Jabin said:
I'm an old and during my adult life ag land has never been valued based on its ag economic capabilities. It came close in the late 80s when Texas and the southwest were in a terrible depression (all TX banks failed, oil at $11/barrel, and commercial real estate was literally being sold for a song). If it didn't get down to its ag value then, it never will.
This.
80's, 90's, and even the early 2000's land that I'm familiar with in Se Tx, South Texas, and the hill country was extremely cheap compared to todays prices. Just wish I had bought more and not sold any during that time period.
As far as ag economic capabilities, irrigated hay and crop land and grass farms paid for themselves when operated by capable farmers during the listed period.
I'll narrow those crops down to irrigated grass farms at todays land prices. By far the best thing going in production agriculture in Texas today. More demand than supply even with ever increasing prices.