, leading to public lands starting down the road. The towns of South Fork, Del Norte, Monte Vista, and Alamosa have plenty to offer in small town charm.
@CoolHandLuke01
@CoolHandLuke01 14 күн бұрын
What will you do on the land ?
@jasonlightfoot4145
@jasonlightfoot4145 20 күн бұрын
I own a property in the SLV and it is a harsh mistress. The wind blows damn near daily and it is intense. It is cold in the winter-15f is not uncommon. With that being said there is a beauty here that is undeniable and can capture your heart. My view of mt Blanca and the SDNP is spectacular and I never tire of it. Oh and the quiet in certain parts is otherworldly and addictive.
@user-tb2zc8du3y
@user-tb2zc8du3y 17 күн бұрын
Give it a few more years and it will be the perfect conditions with climate change.
@stevenwoodie5044
@stevenwoodie5044 22 күн бұрын
I bought 12 acres in the San Lois valley. Mosca in particular. A few miles directly in front of Blanca. Hardly anyone follows those stupid camping laws. My camper is set up permanently and I've never paid that tyrannical "camping fee". WARNING.....San Lois valley has absolutely miserable wind conditions most of the year. Gusts up to 80mph. Lovely place but hard to live.
@jasonlightfoot4145
@jasonlightfoot4145 20 күн бұрын
This last big windstorm about a month back I thought my roof was going for a ride. I am just south of you about 10 miles in between Mosca and Alamosa off CR 112 the quiet and dark skies are what get ya then the reality hits and she is a harsh mistress.
@VR_investments
@VR_investments 20 күн бұрын
You gotta be a pretty miserable person to enforce camping laws like that
@user-kw7yp5pw3n
@user-kw7yp5pw3n 20 күн бұрын
The comments are informative from people who’ve live thru the seasons out there. Wind can be brutal as we know from our CA deserts.
@wbehrens62
@wbehrens62 22 күн бұрын
The reason its so bad in the valley is Government restrictions (state and local), Water rights disputes and rules (see government restrictions) and weather. Its colder in the SLV than in many places in Wyoming. The valley is a cold well where the mountains funnel cold air into the valley in the winter and if there is a high pressure pattern set up it just stays and turns into a deep freeze. On the flats (valley floor) it is known as a place to disappear and a place to freeze to death.
@carmenwheatley7316
@carmenwheatley7316 21 күн бұрын
🥶
@1ACL
@1ACL 22 күн бұрын
Don't buy anything out there until you've experienced every season thoroughly-- and preferably more than once. I live here and have seen many people buy, build, and move out in a couple years. It's cold, hot, dry, dusty, dust storms, do you have water rights?, it's had to get the things you may need, shipping costs makes everything more expensive, ...it's an extreme environment. The Native Americans didn't even live here full time. They came through, hunted, soaked, and left.
@asktheanimals
@asktheanimals 20 күн бұрын
Yup, & mosquito season can be a doozie.
@steventinsley5664
@steventinsley5664 18 күн бұрын
I totally agree with everything you said. All of those spots he showed look like nothing but big pieces of ugly barren wasteland that are not worth buying at all. I wonder who is selling these worthless pieces of land anyway, especially the one selling for $18,000 dollars, who would be dumb enough to pay that much for that land? Not me! lol.
@katieclay3641
@katieclay3641 17 күн бұрын
Thanks for that Info.
@Eric12358
@Eric12358 17 күн бұрын
Good advice. Too many people impulse buying or building big chalets out in the middle of wilderness without thinking.
@DinkAround
@DinkAround 16 күн бұрын
I own a few lots in that spot in San Luis and am working to gather more. I am happy they have restrictions campers and time limits. They require you have survey, septic and water tank. You can build a house and not RVs. Keeps out the trouble. Nice area and I think some land was purchased for an airport.
@larryc6598
@larryc6598 22 күн бұрын
A good book describing the land history and difficulties in this area, Cheap Land Colorado: Off Gridders at Americas Edge
@SUVRVing
@SUVRVing 21 күн бұрын
Just added it to my reading list. Thanks! And for anyone else interested, here it is (Amazon affiliate link): amzn.to/3x7uSrR
@jimgolden5680
@jimgolden5680 21 күн бұрын
This is a great book and gives some perspective…
@TropicTrdr
@TropicTrdr 20 күн бұрын
Thank you. Just purchased.
@robb61887
@robb61887 9 күн бұрын
I was going to recommend the same book. It’s excellent.
@paullopes846
@paullopes846 20 күн бұрын
This is a great series that you should keep doing. Driving to different places in the states and looking at properties that might work as a place to stay. The comments on the last one you did had so much interesting information that people shared. I learned a lot. 💯👊👍
@debbilermond1553
@debbilermond1553 22 күн бұрын
Tristan, thanks for showing us what a Southern Colorado high desert valley looks like for purchasing land. If it were me, I would chose option #5 where you parked for the night. Paying $1,300 - $18K for 2 weeks every 3 months sounds more like a time share to me. It ties you into committing to use your property to justify the expense of owning it. You also have to pay property taxes on that land. Out of the 4 you showed, the only one I would even consider is the 4th option with the trees but unless you planned to do more than just park there, the dispersed camping still appears like the better choice, IMO.
@1ACL
@1ACL 22 күн бұрын
I agree. There's miles and miles of great camping on both sides of the valley.
@SUVRVing
@SUVRVing 21 күн бұрын
I agree. The price of boondocking is hard to beat!
@jeffreyallen1290
@jeffreyallen1290 21 күн бұрын
Your point is exactly correct. I've owned a 35 acre parcel with aspen and bordering NF, two 5 acre lots with trees and rock formations but I found that after a few years the desire to camp at new places is over whelming. I sold them all and just camp anywhere in the NF and whenever I have time . Colorado has so many wonderful places, even with all the crowds that are coming here. The San Louis Valley is the last place I'd buy land.
@Double0pi
@Double0pi 22 күн бұрын
Third one is definitely the way to go. Those plants are larger because there's more easily accessed underground water.
@pimacanyon6208
@pimacanyon6208 20 күн бұрын
San Luis Valley is awesome. It's one of the largest high elevation valleys on the planet. All of those towns and properties you showed are quite high elevation wise, 7500 to 8000 feet above sea level. Winters are cold, but Spring, Summer, Fall are nice. The sun at that elevation is intense and as a result I would prefer to have some trees, otherwise you can end up feeling like you're under a broiler during the day. Crestone is my favorite town in the area. It's on the east side of the valley, right up against the big peaks of the Sangre de Cristo Range. It's a unique place due to the fact that there are 12 or 15 spiritual communities right there, 3 or 4 Tibetan Buddhist Monasteries, one or two Zen communities, a Carmelite monastery, a Hindu temple, etc. And land that's been subdivided into lots, some of which have been built on, but many have not. However, I would guess that lots near Crestone would be the most expensive lots compared to the other lots you showed in this video.
@martinlwebb4
@martinlwebb4 21 күн бұрын
Strangely enough I’ve eaten at that “All-Gon Restaurant & Pizzeria” in Fort Garland after spending the day at Great Sand dunes National Park and it was a hidden gem!
@user-tb2zc8du3y
@user-tb2zc8du3y 17 күн бұрын
Same! They were so friendly, the food was perfect and you can’t beat the Mountain views just outside.
@bridgetmuehlberger5141
@bridgetmuehlberger5141 22 күн бұрын
Love these “Land Hunters” segments. I’m getting a good education in land owning, what you get for your money, nearby resources and local government restrictions. Really enjoying these! Also, loved that camping spot. The golden hour light was gorgeous! 😊
@doingmoreoutdoorswithvivia7310
@doingmoreoutdoorswithvivia7310 9 күн бұрын
You drove past the road to Mountain Home reservoir. If you keep going, you can get to my parents cabin. Well, used to be my parents cabin. When my father passed my mom decided to sell it. There are some issues buying land out there. One neighbor had an entire log cabin kit stolen off the property when they were out of town. Another owner passed, and one of the lawman's son stole all the solar panels off the cabin the next day. If you leave town for too long you may find your pinion nuts stolen, or branches cut off your trees. There are some in that area that think the land is theirs and they can take what they want. No joke. Be aware.
@BryanDoesCinema
@BryanDoesCinema 4 күн бұрын
Trust me. Colorado native for 49 years here. There is a reason it’s so cheap.
@Deanna52ish
@Deanna52ish 22 күн бұрын
#2, the amount of space and the town. Loved the land hunters content. Thank you.
@jwebbw
@jwebbw 22 күн бұрын
This is another good service you have found and are providing to your community while you're outdoor adventuring in the West....thanks and until the next one !!
@mikam8801
@mikam8801 22 күн бұрын
Buy two or three adjacent plots for $7000/$10,500 and get 10/15 acres on #2. (Or whatever multiple you can afford) Plus, you can’t underestimate Walmart access.
@natlovell122
@natlovell122 22 күн бұрын
Something kinda new! Thoroughly enjoyed this Tristan. That little reservoir was a cool spot with some great views!
@SUVRVing
@SUVRVing 21 күн бұрын
Thanks, I'm glad you liked it!
@TheSandiaman
@TheSandiaman 22 күн бұрын
Remember one thing about the San Luis valley, it gets really cold there in the winter, then you would have to deal with mud in the shoulder season, wind year round. Your best bet is to be off the valley floor and be up in the foot hills, less cold and more protection from the winds. You need to be able to get to Alamosa for supplies and repairs etc. your safer investment would be buying land in the trees in case you would want to sell the property in the future.
@jasonlightfoot4145
@jasonlightfoot4145 20 күн бұрын
Great in theory but those parcels are few and far between and the price goes up dramatically. I think k the prettiest part of the valley is up near Bonanza, which puts you into going to Salida and dealing with that mess, but that's just my opinion, and ya know what they say about those 🤣
@Barley150
@Barley150 22 күн бұрын
Hi Tristan. I did this -- bought 20 acres, built cabin. There was no power, so I used Aladdin lamps, gasoline-powered generator, solar panels. Eventually enough people built and we could bring in the power line. If I had known how expensive it would be to bring electricity to undeveloped land like this, I might have done something else.
@SUVRVing
@SUVRVing 21 күн бұрын
Interesting! Thanks for sharing your experiences.
@georgeallen7667
@georgeallen7667 21 күн бұрын
Always got to bring all the conveniences with you, and then B about it. Stop californicating rural/ free areas
@swerne01
@swerne01 21 күн бұрын
@@georgeallen7667 What's the longest period of time you've lived without a source of electricity?
@Eric12358
@Eric12358 20 күн бұрын
That's what solar panels are for.
@rosefitzsimmons1044
@rosefitzsimmons1044 20 күн бұрын
Said the man using the convenience of the internet
@kcreeves199
@kcreeves199 22 күн бұрын
One thing you didn't mention is that Alamosa often has the coldest "officially reported" temperature in Colorado. Don't let the "desert" landscape there fool you. My parents and I used to fish a lot at Mountain View Reservoir when I was a kid. My sister used to own a cabin way up in the mountains above Mountain View, a wonderful area.
@glamperjan
@glamperjan 19 күн бұрын
Great video! Keep em coming!
@mitchellbarnow1709
@mitchellbarnow1709 19 күн бұрын
There are incredible sand dunes in a National Monument close to the eastern side of this San Luis Valley! They are a must see! I was last there in the early 1990’s.
@slimmishler5525
@slimmishler5525 22 күн бұрын
In the winter, constantly leading, with Gunnison, for the coldest spot in the nation.
@Korlinath
@Korlinath 22 күн бұрын
Fort Garland brought back old memories of when I lived in Walsenburg for 1 year in 1999. Me and friends hiked up West Spanish Peak.
@kcreeves199
@kcreeves199 22 күн бұрын
I grew up in Aguilar, and climbed the West Spanish Peak many time. But only climbed the East Spanish Peak once.
@socalifornia1628
@socalifornia1628 22 күн бұрын
At roughly the 7:00 mark you outline the requirements for long-term camping at Location #1. Are there similar requirements at the other three properties? Thanks! BTW... great, informative vid! Love your hiking stuff, too.
@michaelobannion7342
@michaelobannion7342 18 күн бұрын
The requirements Tristan mentions are usually set by the county government. They're usually set to prevent people living permanently in campers and RVs and then abandoning them.
@michaelobannion7342
@michaelobannion7342 18 күн бұрын
And most of the counties in this part of Colorado have the same regs.
@dany8822
@dany8822 22 күн бұрын
I love, love LOVE this series you do!! Thank you for these 🤗
@benboruff
@benboruff 22 күн бұрын
I liked #2 best, too. But your camping spot at the end would be the kind of land I would be looking for! As I look for land to own and camp on, it's always primarily about the weather during specific times of the year. These higher elevation areas look great for a summer base!
@shannasteen9644
@shannasteen9644 22 күн бұрын
Fun land hunters episode! After living in the dry windy desert, trees are sooo important and desired for me now. No covenants is a double edge sword...buy as much land as you can afford.. guaranteed someone will set up next door!!
@Kralphrn
@Kralphrn 21 күн бұрын
Love these series!!!
@WhereToLillian
@WhereToLillian 21 күн бұрын
Really good info and views….enjoyed watching!
@stanbyme7874
@stanbyme7874 21 күн бұрын
My absolute favorite was your free campsite.
@Wes1487
@Wes1487 22 күн бұрын
This is a great series and I really enjoy seeing these smaller town in states I intend to visit.
@loriegreene9375
@loriegreene9375 20 күн бұрын
I enjoy watching these land videos and the comments from others. Thanks Tristin.
@eileenmcloughlin4778
@eileenmcloughlin4778 18 күн бұрын
Thank you for really giving us ĜREAT detailed information and the plus is that you detailed the nearby town!
@sandeeyoung3008
@sandeeyoung3008 22 күн бұрын
Love your Landhunter videos!
@PowerLiesToParalyze
@PowerLiesToParalyze 22 күн бұрын
Thanks for making this. I've visited and considered buying in these areas. This has been very helpful to me. I like property #2 best because Alamosa is a great town with many stores and restaurants. I found it to be more of a centralized location as far as highway travel. $3500 is amazing for 5acres so that's the winner in my book.
@johnsimpson8198
@johnsimpson8198 21 күн бұрын
Great video,such good info,love these videos!
@davids.4760
@davids.4760 22 күн бұрын
San Luis was surprisingly cool for such a small population. I would expect that town to be a few thousand people unless they see a lot of travel/tourist traffic. I really do like the trees on the last land. I enjoy these land videos!
@1ACL
@1ACL 22 күн бұрын
It looks better in photos...
@SUVRVing
@SUVRVing 21 күн бұрын
I'm glad you like them! I appreciate you watching 😁
@tylerquint1891
@tylerquint1891 21 күн бұрын
Love to see you in the valley. I bought a 5ac lot up on the blanca foothills years ago and really love it. It’s amazing how beautiful the land is there. The valley gets a lot of flak, but as long as you use it as a rec property expectations are set.
@glennac
@glennac 20 күн бұрын
Definitely, #3. 👍🏼 The views make it perfect.
@kath121
@kath121 21 күн бұрын
Oh my goodness! You gave me a flashback! Our family had property at Wild Horse Mesa near San Luis. We camped there for several years in the 70s. It was a magical place where wild horses would randomly come running through. 😍
@kevansmith5511
@kevansmith5511 21 күн бұрын
I like your optimism.
@bettyvanwhite6745
@bettyvanwhite6745 20 күн бұрын
I love this! I've been looking for land there
@tja3495
@tja3495 21 күн бұрын
👍 Thanks, very informative. I really like the Mountain Lake area. Also, the campsite is beautiful. Be safe. 💜☮
@gilly20
@gilly20 20 күн бұрын
Thank you brother. 😊 awesome vid as always.
@lmcwill0502
@lmcwill0502 22 күн бұрын
I would not want the first property , it makes no sense , since you must get a permit to camp on your own land . I can camp on BLM land for nothing and not pay any taxes for the land I am camping on.
@michaelmcshane6280
@michaelmcshane6280 21 күн бұрын
Thank you for another fun video
@joseph401
@joseph401 21 күн бұрын
Thanks for doing this.
@corinneconcannon469
@corinneconcannon469 14 күн бұрын
I like #4 by far thank you I enjoyed looking at different choices of land.
@vegas_trip7949
@vegas_trip7949 18 күн бұрын
Thanks for another great video!
@mickeybrumfield764
@mickeybrumfield764 22 күн бұрын
Bit of a rough and rugged area. I would imagine the weather with strong winds and snow storms could make tent living a little challenging at times.
@uwusmolbean
@uwusmolbean 22 күн бұрын
Cedar gnats will make you go crazy 🤪
@duvessa2003
@duvessa2003 18 күн бұрын
Thanks for covering inexpensive land options. If I had to choose one of the properties, I would choose the last, primarily because of the lake nearby. The whole dry and barren thing doesn’t suit me. I wouldn’t even care to visit this area but if I did, free camping by the lake would be preferable to purchasing something.
@Will-Parr
@Will-Parr 22 күн бұрын
A fun video. Thanks
@lowenhall1142
@lowenhall1142 19 күн бұрын
Nice! San luis is where my mom lives, not in town but just outside of it. She's off grid and has amazing views of the valley and the surrounding mountains. Especially Blanca, which i plan to climb this summer.
@1951Roy
@1951Roy 21 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing.
@danielsalach1234
@danielsalach1234 8 күн бұрын
The bushes are called sage brush just to let you know.
@susanjohnson5824
@susanjohnson5824 20 күн бұрын
Great video - thanks
@dporper6390
@dporper6390 18 күн бұрын
I liked the 4th option. Although the noise issue you described would make me hesitate and assess.😊
@TheHebrew
@TheHebrew 19 күн бұрын
Mrs. Rios, in San Luis, is the best restaurant in all of Colorado. My wife and I came from Arizona up through NM and into southern Colorado a few weeks ago and stopped there for lunch. Thai or Mexican, it's your pick, it's NOT fast food, but it's excellent and the service is very good.
@isabelmendi3973
@isabelmendi3973 21 күн бұрын
Nice video. I liked spot #3
@robertmcmahon1221
@robertmcmahon1221 18 күн бұрын
Enjoy your videos.
@SgtSkrog
@SgtSkrog 7 күн бұрын
Hardest part is always the county codes and regulations. Always check before buying. No address for mail without power is doable. But no living on it without power, well, and septic is restrictive. Cannot collect rain water is restrictive. And make sure it has water and can grow something to eat. I love these remote desert-like properties because they are not at the top of everyone's desired list. Some places will restrict you to how long you can live in that RV.
@juanitagreenspan5412
@juanitagreenspan5412 13 күн бұрын
I am really enjoying these peaks at different areas and what available land might look like. Thanks.
@harlandeke
@harlandeke 20 күн бұрын
I love the San Luis valley, we visited back in 2020...I think I would pick the one close to Fort Garland.
@rruffrruff1
@rruffrruff1 20 күн бұрын
TLDV version: You can spend $1,300 for a crappy 1/4 acre in the middle of nowhere on a crappy "road", that you can legally camp on for only 2 weeks every 3 months!... unless you pay, $15-20k? to put in a septic system and big water tank (which you will have to pay to fill) and get a special permit that allows you to camp there for 60 days, 3 times per year. Meanwhile you can camp on beautiful BLM and NF all year, legally.... move with the seasons, etc... for free. If you really want a piece of land, there are in fact places where they will let you park on your land forever and poop in a hole. You can buy a summer and winter parcel, and have nice weather all year. 🤪🤩
@rosettathompson2283
@rosettathompson2283 22 күн бұрын
I'm on board with property #2 also. 5 acres!
@wanderlust62
@wanderlust62 22 күн бұрын
Thanks for researching and sharing comprehensive info you found. With the increase of nomading, it seems people are getting an unrealistic understsnding. Appreciate your sharing facts of what is entailed with viewers. I agree about the shape... square and park or build in the middle!
@krewjones
@krewjones 20 күн бұрын
Alamosa…. So much potential. When we stayed there, a local said “it’s something”. Dead on.
@bryand2978
@bryand2978 18 күн бұрын
I like the last spot where you camped and it was free 😊
@duaneulman9915
@duaneulman9915 18 күн бұрын
Thank you :)
@tarwingrill4531
@tarwingrill4531 9 күн бұрын
The importance of camping free is that you get to move and experience different sites. Having to camp again and again in the same isolated spot, looking at same things, is like having baked potato for lunch and dinner every day.
@josephmartin1540
@josephmartin1540 21 күн бұрын
Brother! Just love this vid! We almost moved to Alamosa in something like 1970 when I was in Jr. High... If I wasn't such a worn out old Fa$t needing an entire medical team... I SO might move ASAP to this part of CO... or up near where y'all live! Thanks for this. Love seeing the places you show, want to visit, but if I never pull it off.. JUST THANK YOU! MAN, buy the last extra one if you want to have a place south! Camping... if I was an gazillionaire KZfaqr [joke] I'd buy several surrounding sites, i would!
@campingalan
@campingalan 21 күн бұрын
Hello from Ouray, Tristan! Thank you very much for showing these properties! I really like your format for doing this. It gives options for people to consider. I agree with your order of preferences!! That second property seemed to be the biggest bang for the buck that would require the least amount of work to get one going on it. I guess in saying that, that is assuming the property is still used under your original concept of a landing spot, for some time, in a camper/rv/tent-ish. Having said all of that, there is some value in that 4th property with the increased coverage with trees. The views on those first 3 open properties are awesome. But....when man made stuff shows up out on the valley floor, that does get attention. Having some trees around helps keep you out of view a bit more. Ha...my 40 acre piece is in the Paradox Valley, on the eastern side of the La Sal Mountains by Moab. 40 acres is a 1/4 mile by a 1/4 mile in size. I am 2 40 acre plots from the state highway that goes through the valley. I'll put my travel trailer out there for a week at a time a couple of times per year. In the warmer times, I do use the outdoor shower on my travel trailer. I hedge my bets that people driving 65mph on a not so great maintained asphalt road, undulating with the terrain, are not focused on my level of dressed-ness hehehehe. Fact of the matter is my trailer is like 3 mm tall when you look at it a 1/2 mile away hehehe. Safe travels!
@Starfish2145
@Starfish2145 21 күн бұрын
Freaking 🥶 in winter there
@chrisdenning9816
@chrisdenning9816 20 күн бұрын
I worked in Fort Garland for a summer in the early 70’s. Doesn’t look like it has changed much. Beautiful country all around that area and north of the San Luis valley. Thanks
@ginacardarella
@ginacardarella 14 күн бұрын
i like the when you show more tress
@praisegod7608
@praisegod7608 21 күн бұрын
Thanks a lot ,God bless you !
@bryanseverino3674
@bryanseverino3674 21 күн бұрын
Property #4. The trees make the difference. Driveway in is a plus. Good luck in your search!
@Anza_34832
@Anza_34832 22 күн бұрын
As much as I love Wyoming, its winter climate is too harsh. That makes Colorado an option. Somehow, the Carlsbad area (New Mexico!) has me interested, too!
@nomaderic
@nomaderic 22 күн бұрын
I don't know extensively about Carlsbad but a little to the west is a great option as well near somewhere like alamagordo. You have your flat desert land like this but can be in the mountains in 15 mins
@Anza_34832
@Anza_34832 22 күн бұрын
@@nomaderic Thanks for your recommendation! 👍
@margaretbutler9528
@margaretbutler9528 21 күн бұрын
San Luis Valley often has lowest temperatures in lower 48 in winter. Great Sand Dunes favorite place to visit.
@bertkelly7650
@bertkelly7650 22 күн бұрын
I liked the one close to the lake. Good road access and nice views.
@hymlog
@hymlog 18 күн бұрын
....Perfect land for a Walmart. ....You Made a Great Investment!
@maryshank7825
@maryshank7825 21 күн бұрын
#4 for sure
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