How do I combine business with outdoor nature, /biz/?
What business is there to be made in a forest and a farming area near a forest?
>>1342481
Mushroom foraging/hunting. Sell them.
tree farm, plant some valuable species of trees, wait around for 10 to 20 years and have a logger pay you thousands for it.
plus in the mean time you can eat all the animals that live in it
You can plant ginseng and make a bunch of money or plant good valuable hardwood trees and let a logging company pay you for them in 10 years. Try both.
You could hunt for burl (or burr if you're a poofter) on the trees. It fetches pretty good prices since the grain is deformed
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burl
>>1342482
amateur.
Clear cut that shit and plant psychedelic mushrooms. Get a trade deal with the UK. Everything is possible in the UK now.
Blow jobs in the park
>>1342781
this. $1/blow, 1 million blows = millionaire.
>>1342799
$1000 blow, 1000 blows = billionaire.
>>1342517
This, with high-quality woods for high quality goods
Animal fur also has good value
also: Make a park, sell hunting rights, get a shovel and make bomb shelters or underground drug farms and midget-fighting centers
There's money everywhere, senpai. Just need to be smart about it
>>1342481
Tree removal. Those guys make good money in my area.
Just go work for a company for a bit, then once you get it, start your own.
How to Make $100,000 Farming 1/2 Acre You Don't Own
https://youtu.be/tP5bOr0aC58
>>1342894
Dick better spooge out eternal youth for that much
>>1342785
Most fruit/nut trees would be close to peak production at 10 years, and producing commercial quantity by 8.
A good yield for pecans would be around 3,000lbs per acre. Not bad considering you can sell them for as much as $9/lb.
Lead nature trail hikes pointing out names of plants and interesting little facts to city folk.
>>1342785
Eucalyot trees grow in 4 years. Granted, their only use is making paper.
>>1342481
Organic Farming™ if you're a real scum
>>1342482
Truffle hunting is great too.
>+1UP