Seeing the wood for the trees: Why woodland retreats are becoming the must-have property
Nothing quite beats woodland for inspiring that back-to-nature feeling.
And, increasingly, more and more of us are happy to buy our own patch even if there is no property to go with it.
According to the specialist company Woods4Sale, owning woodland — for weekend jaunts, rather than to build on — is a growing market.
Leafy abode: Galewood House near Cambridge is on the market at £1.65million
‘Our buyers usually want a piece of land which is both a sound investment and something they can enjoy with their children,’ says Wood4Sale’s managing director, Joe Fielding, who claims sales have more than doubled since 2012.
Woodland can be bought either as part of the grounds of a property or as a stand-alone entity, with no dwellings on it.
When the writer and broadcaster Robert Penn moved to his cottage in the Black Mountains of South Wales 14 years ago, he hardly noticed the three acres of woodland it came with.
Yet it later became a passion that inspired him to make a television series for BBC4 about bringing an ancient wood back under management.
He also wrote a book Woods: A Celebration (Pavilion Books).
‘Working in the woods is profoundly satisfying,’ says Penn, 50, who is best known for partnering ex-cricketer Freddie Flintoff around Britain in a fish and chip van.
‘It’s something I look forward to, rather than a chore. I see the seasons change, feel in touch with nature and there are physical benefits you don’t get from the gym.’
Penn’s year-round list of tasks includes thinning out the weaker trees and planting new oak, cherry and hornbeam, while leaving dead timber on the ground.
As a result, wild flowers such as celandines, stitchwort, foxgloves and bluebells spring to life wherever sunlight falls.
‘It’s important to make holes in the canopy,’ says Penn, who is also patron of the Small Woods Association.
‘If you don’t, then the wood will become dark and dank, and you’ll damage the biodiversity.’
Richard Freshwater, director of estate agents Cheffins, says: ‘Woodland included within the grounds of a property adds to its desirability for various reasons.
Warm welcome: Fuel your woodburners with logs from your own 2.5 acres of mature woodland, in this detatched four-bedroom house, near Loch Ness
'If you are looking for privacy, it will help hide you away from neighbours and give added levels of peace and quiet.
‘For those with children, the possibilities for fun are endless.
'There are also practical benefits such as being able to chop your own firewood.’
Local wildlife can also enhance the appeal of a property.
Galewood House, (cheffins.co.uk) priced at £1.65million, is an Arts & Crafts house near Cambridge, virtually surrounded by woodland, which has created a wildlife haven.
‘We have buzzards, kestrels and tawny owls, which have successfully bred owlets,’ says Doug Clarke, a retired IT executive who has owned the house for 34 years.
‘We often see foxes, muntjac and badgers.’
The cost of buying woodland without a property on it, varies greatly.
Stop over: Stentwood Coach House is a four-bedroom modernised Victorian coach house in Honiton. It has 14 acres of mixed native woodland in its 20 acres of grounds
You may pay as much as £10,000 an acre for a well-managed broadleaf woodland in Kent, while you could get a mixed conifer and broadleaf woodland in Powys for as little as £2,000 an acre.
The Lake District is much sought after — especially near the central or southern lakes. Earlier this year a 1.9 acre patch near Lake Windermere sold for £40,000 at auction: a cost of about £21,000 an acre.
‘People buy woodland here for the tranquillity and the views,’ says Mark Barrow, a chartered surveyor with H&H Land and Property.
‘One buyer from Liverpool catches a train here most weekends, just to walk around in his own little piece of the Lake District.’
James Greenwood, at Stacks Property Search, has clients who buy houses in woodland to benefit their health.
‘Some see purchasing woodland as the equivalent of having their own personal health spa,’ he says.
The sale of Haws House, a nine-bedroom detached home near Broughton-in-Furness, Cumbria, offers an attractive extra option.
The house and one acre of grounds is for sale at £595,000 (michael-cl-hodgson.co.uk).
There is also the chance to buy the adjoining 11.8 acres of pasture and woodland, which could make a good money-spinner.
Picture perfect: Arts & Crafts house, Woodland Court, near the South Downs National Park, comes with nine acres of land including woodland
Small woodlands, run on a commercial basis, can make lucrative investments.
Figures from the Forestry index show returns from woodland have averaged about eight per cent for the past 20 years, though this is more due to the escalating price of land than the increased value of timber.
There are also tax benefits.
Profit from commercial woodland is tax free and any gains made on the value of the forest are exempt from capital gains tax.
On the debit side, small woods will require public liability insurance and cover for storm and fire damage.
Add to that the maintenance costs, and a small patch of woods may prove to be a solid investment, but it is unlikely to make you a fortune.
However, that is not what interests woodland enthusiasts.
‘The woods are great for the children,’ says Penn.
‘And, having watched me care for the environment, hopefully they will do the same in years to come
M. L. Marsh Ox-Teams and Barns22. M. L. Marsh Sawmill
ILLUSTRATIONS AND PHOTOGRAPHS
The Southern 70 acres version of El Capitan. Massive rock formation, hidden granite cliff on the left side covered by the trees
Marsh Mill Road
Along Marsh Mill Road
Entrance to R/W Middleton Rd
1. The Miner's Sunday2. A Sunday's Amusements3. A Daily Pleasure4. Occupation for Rainy Days5. The Mountain Expressman6. Residence and Farm of A. P. Chapman7. "The Expressman Has Arrived"8. Lodgings About 18559. Residence and Ranch of H. H. Kennedy, Goodyear's Bar, Sierra County, California10. Hidden Treasure Mine, Sunny South, Placer County, California11. Forty-Stamp Gold Mill12. Cross-Section Forty-Stamp Gold Mill13. Batea For Gold Mill14. Battery Frame15. Schematic View, Malakoff Diggings, Ca. 188016. English (Rudyard) Dam17. Omega Mine, Washington Ridge18. Truckee Hotel19. Bear Valley Mill, Towle Brothers, Dutch Flat20. Kearsarge Mill, Towle Brothers, Dutch Flat21. M. L. Marsh Ox-Teams and Barns22. M. L. Marsh Sawmill23. Gold Lake Ranger Station, Ca. 192224. Sierra Valley Ranger Station, 191525. Logging Engine26. Steam Donkey27. Steam Donkey Yarding, Ca. 190028. Railroad Logging Engine, Cars; Loader in Background29. Auburn Ski Club C.C.C. Camp30. Sattley C.C.C. Camp31. Temporary Logging Structure32. Fir Camp, Forest Hill; 1924. Fire Fighter's Payday
MAPS
1. Tahoe National Forest2. Ancient and Modern River System3. Main Routes to the Gold Fields4. Yuba Basin Mining Water Supply, 1850-535. Location of Gold Districts6. Geologic Map of Sierra City and Johnsville Districts, Plumas Counties7. Meadow Lake Mining District8. North Bloomfield Area, Ca. 18759. Yuba Basin Hydraulic Mining Ditch System 1854-188410. Routes Across the Tahoe National Forest11. Stagecoach Routes, 190212. Truckee Basin Logging Railroads (1868-1930)13. Geologic Map of Alleghany District, Sierra County14. P.G.& E. Facilities in the Yuba Basin, 191115. Tahoe National Forest - Cattle - 191516. Tahoe National Forest - Sheep - 191517. Tahoe National Forest - Grazing, 1939
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Nevada County GenWeb
Biography of Martin Luther Marsh
Marsh Mill is a historical town worth more than the asking price of $ 999,000. Includes a spring fed lake and 167 acres of rolling forested terrain. A plateau if you consider the hills surrounding the town.
Martin Luther Marsh and his brother Daniel photocopied from the 1895 Pictorial History of Nevada County.
The Marsh brothers were very prominent lumbermen in Nevada County. They partnered with A.B. Gregory in the 1860's to run the Old Pioneer Sawmill. It had been founded in the 1850’s on Little Deer Creek and encompassed the land now bounded by Nimrod, Nile and Clay Streets.
The above map is a detail from the 1871 Birdseye View of Nevada City which appears below.
Early newspapers mention a steam saw mill on Little Deer Creek owned by a “Russell and Hirst” in 1854 and owned by “Marsh, Palmer and Perry” in 1861. The sawmill and lumber operation of M.L. Marsh and A.B. Gregory on Nimrod Street in 1859 is shown on page 107 in the 1895 Pictorial History of Nevada County. (Marsh later removed his sawmill to another location on Boulder Street.) The 1864 Nevada County Assessor's roll shows the property as the Old Pioneer Sawmill of “A.B. Gregory.” Early tax assessments show stockpiles of lumber and 'working’ cattle on the property.
Martin Luther Marsh and his large family resided in the historic Marsh-Christie house on Boulder Street. He died 14 December 1911. His brother Daniel died 26 July 1921.
Judah had ignored the Truckee Route early on, leaning more toward a southern route near Tahoe, etc. I gather that his Doctor pal in Dutch Flat had much to do with the decision being made in favor of the Truckee Route, but then today I find something else! ...
Caleb Greenwood, the scout for the Stevens Party in 1844, found a way to bypass the upper Truckee Canyon in 1845. Known as the Dog Valley Section of the Truckee River Route of The California Emigrant Trail. From 1845 on it became THE route, basically a horseshoe detour from what is now Verdi, Nevada, to what is now Donner Lake, California. The Dog Valley Road would be nothing more than a part of the TRR until about 1852.
The northern mines of California, specifically the Yuba River country, and particularly the North and Middle Forks, were worked at early as June of 1848. Roads from Marysville and Sacramento had been established to the settlements of Camptonville, North San Juan, and Nevada (City), by 1849. Pack trails of course connected these settlements to the diggings on the North and Middle Forks of the Yuba. By 1852, the trails from Camptonville and North San Juan had been developed into passable wagon roads. They would meet and become one roughly three miles east of Forest (City). It would continue as one road through to what is now Verdi, Nevada. Jackson and Henness had built a road to their ranch, and Dr. Webber had built a road to his lake and hotel, so connecting the roads was an obvious thing to do. Emigrants traveling over the TRR by 1852, would branch off the TRR near what is now Stampede Valley (Dog Valley Road), and instead of heading south and west to Donner, would head west and a little north. I have numerous diary excerpts to verify this.
Diaries note that most went emigrants to Downieville, and a couple note that some companies went "south and west from Jackson's Ranch to Nevada City". (Not to be confused the Nevada City section of the Truckee River Route). ... That little jag to Nevada (City) is vital to the Judah connection.
In 1859, after gold was discovered in the Comstock, two different companies were formed to push freight and people to and from Virginia City, Nevada. The first was the "Truckee Turnpike Company". Organized
in Marysville, the road actually began in North San Juan, as connecting roads from there and Camptonville already existed. The TTC was actually two roads, the NSJ road and the Camptonville Road. Current "topo" maps show the Camptonville route as the Henness Pass Road, but in truth the NSJ road was more heavily used. In reality, they are "bifurcations" as they joined as one just east of Forest (City).
The second company started in Nevada (City), and was known as the "Heness Pass Turnpike Company". The two roads of the TTC that became one after Forest (City), and the HPTC, all became one at Jackson Meadows, now the site of the Jackson Reservoir. From that point on, the road was known as "The Henness Pass Road", and the companies involved worked as one, under the name HPTC, through to Virginia City, Nevada.
Of interest to you initially would be the site of "Marsh Mill". This site sits directly on the HPTC route between Graniteville, (Eureka), and the site of Bowman House. Marsh Mill was of course owned and operated by Charles Marsh!
In 1864, yet another road connected into the Henness Pass Road system. Known officially as the Pacific Turnpike, it was also known as "Culbertson's Road". This road ran from Dutch Flat east to Bear Valley,
then due north to Bowman House, where it connected to the HPTC road to Jackson Meadows, etc.
From a business viewpoint, let us look at Charles Marsh. His place sat roughly four miles west of Bowman House, directly on the HPTC road. The Pacific Turnpike intersected the HPTC Road at Bowman House. The Pacific Turnpike, A/K/A Culbertson's Road, was "owned" by yet another company, "The Nevada City Turnpike Company". The NCTC was basically the route of California #20, a heavily-used emigrant road in the 1850's. Both road connected at Bear Valley.
This is complicated, so please bear with me.
The Dutch Flat Tahoe Wagon Road, also started at Dutch Flat. Is that a coincidence?
...On the surface it appears that Judah and political as well as business allies were attempting to control wagon routes long before the existence of rail!
My point to all of this is that I have found newspaper accounts from the 1850's and 1860's of Marsh and Judah on the Henness Pass Road. It was a prime candidate, per the accounts, for rail. Marsh's interest should be obvious. Considering where rail was laid, and further considering the position of Charles Marsh in the grand scheme, what happened? I will send you the accounts of what I have if you are not aware of them.
... I was recruited to act as a scout, guide and mule skinner/teamster for the official California 150th celebration. The Missouri crew was short-handed when they reached Fernley, Nevada, and as I know the old wagon roads, I was drafted on the spot. Two weeks later, we arrived in Sacramento. We had four wagons, all Conestoga's almost thirty feet each in length. The wagons were built by Morris Carter using Smithsonian plans, right down to the brakes; being nothing more than a rope across the box to hook a
bootheel into, etc.
The mules did not like the few times we hit pavement, once in Reno and once near Truckee. In Truckee, some motorist honked a number of times, and the mules of course "went south". The result was two runaway teams, one of course was mine! We all survived the mishap, two-leggers and four-leggers alike, but we had to layover below Donner Summit to do some wagon repair, shrink wheels, replace a broken tongue, etc. I had been thrown from the wagon during the mishap and had more than a few bruises."
Trees Speak to the Soul of Human Beings
In a stunning new map, geographer and GIS analyst Robert Szucs has plotted the sprawling forests that blanket the continental United States.
The map highlights the striking difference between the landscape of the coasts and the central US, where what appears to be a massive blank space reveals land that is dominated by deserts and plains instead of trees.
In a stunning new map, geographer and GIS analyst Robert Szucs has plotted the sprawling forests that blanket the continental United States. The map highlights the striking difference between the landscape of the coasts and the central US. Forest cover is illustrated in varying shades of green
HOW TO READ IT
The brightest areas represent those where the forests are densest, while black indicates spaces with no forests at all.
The East Coast, along with the southeastern US and the Great Lakes region, makes up the largest chunk of forested area in the country – though industrialization and urbanization have brought extensive changes to the areas in the last few centuries.
The Eastern Deciduous Forest ecosystem stretches all the way from Florida to Canada, branching out across New England and up through Minnesota.
It covers 26 states, according to the National Park Service, with 10 different forest regions that range from broad-leafed deciduous trees to the evergreen conifers.
On the West Coast, forest cover stretches from southern California up to Canada. Further north, the forests become far bigger, with northern California, Oregon, and Washington shown to be dominated by areas of bright green
The Eastern Deciduous Forest ecosystem stretches all the way from Florida to Canada, branching out across New England and up through Minnesota. It covers 26 states, according to the National Park Service, with 10 different forest regions that range from broad-leafed deciduous trees to the evergreen conifers
On the West Coast, forest cover stretches from southern California, though more sparse than on the opposite end of the country, up to Canada.
Further north, the forests become far bigger, with northern California, Oregon, and Washington shown to be dominated by areas of bright green.
The map also reveals where forests blanket portions of Montana, Idaho, and Colorado.
Szucs’s latest creation was made using the open-source QGIS software, and is his first new design in nearly a year.
The East Coast, along with the southeastern US and the Great Lakes region, makes up the largest chunk of forested area in the country – though industrialization and urbanization have brought extensive changes to the areas in the last few centuries
In the past, the map enthusiast has unveiled numerous striking visualizations of the natural processes all around us. His past work, available on Etsy , includes colourful maps of river basins all around the world. The breathtaking visualizations (the US is shown above, for example) rely on Strahler Stream Order Classification
EXPERTS WARN CLIMATE CHANGE IS CREATING 'GHOST FORESTS' ACROSS THE UNITED STATES
His past work, available on Etsy, includes colourful maps of river basins all around the world.
The breathtaking visualizations rely on Strahler Stream Order Classification, plotting the individual flows involved in each particular basin as snaking ‘veins’ of varying thickness.
These maps reflect a ‘lifelong passion for beautiful maps,’ combining scientific expertise with art to create maps that are both ‘informative and beautiful,’ Szucs explains on his website, where he goes by Grasshopper Geography.
It is no wonder that trees have captured the human imagination since the beginning of time. Their strength, deeply rooted in the Earth, is an inspiration. Their trunk and branches are a wonder of nature because they stand sturdy and impenetrable most of the time, yet they can flex and sway with the wind when needed.
The whisper of a breeze in their leaves or the sight of ants marching in a straight line up or down their trunks remind us of the magic of nature that trees embody. They live for hundreds or even thousands of years, and so we revere them as keepers of past secrets and sentinels of the future.
Watching their cycles of growth, shedding of leaves, and re-flowering in the spring, people have long perceived trees as powerful symbols of life, death, and renewal. Since the beginning of time, humans have had a sense that trees are sentient beings just like us, that they can feel pain, that they bleed when they are hurt. Trees even look like us. People have a trunk; trees have arms. And so we innately feel a deep connection to them.
Many people say they can feel a tree’s vibrational energy when placing their hand upon its bark. With their deep roots, trees carry significant grounding energy. We naturally feel peace and serenity when walking in the shade of trees or on a forest trail.
A recent study shows that trees remove so much pollution from the air that they “prevented 850 human deaths and 670,000 cases of acute respiratory symptoms in 2010 alone.” When an insect called the emerald ash borer killed off a significant number of trees in the American Midwest in the 1990’s and 2000’s, rates of human death from cardiovascular and respiratory illness increased.
More difficult to quantify is the psychological effect that trees have on people. People who spend time outdoors, or even those who have access to windows looking out at trees, have been shown to have better health than those who do
Entire ghost town for sale at less than $1million
Their bust is your boon.
The town of Bradian in Canada's British Columbia was abandoned in the 1970s when the local gold mine closed, and now it's for sale at just $995,000.
That includes all 50 acres of the mountain hamlet, including 22 empty homes that will need a lot of attention to make habitable again.
The town was established in the 1930s, in the middle of Canada's gold rush, by families who came to work at the nearby Bralorne mine.
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Ghost town: The abandoned town of Bradian in Canada's British Columbia has hit the market with an asking price of about $907,000 U.S. dollars
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Abandoned: The small town was established in the 1930s, in the middle of Canada's gold rush, when families flocked to Bradian to work at the nearby Bralorne mine. Above, a 1960s newspaper found on the 50-acre property
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Shut down: The town was abandoned in the 1970s when the mine closed and there was no longer any work for the locals
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Rural: Bradian is located four hours from Vancouver and two hours from ski-resort Whistler. It includes 50 acres of property and 22 abandoned homes
For 40 years, the mine was one of the biggest gold producers in Canada, turning out $4million ounces of the precious metal.
But the mine closed in 1971 when the price of gold dropped and the operators couldn't turn a profit.
By the end of the 70s, the town was completely abandoned and the homes fell into disrepair.
In 1997, Vancouver couple Tom and Katherine Gutenberg, senior flight attendants for Air Canada, bought the town as a fun project for their family.
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Gold in the hills: For 40 years, Bralorne mine was one of the biggest producers of gold in Canada, turning out $4million in the previous metal
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Investment: Current owners Tom and Katherine Gutenberg, senior flight attendants for Air Canada, bought Bradian in 1997
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Bonding: The Gutenbergs spent vacations and holidays at the property, working to fix it up with their two young children
'When he saw the town was falling apart, Tom thought, "Wouldn’t it be great for the family to save the town?"' listing agent John Lovelace told FoxNews.com.
Now that their two children are grown up though, the Gutenbergs rarely visit the town, and decided to put it up for sale.
Bradian was originally listed in 2010 with an asking price of $1.3million.
They recently dropped the price to $995,000 - or $907,0000 in U.S. dollars - and have seen a flurry of interest in the unique property.
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Moving on: Now that their children have grown, the Gutenbergs don't visit Bradian often and decided to put it up for sale
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Discount: Bradian was initially listed in 2010 for $1.3million, but the owners bumped that price down recently
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Excitement: The real estate agent says he's received more than 30 calls from people interested in the property - some even as far away as Australia
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Promising: Lovelace says the property will take a lot of work to make habitable again, but it could prove a cash cow for whoever invests the money into it
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Potential: Lovelace thinks Bradian would be a great place to start a snowmobiling company
Lovelace says he's received more than 30 calls, emails and texts from people interested in the property - with some as far away as Australia.
However, Lovelace has not been shy about how much work the property needs.
'If somebody went in there with some money and they got the services up to speed and created those (vacant) lots, they’d make a crap load of money. But that’s a five to 10-year process,' he said. Lovelace hopes another young couple will take interest in the property in the same way the Gutenbergs did. He says it would also make a great location for a snowmobiling company.
Bradian is located a four-hour drive from Vancouver and two hours from ski-resort Whistler. However, for nine months of the year, the road to Whistler is impassable, making it a four-hour drive as well.
Bradian isn't the only town to hit the real estate market in recent months.
Back in June, the town of Swett, South Dakota was listed for $400,000.
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Seed-time and harvest, has returned again,
'T is sweet to visit the still wood, where springs
The first flower of the plain.
I love the season well,
When forest glades are teeming with bright forms,
Nor dark and many-folded clouds foretell
The coming-on of storms.
From the earth's loosened mould
The sapling draws its sustenance, and thrives;
Though stricken to the heart with winter's cold,
The drooping tree revives.
The softly-warbled song
Comes from the pleasant woods, and colored wings
Glance quick in the bright sun, that moves along
The forest openings.
When the bright sunset fills
The silver woods with light, the green slope throws
Its shadows in the hollows of the hills,
And wide the upland glows.
And when the eve is born,
In the blue lake the sky, o'er-reaching far,
Is hollowed out and the moon dips her horn,
And twinkles many a star.
Inverted in the tide
Stand the gray rocks, and trembling shadows throw,
And the fair trees look over, side by side,
And see themselves below.
Sweet April! many a thought
Is wedded unto thee, as hearts are wed;
Nor shall they fail, till, to its autumn brought,
Life's golden fruit is shed.
Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village, though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.
My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.
He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sounds the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.
The woods are lovely, dark, and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep
For $2.7million you can buy your very own enchanted forest, complete with houses from Goldilocks and the Three Little Pigs
Every child dreams of living in a magical land, complete with dragons and castles, as well as their favorite fairytale characters.
And now those childhood dreams could become a reality - at the bargain price of just $2.7million (£1.74million).
The Enchanted Forest, in British Columbia, not only boasts 38.1 acres of beautiful woodland, but also a host of colorful characters to keep its new owners company - from Captain Hook and Snow White, to Humpty Dumpty and the Pied Piper.
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Magic: The Enchanted Forest theme park in Calgary, British Columbia, is on sale for a bargain $2.7million
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Attraction: Up to 1,000 visitors a day are said the flock to the park - which was lovingly created over 10 years more than 70 years ago
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Neighbors: The forest has been filled with a host of magical characters to keep the new owner company during the quieter periods
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Properties: It also boasts a host of different homes for the new owner to explore - including this one, the home of the Three Bears
The new owner will also get their pick of the properties, from the Three Bears' cozy cottage, to their very own castle - although they may have to watch out for the dragon peeking over the battlements.
They'll also be the proud holder of British Columbia's tallest treehouse, which soars 50 feet into the sky.
And if it is peace and quiet they seek, they can certainly find plenty of that in the forest: the nearest major town is Calgary, 275 miles away.
However, if magic isn't quite your cup of tea, the property also boasts a high-rope assault course, mile-long nature trail and lake.
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Record breaking: The park also has the tallest treehouse in the whole of British Columbia, soaring 50 feet into the sky
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Hard work: The figurines dotted around the forest were lovingly created by the park's first owner, Doris Needham
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Enchanting: Doris was an artist in the 1950s who wanted the perfect space to place the figurines - and settled on the forest
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For sale: It was bought in 1990 by Rocky and Juliet Ehlers, who have now decided it is time to retire
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Continue: But Rocky has said he very much hopes the new owners will continue to run the much-loved park as a tourist attraction
The Enchanted Forest was opened as a theme park in the 1960s after 10 years of hard work by Doris and Ernest Needham, who lived in their very own Candy Cane House.
Indeed, it was Doris' own artistic talent which helped create the 350 figurines scattered about the neighborhood. She searched for the perfect location for her unusual figurines for two years, before settling on this space in the Cedar Mountains.
Since 1990, however, the popular attraction has been owned by Rocky and Juliet Ehlers.
The couple, having lovingly run the forest as a theme park for 25 years, have now decided to hang up their ruby slippers for good, and enjoy a quieter retirement.
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Interest: There is already a lot of interest in buying the property - with inquiries flooding in from all over the world
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Bargain: The theme park is far cheaper than Michael Jackson's Neverland, which was expected to fetch $85million last year
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Bright: It is also a bargain when compared to the cost of flats in some of the most expensive cities in the world
Rocky, 69, told the Revelstoke Times Review: 'It's been very enjoyable years and it's time we move on.'
He remains hopeful whoever buys the Enchanted Forest - which can still attract up to 1,000 visitors a day - will keep running it as a theme park.
Estate agent Steve Daschuk said: 'This is such a magical property. So far we've had interest from all over Canada and internationally.
'We've even had people get in touch from China, enquiring about the forest.'
And that is perhaps not surprising: the theme park's asking price is a snip of that sought for Michael Jackson's Neverland, which was expected to get as much as $85million when it went on sale last year.
It is also just a million dollars more than the average flat price in Manhattan, the same price as a two-bedroom flat in central London and Hong Kong.
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Dragons: Estate agent Steve Daschuk described it as 'such a magical property', and said people from China had expressed interest
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Remote: The nearest large town is Calgary - which is 275 miles away from the Enchanted Forest
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