WTP-GC wrote:
valhalla360 wrote:
Reality is there is no ideal location. If it was ideal, there would already be a park there. Undeserved areas are typically undeserved for a reason.
This is quite frankly untrue. What you're basically saying is that there's no such thing as an available market. If that were true, then no new businesses would ever be necessary or successful. When Amazon started selling textbooks, it wasn't like that was the easiest or best way to buy textbooks. But over the course of time, they became dominant in that market sector and moved on to bigger and better things. My community has been under-served for years in terms of local retail and eateries. It wasn't because people didn't try to come in and open an establishment, but rather they did so with poor planning. Many came and went, and one might suggest that such businesses were not needed. But those who came and stayed have proved otherwise. It has as much to do with the owner and how its managed as it does with the location (within reason of course).
Not at all. There are undeserved markets but as I said, there is usually a reason.
Example: If you are sitting on 40 acres in the Florida Keys with utilities and beachfront access, there is far more demand than spots available. But if you are trying to build in this under served area, I would be shocked if you could buy a 3 acre site and build from scratch for under 20 million and when you cost out what you can charge per site, there is no way you could amortize, $20million on what the sites bring in (and sites in the keys are crazy expensive).
You run into similar issues in other areas, just not as extreme and sometimes the issues are different. It might be easier to build in the middle of no where but fewer people want to camp there and you can't charge premium prices.
Most successful private campgrounds we've come across (govt campgrounds usually run at a huge loss when you consider the underlying value of the land), are run by families who have saved up and are living the dream but not getting rich. If it's 2nd or 3rd generation and everything is paid off, they may even earn a decent living but when you subtract the expected investment returns, they are usually making little more than minimum wage.
Now if you have the Amazon of campgrounds figured out, wow, I'm impressed. By all means go out and build a string of campgrounds. Of course, Amazon is still running on the dream of someday being profitable.