The land is beautiful. The water is poisoned.
On 4.2 quiet Kansas acres, a 4‑bed, 3‑bath home sits empty, trapped between promise and contamination. Cash‑only buyers circle, lured by the $50,000 price tag and the three‑car garage, but most never hear the full story. Because beneath the pasture, in the private well, crude oil silen… Continues…
This Augusta, Kansas property is both a warning and an invitation. For $50,000, a buyer gets 4.2 fenced acres, a 1,743 sq. ft. 1960 home, multiple outbuildings, and a detached three‑car garage in a peaceful, small‑town community just a short drive from Wichita. On paper, it reads like a once‑in‑a‑lifetime deal for anyone dreaming of a modern farmhouse, hobby farm, or long‑term land investment.
- On my way to my son’s house, I stopped for gas when a stranger suddenly wa:rned me, “Don’t go. You’ll regret it.”
On the way to my son’s house, I pulled into a gas station when a stranger abruptly warned me, “Don’t go. You’ll […]
- On Mother’s Day, my grown kids told me they had chosen the restaurant and expected me to pay for all twelve of them, just like always.
On Mother’s Day, my adult children informed me that they had already picked the restaurant and expected me to cover […]
But the well tells a different truth. Crude oil contamination has rendered the home unlivable until professional environmental remediation, a full water system replacement, and major mechanical overhauls are completed. Traditional financing will almost certainly fail; only experienced investors, builders, or fearless visionaries with cash and patience can unlock its value. For the right buyer, this isn’t just a fixer‑upper—it’s a high‑stakes transformation, turning a damaged property into a restored estate and a quiet statement of environmental responsibility.

