About your ad-take the following out:
1)
so you could buy this, put some money and sweat equity into it and sell it for a great profit.
and, re

Asking $35000 firm.)
2)
that is less than we have invested in the house.
Get a sale, first or you'll be sitting on two properties and they both will need attention. In 1999, I had two properties at the same time, BUT, the first was paid for, and it was in town where DH and me worked, and eldest DD were going to college, so it wasn't vacant. ALSO, DH and I moved in the early 1980's without selling our house. Renters eventually trashed the interior, and it was only by the grace of God that we finally sold the headache.
That farm property isn't going to move as fast as the realter suggests, and even if it does, it takes gumption to live on that much acreage. My property was suggested to me before the people we bought it from bought it and moved in. They were elderly and got sick before they had been there 10 years--in a good economy, mind you. Less acreage is more attractive to buyers. I was told that I was foolish to have only
5 acres for my horses. It would have been BETTER for me to have bought 20 acres in an equine community, undeveloped. Well, those properties are now being foreclosed on. With my brand new equine fencing (see an example below), I could sell my place in a heartbeat because it has all of the things in the property you are looking at, but now looks ready to move into.
<--March, 2007 August, 2010 below
BTW, the first photo is of my elderly herd, now passed on AND, yes, Virginia, horses LOVE to have a daily lie-down, where they look dead and scare their owners.