Expansive area inside the vermin proof fence.
Registered and Reporting HIR Carbon Project.
Situated between Mt Magnet and Sandstone with bitumen road frontage. Originally developed for sheep and now set up for cattle, with yards, fences and waters to suit,
Registered and reporting HIR Carbon project ERF121658 provides good cash flow.
300 plus mainly Droughtmaster cows with followers, 23 operational waters, only those currently being used running as part of the HIR management plan.
Comfortable airconditioned homestead set in established gardens with huge undercover outdoor area, quarters and sheds. Some plant and equipment is included.
Opportunity to increase cattle numbers and capitalise on other potential income streams due to location, size and available water.
For sale by 2 stage Expression of Interest. Phone Greg Smith 0428 486 806 for more information. Stage 1 closing 8th November 2024
This property at Mount Magnet - Sandstone Road, Mount Magnet is listed for sale by Greg Smith at Elders Real Estate.
For more information about Mount Magnet, including sales data, facts, growth rates, nearby transport and nearby shops, please view our Mount Magnet profile page.
If you would like to get in touch with Greg Smith regarding Mount Magnet - Sandstone Road, Mount Magnet, please call 0428 486 806 or contact the agent via email.
Track this property
Track propertyMount Magnet is a townsite in the Murchison goldfields, 569 kilometres northeast of Perth and 126 kilometres east of Yalgoo. Gold was discovered in the Mount Magnet area in July 1891 by the prospectors George Woodley and Tom Sampey. By late 1893 there was enough interest in the area for the government to consider declaring a townsite, and the survey was carried out in 1894 and the townsite gazetted in 1895. The railway to Mount Magnet was completed in August 1897, but it was not opened until July 1898. The railway closed in May 1978.
Mount Magnet is named after the nearby hill of the same name. The hill was named by the explorer Robert Austin in 1854, in consequence of the magnetic properties of the rocks on its summit. The Aboriginal name of the hill is Warramboo.