This estate is ideal for leisure. It has an old estate, perfectly preserved and maintained, in an ideal location, with undulating views of the nearby mountains, natural surroundings, tranquility, privacy...
In total, it covers about 415 hectares, of which xxx are dryland farming, xxx are woodland, and xxx are mountain olive groves.
The terrain is rather undulating, with a setting of hills and visually balanced mountains.
The house is easily accessible. It is an old estate that is now used for family enjoyment but also for celebrations and social events.
It is a very organized construction, with the farmhouse and the garden well oriented to the south, an interior patio that distributes the different rooms: owners' residence, caretaker's residence, event halls.
At the back, a beautiful bullring with the cattle yards in perfect condition, open gallery for celebrations, labor patio, and sheds for tools and machinery.
The estate has well water to meet the needs of the house.
Utilizations:
According to SIGPAC data, the existing uses on the estate are detailed with their corresponding areas:
Dryland Farming: 221 hectares
Dryland Olive Trees: 35 hectares
Wooded Pasture: 32 hectares
Shrub Pasture: 80 hectares
Unproductive: 5 hectares
Forestry: 41 hectares
In summary, with an area of 415 hectares, the uses are distributed as follows:
Non-cultivable Area: 158 hectares of wooded area with some holm oaks and quite a few wild olive trees, as well as low scrubland with mastic, rockrose, broom, and some pasture. Currently, it is not exploited with any type of livestock although there are old watering holes.
Cultivable Area: With approximately 257 hectares between scattered olive groves and dryland farming, where cereals (wheat, barley, oats, triticale), oilseeds (sunflower, rapeseed), and legumes (chickpea, broad bean, pea, vetch) are grown. All this area is exploited by third parties with lease contracts and does not possess any type of CAP Rights.
Hunting Reserve:
The 415 hectares belong to a hunting reserve with the main use being small game hunting and secondary use being big game hunting. The species usually hunted as small game are the native ones: rabbit, hare, red-legged partridge; and the migratory ones: African turtledove, wood pigeon, thrush, etc. For some years now, the wild boar population has been increasing considerably, hence the authorization of big game hunting as a secondary use for crop damage control.
Access:
85 km from Seville, about 80 km from Ronda and Grazalema, 160 km from Malaga, and 135 km from Jerez de la Frontera. Southern area of the province of Seville, in a region called Campiña de Marchena and Morón. It borders the north of the province of Cadiz, with mixed landscapes between countryside and typical undulating hills of the Mediterranean forest. Its usual access is via the A-92.
Buildings:
Main Farmhouse with initial construction from the 19th century and renovations in the 20th century. 10 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms, 2 living rooms with fireplace, dining room, and kitchen. Garden with pool, interior patio with access to the old oil mill celebration halls. There are stables and various interconnected dependencies such as material and tool storage. Separated from the main building, there are sheds for the use of agricultural machinery and shelter for small domestic animals. All dependencies are electrified and have water. It has a bullring with albero flooring, with its corresponding pigsties and pens suitable for the management of bullfighting livestock, all made of brick, concrete, and wood and metal carpentry.