Great countryside - reminds me a bit of my native Wales. For me, I'd just want to live in it - as far away from other people as possible! Although I think I prefer the Ukrainian scenery carved out elsewhere by some of your rivers and lakes, personally. Just as an observation, here in the UK, 1 acre = 4000m2 (or just over). It seems you calculate acreage differently in Ukraine, which might explain why I see some videos of properties for sale there advertised with '25 acres' or '40 acres' etc, but doesn't actually look that big an area (although still big plots, regardless). Interesting. 👍
Yes, you are right! Seems like I pronounce it incorrectly. 1 acre is indeed 4000 m2. I am talking about hectares, which is 10000 m2. In Ukraine we do not use acres actually, it is all in hectares.
@@UkraineScamExpert Thanks! We rarely consider acreage in the UK (and certainly not hectares) as our residential plots are usually so much smaller than you tend to get in Ukraine, so it’s a new (and welcome) concept - to be talking about acreage when considering real estate for sale!
In foremer Soviet Union countries people used to get land in the countryside from their places of work - usually from factories to keep people busy with their gardens and building small summer homes. And land plots were given and later sold when SU collapsed in so called - "sotka", from the word - "sto", which means one hundred. One sotka = 100 m2 or 0.01 hectares. When viewing any ad, you will see that land plot has 4,5 sotka or 7,2 sotka, which is 450 m2 and 720 m2, and so on... In this video you see that land plot in electronic register is registered as 0.25 ga, so it is 0.25 hectares, which means either 25 sotkas, or 2500 m2.
Beautiful. But expensive when you factor in everything. BTW, a little more than a month ago we drove past those horrible new built (&half-built) houses close to the border crossing. They are wrong in so many ways. Too big for the plots. Some of them really ugly. On a weird stretch of road, not really close to any real town or village (or at least that's the impression you get, very non-natural placement). Houses built to make money, not houses built because people wanted to live there. Overall the vibe on that stretch of that main road (roughly from Rachiv to maybe a bit further than where the road up to Gluboki Potok is) was somehow different, hard to explain how.
Actually most of these building are built to live there. People just have some easy money and not to keep them at home, just invest in such mansions. Difficult to explain mentality of rich people in those areas 😁
I'm very much interested in the Carpathian land plots like this one. I find it quite difficult to search for listings like these online. Which websites would give the best results?
They are mostly not listed on Web sites, but even if they are, prices will be tremendous! If to buy land in Carpathians, it is much better to come to Ukraine, find a local English speaking person with a car and just find a land by going into villages that you would most likely to live in.
Thanks very informative, keep them coming.🎉
Excelient bro from Canada
Only land but good price
My goal is to visit your country
Once conflict is over
Beautiful region!
I hope this conflict ended soon 🙏🙏🙏
🙏
Great countryside - reminds me a bit of my native Wales. For me, I'd just want to live in it - as far away from other people as possible! Although I think I prefer the Ukrainian scenery carved out elsewhere by some of your rivers and lakes, personally.
Just as an observation, here in the UK, 1 acre = 4000m2 (or just over). It seems you calculate acreage differently in Ukraine, which might explain why I see some videos of properties for sale there advertised with '25 acres' or '40 acres' etc, but doesn't actually look that big an area (although still big plots, regardless). Interesting. 👍
Yes, you are right!
Seems like I pronounce it incorrectly.
1 acre is indeed 4000 m2.
I am talking about hectares, which is 10000 m2.
In Ukraine we do not use acres actually, it is all in hectares.
@@UkraineScamExpert Thanks! We rarely consider acreage in the UK (and certainly not hectares) as our residential plots are usually so much smaller than you tend to get in Ukraine, so it’s a new (and welcome) concept - to be talking about acreage when considering real estate for sale!
In foremer Soviet Union countries people used to get land in the countryside from their places of work - usually from factories to keep people busy with their gardens and building small summer homes.
And land plots were given and later sold when SU collapsed in so called - "sotka", from the word - "sto", which means one hundred. One sotka = 100 m2 or 0.01 hectares.
When viewing any ad, you will see that land plot has 4,5 sotka or 7,2 sotka, which is 450 m2 and 720 m2, and so on...
In this video you see that land plot in electronic register is registered as 0.25 ga, so it is 0.25 hectares, which means either 25 sotkas, or 2500 m2.
@@UkraineScamExpert Thanks (again!) for the context. So much to learn!! :)
Bro log. Time I will not see you god bless you
Thanks for replies from Canada
Beautiful. But expensive when you factor in everything.
BTW, a little more than a month ago we drove past those horrible new built (&half-built) houses close to the border crossing. They are wrong in so many ways. Too big for the plots. Some of them really ugly. On a weird stretch of road, not really close to any real town or village (or at least that's the impression you get, very non-natural placement). Houses built to make money, not houses built because people wanted to live there. Overall the vibe on that stretch of that main road (roughly from Rachiv to maybe a bit further than where the road up to Gluboki Potok is) was somehow different, hard to explain how.
Actually most of these building are built to live there. People just have some easy money and not to keep them at home, just invest in such mansions.
Difficult to explain mentality of rich people in those areas 😁
I'm very much interested in the Carpathian land plots like this one. I find it quite difficult to search for listings like these online. Which websites would give the best results?
They are mostly not listed on Web sites, but even if they are, prices will be tremendous!
If to buy land in Carpathians, it is much better to come to Ukraine, find a local English speaking person with a car and just find a land by going into villages that you would most likely to live in.
Any idea if still available?
What available?
This land plot?
As far as I know it is not sold at this moment.