Nicaragua, Granada, Granada
Property code | 00040CA |
Category | Cattle Ranches / Featured Properties / Coffee Farms / COFFEE FARM - ECO-LODGE / Farmland / New Releases / Country Homes and Villas |
Location | Nicaragua, Granada, Granada |
Sale price | US$ 400,000.00 |
Property Size: | 174 Ac/ 100 Mzn/ 70.5 Ha |
Total Built: | 4,412 sqft / 410 sqmt |
Distance from Province: | 15 mins from Granada |
Elevation: | 1,312 FASL (400 MASL) |
On a global scale, farmland is becoming a scarce resource; the purchase of productive farmland will enable you to own a stake in the global food supply chain. The global demand for coffee and agricultural products keeps growing.
This beautiful Hacienda is located only 15 mins away from Granada City, 1 mile away from Laguna de Apoyo, only few miles away from Lake Nicaragua (a.k.a. Lake Cocibolca), the world's twentieth largest lake. Sits on top of the hills on the outskirts of Granada City, Nicaragua, Central America, at elevations between 1,312 Feet (400 MASL).
Prime Location for: coffee, Cocoa, cattle ranching, horse ranch, beans, corn, pastures, among other agricultural products.
These are fertile farmlands; I would say some of the best lands in near Granada City and within Granada Department.
The Agroforestry system in this Hacienda helps preserve hundreds of bird species, deer, howler monkeys, sloths, owls, and other wildlife species. Not to mention the preservation of water springs.
There’s an incredible potential for remodeling the Estate Colonial Mansion into a Hotel with amazing views of forests and building cabañas with amazing views of Granada City and Lake Granada; a place where guests will be able to walk trails surrounded by nature, just a few minutes away from Granada City.
Perfect for:
- HOTEL
- ECO-HOME DEVELOPMENT
- QUINTA GATED COMMUNITY
- HORSE RANCHES
Fruit Trees – Drip Irrigation
• Coffee
• Dragon Fruit Plants
• Cocoa trees
• Citric trees
• Beans
• Corn
• Pastures
• Among other agricultural products
PRECIOUS WOODS
• Mahogany
• Laurel
• Nancite tree
• Tamarind
• Genizaro
• Guanacaste
• Ceibo
INFRASTRUCTURE: The Hacienda has:
1. 2,690 sqft / 250 sqmt Hacienda Colonial Mansion
2. 1,076 sqft/ 100 sqmt Stables and workers quarters
3. 646 sqft/ 60 sqmt caretakers home
4. Old well
SOILS: Clay Loam / Rich Volcanic Soils
WATER SOURCES: Rain patterns are 1,500 mm/year. There’s also an old well that can be reactivated.
CLIMATE: The Hacienda location provides the perfect conditions for agriculture: cool temperatures 77 – 87.8 F average (25 – 31 C). Perfect rain patterns (1,500 mm/year), clean mountain air, and clean and fresh rainwater.
ELEVATION: 1,312 Feet (400 MASL).
COFFEE VARIETY: This is a perfect location to grow Robusta Coffee or COCOA.
Labor in Rural Nicaragua is the cheapest in Central America starting @ $0.92 / hr.
Call/text for details: US +1 (202)-241-3184 ; Nicaragua +(505) 8354-4534 (Whatsapp - phone calls)
7 “Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you.
Matthew 7:7
Ephesians 6:10-18
Granada (Spanish pronunciation: [ɡɾaˈnaða]) is a city in western Nicaragua and the capital of the Granada Department. With an estimated population of 123,697 (2012),[1] it is Nicaragua's sixth most populous city. Granada is historically one of Nicaragua's most important cities, economically and politically. It has a rich colonial heritage, seen in its architecture and structure.
Granada had a thriving Indigenous population. In 1524, the city was renamed Granada, by Francisco Hernández de Córdoba, ostensibly the first European city in mainland America. Unlike other cities that claim the same distinction, the city of Granada was not only the settlement of the conquest, but also a city registered in official records of the Crown of Aragon, and the Kingdom of Castile in Spain.
It was named by Hernández de Córdoba after the ancient Spanish city of Granada. This was done in honor of the defeat of the last Moorish stronghold, which had been Spanish Granada, by the Catholic King and Queen of Spain. Granada, Nicaragua was historically the sister capital in Central America to Antigua, Guatemala. During the colonial period, Granada maintained a flourishing level of commerce with ports on the Atlantic Ocean, through Lake Nicaragua (a.k.a. Cocibolca) and the San Juan River.
The city has been witness and victim to many of the battles with and invasions from English, French and Dutch pirates trying to take control of Nicaragua by sailing up the San Juan River.[2]
It was also where William Walker, the American filibuster, took up residence and attempted to take control of Central America as a ruling president. One of Walker's generals, Charles Frederick Henningsen, set the city ablaze before escaping, destroying much of the ancient city and leaving printed the words "Here was Granada".[3][4]
Granada is located along the coast of the Lake Nicaragua (a.k.a. Lake Cocibolca), the world's twentieth largest lake.
Other important cities and towns within the Granada district include Malacatoya, El Paso, El Guayabo, Diria, Macatepe, El Guanacaste, Nandaime and Diriomo, known nationally as the last city of witches. Mombacho volcano is the highest point (1,345 m) within Granada; the now dormant volcano blew most of its cone into the lake, forming the 365 Islets of Granada, from where the volcano provides an amazing view.