The Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) online Soil Survey is a great resource for any landowner, real estate agent, developer, or anyone that has an interest in land.
"It has the Official USDA soil information as viewable maps and table for more than 2300 soil surveys..soil maps and data available online for than 95 percent of the nation's counties and anticipates having 100 percent in the near future. The site is updated and maintained online as the single authoritative suorce of oil survey information."
Our office has printed hard copies of the soil surveys for the counties that we work in and they are great.
I prefer the online version anyway because not only can I get Soil Maps, but also Aerials and it has a great measuring tool that tells you the approx acreage.
I use it for both counties that I work in, in Oklahoma, Choctaw and McCurtain.
The Web Soil Survey Site is very user friendly. Most of the navigation tabs are self explanatory.
The best way to learn to use the site is to have some time to play with it when you're not in a hurry and then do just that, play with the maps, menus, navigation buttons.
The NRCS Web Soil Survey Site will tell you the acreage of your AOI (Area of Interest), what kinds of soil are in the area, acreages of each soil type, and it's suitability and limitations for many uses:
The Three Basic Steps are laid out on the main page of the Web Soil Survey Site:
1. Define your area of interest
2. Click the Soil Map Tab
3. Use the Shopping Cart (free) to get your report or download it later.
An example:
I used the site for an area of our farm:

Start with the "Start WSS" Green Button their main page.

Then define your area of interest with the AOI button and with the drop down menus on the left side of the page.

The Site will tell you what types of soil are in your AOIs and their acreage.

The Site will also then tell you how well suited that soil type is for different applications and it's limitations in those applications.
This may seem like an over simplified description of the Web Soil Suvey but I'm here to tell you that is simple to use. You can gather a lot of informaiton about your site whether it's for building a house or planting corn. Next time you have questions about the suitability of a particular parcel of land for a specific application, go to NRCS's Web Soil Survey Site. After all it's your tax dollars ar work :)
I need to say "just a tad" about this photo (and video if you click on the photo) that I shot at Lake Raymond Gary, Fort Towson, Oklahoma. It looks like someone broke a water line, but that's not the case.
We've had so much rainfall in Southeast Oklahoma. The area around the lake has quite a bit of the Swink type of soil which includes is limestone based.
This water is shooting up out of the ground due to a small hole in a limestone rock! The rock is on a slope, so water drainage inside the hill found it's way out through this hole in the rock.
Formed it's own fountain! If you want to see the video and sound, just click on the photo. Just another example of the wonder of it all!
You can tell just by looking at these folks that they were a joy to work with!
When I emailed them and asked them if I could use this photo in my blog, they came back and said it was OK, even with the husband's obvious "cutting up" in the photo.
The Anderson's purchased a waterfront cabin on Lake Raymond Gary. They are pleased with it and thoroughly enjoying it and of course the sellers are happy because they were ready to sell.
These kinds of deals are win-win situations!
I think that I get more than my FAIR share of the win-win situations in real estate.
Great clients, great properties, people that work together... .what more can a broker ask for??
The New Library at Idabel Oklahoma is going to be such an improvement over the current one. Located next to the City offices on East Main Street.
Great progress has been made as the embedded street scene of the pad prior to construction illustrates below. Grand opening should be coming up soon. The current library is a little more than a block away.. it may take a while to move all of those books!
Brown Addition which is located just east of Idabel, Oklahoma is an ideal community to live in if you want to be near town and yet enjoy the feeling of living in the country.
Homes in the Brown Addition (which by the way is so named because the developer was J.L. Brown) are mostly Ranch Style homes. Some of the homes were built in the late 70's and early 80's with some newer homes also in the addition. There are different sizes of lots with some being on small acreages.
The homes in Brown Addition are on the Idabel Public Water Supply for city utilities and have private septic systems. Cable TV along with Cable Broadband Internet Service is available from Pine Net in Broken Bow, Oklahoma.
Denison School is located about a mile from Brown Addition. Denison is a small elementary dependent school with classes through Eighth Grade (8th) grade.
Brown Addition is convenient to restaurants and shopping since it’s only about 2 miles east of Idabel.
If you are wanting to be near town but not too near… outside town but not to far outside… Brown Addition just east of Idabel, Oklahoma may be the right choice for you. There’s not a lot of homes on the market in the area, but usually there’s one or two. The three latest sales in the area have been at $100K and $125K, with one smaller frame home selling for $35K.
My office is very near the Brown Addition. If you are wanting to sell or buy in the Brown Addition, just east of Idabel, Oklahoma, call me, Judi Barrett, broker, Integrity Real Estate Services at 580-212-5946 or email me at judi@integrity-realestate.net Let’s talk about Brown Addition and Idabel, Oklahoma homes for sale.
This post contains some typical street photos of Brown Addition. The photos were taken on a rainy day...It seems we've had a lot of rain this month... waiting for a sunshiny day to take photos has not worked very well! Also I wanted to give you a general idea of Brown Addition and at the same time respect home owners in the area.
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