Yeah, this is one of those subjects that sounds good, in your head, until you start looking into liability.
Last year when I refinanced the house, we have 5 acres, and majority is fenced pasture for horses, I looked into ways to reduce property taxes. Horses are not considered livestock, so when we moved in 20 years ago, the taxes went from nearly nothing, Farm based, to residential taxes. Now I am looking to change that. One thought I had, an Orchard. Looking into liability insurance for that opened my eyes up. Besides just being insured, since it is a food product, there are also licenses involved, and a whole bunch of other things. If someone got sick because they didn't wash the cherries when they got home, even though whatever made them sick could have got on them from anywhere after they were bought, that person can sue me.
Nope, not going that route!
I finally settled on hay, but still need an LLC, among other things, including a business plan etc. that we are working on. Even though it is hay fed to animals, there is still liability to be concerned with. If say a piece of metal got caught up in a hay bale and a persons horse got injured from it, it comes right back to me, so even something as simple as a $5 bale of hay can cause me to lose everything.
#1 thing you HAVE to do is protect yourself. Good insurance, a good business plan and a good accountant are the 3 things that are a must if you want to do this.
Last year when I refinanced the house, we have 5 acres, and majority is fenced pasture for horses, I looked into ways to reduce property taxes. Horses are not considered livestock, so when we moved in 20 years ago, the taxes went from nearly nothing, Farm based, to residential taxes. Now I am looking to change that. One thought I had, an Orchard. Looking into liability insurance for that opened my eyes up. Besides just being insured, since it is a food product, there are also licenses involved, and a whole bunch of other things. If someone got sick because they didn't wash the cherries when they got home, even though whatever made them sick could have got on them from anywhere after they were bought, that person can sue me.
Nope, not going that route!
I finally settled on hay, but still need an LLC, among other things, including a business plan etc. that we are working on. Even though it is hay fed to animals, there is still liability to be concerned with. If say a piece of metal got caught up in a hay bale and a persons horse got injured from it, it comes right back to me, so even something as simple as a $5 bale of hay can cause me to lose everything.
#1 thing you HAVE to do is protect yourself. Good insurance, a good business plan and a good accountant are the 3 things that are a must if you want to do this.