So I have a contract on 8A of gently sloping raw
land hill on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington state. One face of the hill is very steep, maybe 35 or 40 degrees rising to a plateau. The backside of it runs the length of the property into a ravine, and is a much gentler 5-10 degrees with flat areas. Thought I'd share what I've been up to, might help folks see what the process is and maybe someone will have helpful ideas.
I'm in the "feasibility study" period in which I have 30 days to figure out the following:
1) can I afford septic (required by law ho hum), electric, well to this ppty?
2) can I collaborate with this land in all my desired purposes?
3) how are the neighbors? will they be germane to my efforts? (one guy has already moaned about generators, somehow it interferes with his Orca watching)
4) what are the boundaries of the land?
Regarding 1), I rented an earth auger and bored 5 3' deep holes on the ppty with my realtor, who used to be a soil scientist 20 years ago. We found two sites that she believes could be used for a gravity
feed septic, the cheapest kind, thank dog. I am planning to do composting toilets but the county REQUIRES you have a septic field no matter what. It sounds like a handout to the underemployed of the county but the health dept insists it is because people get composting toilets, then can't deal with them (eww! gross!) and need something to fall back on. As for electric and well, the previous owners did the legwork on that so I only need to confirm their figures.
On 2), I have walked it a fair bit, but nowhere near
enough. The
trees are mostly alder from a logging 20-30 years ago, and plenty of gnarly bigleaf maples. The understory is diverse but typical, including oregon grape, huckleberry, lots of salmonberry,
native trailing blackberry,
nettles, devil's club, very little if any salal (yay), damn sword and
deer ferns agogo, holly trees, some Himalayan blackberry which will have to be slain with extreme prejudice. We were thinking of making treehouses in the maples (you can see top of Mt Rainier from one of them), maybe for airbnbs. Something that everyone thinks is birch is around, but it's not any birch I can find. And I really want birch. I have to figure out how much of the acreage is wettish due to a spring on the property and permeable hydrology which creates natural depressions suitable for ponds. Since I want to plant a lot of trees, hydrology is going to be very important.
3) After mining the real estate sites for months and driving all over to hell and gone looking at clearcut trashheaps and stony slopes, I found this unlisted property by word of mouth. That supports what I heard on here: the best places are not listed. The neighbors prefer the quiet of the woods, who doesn't? One of them sleeps outside 90% of the time. I don't want to run a generator longer than I have to (til I have grid power), but there will be earth augers, chainsaws, tree chippers (ok ok permies yell at me now but..........mushrooms) and the like running, plus gunfire, people are gonna have to deal. These are very real concerns as I want to have a community not be a nuisance.
4) I tried to run a string between two markers, which is never easy when it's overgrown. A proper survey costs 2-4k and I'm starting to think it's inevitable even though there are several markers and a clear treeline with the neighbor's ppty which hasn't had its marketable doug firs logged. I had the notion that a drone with GPS and a camera might do an easier and faster job, and be cheaper than a survey, and be something I could tool-library with friends and neighbors (accompanied by my services flying it). Has anyone had
experience doing drone surveys or having them done?