Save search On map Reset Filters
1-4/4
  • 583030B Range Road 121: Rural Woodlands County Agriculture for sale : MLS®# A2175613

    583030B Range Road 121 Rural Woodlands County Rural Woodlands County T7S 1P5
    Main Photo: 583030B Range Road 121: Rural Woodlands County Agriculture for sale : MLS®# A2175613
    $2,150,000
    Agri-Business
    Status:
    Active
    MLS® Num:
    A2175613
    Bedrooms:
    3
    Bathrooms:
    4
    This farm is everything you could have imagined! 158 acres of ranchland set against thousands of acres of crown land. Follow the private driveway to this truly spectacular full-log home, up high in the center of this quarter. Custom built for this family, featuring high ceilings, and full-sized logs that are truly stunning. Enter the grand room with southerly views of fields from the large windows. A large entertaining kitchen faces north. The kitchen and eating area includes built-in appliances, an enormous island, a walk-in pantry, solid wood cabinets, and big bright windows along with a patio door to the back deck. The dining space allows for a grand table and room for all of your best guests. Two solid half-log staircases in the center of the home, flow to the lower floor and the second floor. The home features a luxurious Master bedroom on the main floor with a full en-suite with heated floors. The one-of-a-kind main bath features a hand-picked knotted log sink. A main floor laundry is full of windows and allows for a back entrance. There are two grand bedrooms on the top floor both with dormer windows and a full bath. On the lower level, there is access to the large double car garage (of course heated), family room, guest room, storage, and utility room. Outside this home is secured with heavy metal railings and river rock highlights. Parking is paved asphalt. There is also a second residence with living quarters, a barn, a shed, and a garden. Texas gate at the entrance. PS . . . the owner presently raises and markets world-class elk. Operation and all the equipment could be acquired along with the property. More details
    Listed by ROYAL LEPAGE MODERN REALTY
    Steve LeBlanc
  • 57215 RR 91 Range: Mayerthorpe Agriculture for sale : MLS®# A2160394

    57215 RR 91 Range Mayerthorpe Mayerthorpe T0E 1N0
    Main Photo: 57215 RR 91 Range: Mayerthorpe Agriculture for sale : MLS®# A2160394
    $1,900,000
    Agri-Business
    Status:
    Active
    MLS® Num:
    A2160394
    Bedrooms:
    3
    Bathrooms:
    5
    Ready to go farm with a beautiful home and yard site! Two quarters with high quality soil ready to be farmed. 25 thousand bushel storage grain bins with cement floors. 2600 square foot custom built house, triple attached garage and Quonset detached shop. Large tarp shelter building for equipment and 2nd residence. This farm is ready to go. The house is large, spacious and bright with tons of amazing features that has to be seen to be appreciated including a hottub and sauna in the basement. The yard site has a garden, mature fruit trees and a view that will make you want to wake up in the morning. There is a potential to add a 3rd quarter as well. More details
    Listed by Digger Real Estate Inc.
    Steve LeBlanc
  • 7219 Township road 560: Rural Lac Ste. Anne County Agriculture for sale : MLS®# A2162094

    7219 Township road 560 Rural Lac Ste. Anne County Rural Lac Ste. Anne County T0E 2A1
    Main Photo: 7219 Township road 560: Rural Lac Ste. Anne County Agriculture for sale : MLS®# A2162094
    $1,100,000
    Agri-Business
    Status:
    Active
    MLS® Num:
    A2162094
    **PRIME LOCATION** This 278.41 Acre Farm is cross Listed and can be bought as a whole or separately. One Title is 160 acres backing on to crown land with endless trails leading to the Pembina River with a creek running through the Property. Amazing for trail rides with horses, Hiking, Quading, skiing or snowmobiling. The home has 2 living rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 Bathrooms and the attached garage was converted to a large unheated Man Cave/ Storage area. Second Parcel is 15.59 Acres which boasts a large shop/Barn, with power and water, this parcel has a well, septic, power and 3 Auto waterers and an old build site which you can put another home. the Third titled parcel is 102.82 Acres for rolling Pasture or hay land. There is water going to Quonset by house, Barn, barn/shop. they are all heat trace taped for winter. Parcels are posted separately (MLS A2162088 102.82 Acres, MLS A2162087 15.59 Acres, and MLS A2162090 House and Quarter). All available parcels are posted together under Listing A2162090 Agricultural Listing). More details
    Listed by CENTURY 21 TWIN REALTY
    Steve LeBlanc
  • SW-22-57-8-W5: Rural Lac Ste. Anne County Agriculture for sale : MLS®# A2164524

    SW-22-57-8-W5 Rural Lac Ste. Anne County Rural Lac Ste. Anne County T0E 1N0
    Main Photo: SW-22-57-8-W5: Rural Lac Ste. Anne County Agriculture for sale : MLS®# A2164524
    $299,000
    Agri-Business
    Status:
    Active
    MLS® Num:
    A2164524
    106 acres of land for agricultural use. Currently in crop. With good drainage and some trees. Land borders Highway 43, just east of Mayerthorpe. Price is subject to GST. More details
    Listed by ROYAL LEPAGE MODERN REALTY
    Steve LeBlanc
1-4/4
Data was last updated December 1, 2024 at 12:05 PM (UTC)
powered by myRealPage.com

Whitecourt Alberta Information

Whitecourt is a town in Northern Alberta, Canada that is surrounded by Woodlands County.[10] It is approximately 177 km (110 mi) northwest of Edmonton and 279 km (173 mi) southeast of Grande Prairie at the junction of Highway 43 and Highway 32. It has an elevation of 690 m (2,260 ft). Whitecourt is also located at the confluence of four waterways – the Athabasca River, McLeod River, Sakwatamau River and Beaver Creek.[3] A Canadian National rail line runs through the town. The Town has branded itself as the Snowmobile Capital of Alberta[1] and its motto is Let’s Go….[2] The Whitecourt meteor impact crater is found on nearby Whitecourt Mountain. The community was formed in the place known by the Cree as Sagitawah (the place where the rivers meet). While the first Hudson’s Bay Company trading post was established in 1897, the first permanent resident on the present day town site was John Goodwin, who settled there in 1905. In 1910, with the expansion of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway, immigrants were encouraged by Premier Arthur Lewis Sifton to settle in the vast scarcely inhabited area between Edmonton and the Peace River Country.[11] The name “Whitecourt” was chosen in 1910 by Walter White, the postmaster of the young community. White was the son-in-law of former Kansas governor John W. Leedy who also settled in the community. Whitecourt has three identifiable geographic components: Whitecourt has a subarctic climate (Köppen Dfc), falling just short of a humid continental climate (Dfb) due to May and September having mean average temperatures just below 10 °C or 50 °F. Winters are long and cold (though milder than many areas farther east, even at lower latitudes), and summers are fairly short and relatively warm. In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, the Town of Whitecourt had a population of 9,927 living in 3,876 of its 4,341 total private dwellings, a change of -2.8% from its 2016 population of 10,209. With a land area of 29.51 km2 (11.39 sq mi), it had a population density of 336.4/km2 (871.3/sq mi) in 2021.[6] In the 2016 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, the Town of Whitecourt recorded a population of 10,204 living in 3,743 of its 4,253 total private dwellings, a 6.2% change from its 2011 population of 9,605. With a land area of 26.44 km2 (10.21 sq mi), it had a population density of 385.9/km2 (999.6/sq mi) in 2016.[26] The population of the Town of Whitecourt according to its 2013 municipal census is 10,574,[27] a 14.9% increase over its 2008 municipal census population of 9,202.[28] At its current population, Whitecourt is one of the largest towns in the province and is eligible for city status. According to Alberta’s Municipal Government Act, a town is eligible for city status when it reaches 10,000 residents.[29] Whitecourt’s economy is largely driven by three major industries – forestry, oil and gas industry and tourism.[35] With some farm land to the south and east of Whitecourt, agriculture plays a minor role in the town’s economy. Whitecourt is the site of four forestry-related mills: Due to Whitecourt and area’s forestry heritage, the Canadian Forestry Association named Whitecourt and Woodlands County the “Forest Capital of Canada 2013”.[36] Whitecourt is also home to many service companies in the oil and gas industry. Attractions within Whitecourt include the Allan & Jean Millar Centre, Festival Park, the Forest Interpretive Centre and Heritage Park, and a variety of other facilities and parks.[37] The Allan & Jean Millar Centre consists of both an aquatic facility, a fieldhouse, a fitness facility, a children’s indoor playground area, and boardroom and classroom rental spaces. The aquatic facility comprises a main pool, a children’s pool, a leisure pool, a lazy river, a water slide, a hot tub, and a steam room. The fieldhouse includes a configurable multi-sport area, a track, and racquetball and squash courts. The fitness centre provides cardio training equipment, weight training equipment, and a fitness studio. Overall, this recreation venue also provides a variety of programming including lessons, classes, and personal training.[38] Festival Park, located in the river valley adjacent to downtown, is a multi-use outdoor park facility consisting of a pond stocked with fish that is cleared for skating in the winter, trails, sports fields, playgrounds, picnic areas, an off-leash dog park, and a river slide attraction featuring two flowing artificial creeks with drops for tubing.[37] A splash park with 19 water features opened within Festival Park in 2012.[39] The park was originally known as Rotary Park, but the name was changed to Festival Park in 2023 when Rotary International updated their policies on how facilities can be named after themselves.[40] The town also features several bike trails, as well as a professionally designed bike park.[41] The Forest Interpretive Centre includes a multi-media museum that presents the forestry industry’s role in Whitecourt’s history.[37] It also features meeting rooms and hosts the local chamber of commerce, a tourist information centre, and town council meetings.[37][42] The Forest Interpretive Centre’s associated Heritage Park includes antique vehicles and farm equipment, a barn, and an interpretive trail among other features.[37] Travis Roche and Rocky Thompson are current and former professional hockey players that were raised in Whitecourt.[43][44] Roche played 60 games in the National Hockey League (NHL) between the Minnesota Wild and Phoenix Coyotes and now plays for SC Bern in Switzerland’s National League A.[45] He has represented Team Canada at the Spengler Cup on numerous occasions, winning gold at the 2012 tournament.[46] Thompson played 25 games in the NHL between the Calgary Flames and Florida Panthers and was an assistant coach for the Edmonton Oilers in the National Hockey League.[47] Normand Lacombe is the strength and conditioning coach for the Whitecourt Wolverines of the Alberta Junior Hockey League (AJHL),[48] and was the head coach of the predecessor Wolverines of the North West Junior Hockey League prior to the AJHL’s arrival.[49] Lacombe played 319 games in the NHL for the Buffalo Sabres, Edmonton Oilers and Philadelphia Flyers,[50] winning the Stanley Cup with the Oilers in 1988. Whitecourt Town Council consists of a mayor and six councillors that were elected in the 2021 municipal election. As of 2023[update] the members of town council are Mayor Tom Pickard and councillors Tara Baker, Paul Chauvet, Braden Lanctot, Serena LaPointe, Bill McAree, and Derek Schlosser.[5] The town’s chief administrative officer is Peter Smyl.[5] The Northern Gateway Public Schools division office is in Whitecourt. The school division is responsible for public schools within the geography comprising Lac Ste. Anne County and portions of Woodlands County and the Municipal District of Greenview No. 16, including the towns of Fox Creek, Mayerthorpe, Onoway and Valleyview in addition to Whitecourt.[51] Whitecourt is within the West Yellowhead provincial electoral district, which as of 2023[update] is represented by Martin Long of the United Conservative Party. Progressive Conservative George VanderBurg was a four-term MLA for the Whitecourt area until 2015. A resident of Whitecourt, VanderBurg was a businessman and the mayor of the town for nine years prior to his entry into provincial politics.[52] At the federal level, Whitecourt is within the Peace River—Westlock electoral district, which as of 2023[update] is represented by Conservative Arnold Viersen. Conservative Rob Merrifield was a four-term MP for the Whitecourt area until 2014. Merrifield is a resident of Whitecourt and a farmer.[53] Other former politicians who lived in Whitecourt include Raj Pannu, Allen Sulatycky and Rod Fox. Pannu, former MLA for Edmonton-Strathcona and former leader of the Alberta New Democratic Party, taught high school in Whitecourt between 1962 and 1964.[54] Sulatycky, judge and former MP for Rocky Mountain, was a lawyer and was elected the first Liberal to represent Whitecourt’s constituency in 1968.[55] Fox, former Wildrose Party MLA for Lacombe-Ponoka, was born and raised in Whitecourt.[56] Acute and non-acute medical care is provided at the Whitecourt Healthcare Centre.[57] The full air-service Whitecourt Airport is located west of Whitecourt on the north side of Highway 32, approximately 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) from Highway 43. It is Alberta’s ninth busiest airport with up to 32,000 aircraft using the airport annually. The airstrip is 5,800 ft (1,800 m) in length and 100 ft (30 m) wide and can accommodate 737 jets. Numerous carriers offer scheduled charter flights out of the airport.[58] Red Arrow and Northern Express offer service to Edmonton and Grande Prairie. The CN Sangudo Subdivision provides rail service through Whitecourt from Edmonton to numerous gas plants south of Fox Creek. The Millar Western Sawmill / Pulp Mill and the Alberta Newsprint Company Pulp & Paper Mill are both served by rail.[59] The Town of Whitecourt is served by two highways. Highway 43, which is part of the CANAMEX Corridor, is a twinned highway that provides connection to Edmonton to the southeast and Grande Prairie to the northwest. Highway 32 provides Whitecourt with a direct link to the Yellowhead Highway (Highway 16) to the south, which connects the town to Edson and Hinton to the southwest. Another segment of Highway 32 begins approximately 6 km (3.7 mi) northwest of the town, providing a link from Highway 43 to Swan Hills and Slave Lake. Numerous local roads provide connections from Whitecourt to surrounding rural areas within Woodlands County. Within the McLeod River valley, Govenlock Road feeds two rural roads – West Mountain Road (Range Road 122) and Tower Road (Range Road 121A) – that provide access to numerous country residential subdivisions and some agricultural operations to the south. Within the Athabasca River valley, Flats Road (Township Road 600), which exits the town following its northern boundary, serves numerous agricultural operations to the east. On the Hilltop, 41 Avenue (Township Road 594A), which was the original highway alignment into Whitecourt, exits the town eastbound for the Hamlet of Blue Ridge. This road is commonly referred to as Blue Ridge Road. Whitecourt is served by two news outlets: the Postmedia owned Whitecourt Star (which became digital-only in 2023)[62] and the independent weekly Whitecourt Press.[63] The monthly Community Advisor ceased publication in 2018.[64] Two FM radio stations broadcast from Whitecourt. The CKUA Radio Network also has a repeater broadcasting from Whitecourt at FM 107.1.[67] Whitecourt has been twinned with Y?betsu, Hokkaido, Japan, since 1998.[68][69] Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitecourt

Whitecourt Alberta Farm MLS®

Welcome to our Whitecourt Alberta Farm MLS® Search page, where you can explore a diverse selection of Farm MLS® listings.

www.FarmForSale.ca is produced by Steve LeBlanc, an experienced Farm and Commercial Realtor®, The search pre-set includes Farm listings within a 50 km radius of Whitecourt Alberta, each listing provides detailed insights into the Whitecourt Alberta area.

Whether looking for Farms, Ranch, Land, Commercial or Residential, you will find valuable information about the local community, amenities, and market trends. Our advanced search filters allow you to easily refine your search by location, property type, price range, and more, while interactive maps help you visualize property locations and explore surrounding areas.

Each listing includes comprehensive details, high-quality photos, and key features to assist you in making informed decisions. Additionally, Steve LeBlanc offers insights into the Whitecourt Alberta area real estate market, community highlights, and essential amenities, helping you understand each property’s unique characteristics.

Steve LeBlanc’s years of experience in Farm and Commercial real estate ensure you receive knowledgeable and personalized assistance throughout your buying or selling journey.

Welcome to www.FarmForSale.ca

Steve LeBlanc

Farm | Ranch | Land | Commercial
Alberta & Saskatchewan

Licensed Realtor® | Associate
Marcel LeBlanc Real Estate Inc.

Contact
Phone: 403-391-6447
Email: steve@leblancrealty.ca
Website: www.FarmForSale.ca

Contact by
Phone | Text | Email | Contact Form

steve leblanc farm realtor home picture Alberta & Saskatchewan
topsoil Depth (in) Alberta Source aafc slc version 3.2

Understanding Topsoil Depth in Alberta: Insights from AAFC SLC Version 3.2 Data

Topsoil depth is a critical factor for agricultural productivity, influencing water retention, nutrient availability, and root growth. The provided map of Alberta illustrates the topsoil depth in inches, highlighting significant regional variations. This analysis is based on data from the Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) Soil Landscapes of Canada (SLC) Version 3.2.

Key Observations

The topsoil depth in Western Alberta and the Rockies is generally shallow, ranging from 0 to 6 inches. This is due to the rugged terrain and erosional processes associated with mountainous regions. The shallow topsoil in these areas supports forests and natural vegetation rather than extensive agriculture.

Central Alberta, including areas around Edmonton and Red Deer, exhibits moderate to deep topsoil depths, generally between 8 to 14 inches. These depths are conducive to productive agriculture, supporting a variety of crops. The deeper topsoil in central regions contributes to higher agricultural yields and sustainable farming practices.

In Southern and Eastern Alberta, regions such as Calgary and areas towards the Saskatchewan border show variable topsoil depths ranging from 6 to 10 inches. While suitable for agriculture, these areas may require careful soil management to maintain productivity. Areas with shallower topsoil are more drought-resistant and may need irrigation and soil conservation practices.

Regional Analysis

The Rocky Mountain Influence is evident in the shallow topsoil of the Rocky Mountain foothills, resulting from the rocky and rugged terrain, limiting soil accumulation. These areas are more suited to forest growth and natural vegetation rather than intensive agriculture.

In contrast, the Prairie Conditions in central Alberta benefit from moderate to deep topsoil, which is ideal for crop production and supports Alberta’s agricultural economy. Maintaining topsoil depth through conservation practices is essential for sustaining long-term agrarian productivity in these areas.

Implications for Agriculture

Understanding topsoil depth is crucial for effective soil management practices, including crop selection, irrigation, and fertilization. Farmers can use this data to optimize their farming practices, choosing crops suited to the available topsoil depth and implementing appropriate soil conservation measures. Deeper topsoil improves water retention and nutrient availability, which is essential for healthy crop growth and high yields.

Conclusion

The topsoil depth map of Alberta reveals significant regional variations influenced by geographical features such as the Rocky Mountains and the fertile plains of central Alberta. Understanding these variations is crucial for optimizing agricultural practices and ensuring sustainable farming. By leveraging this data, farmers can improve crop yields, manage soil health, and enhance overall agrarian productivity in Alberta.

Sources

  • Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) Soil Landscapes of Canada (SLC) Version 3.2 Data
  • Alberta Agriculture and Forestry