Friday afternoon, you cross the bridge and feel the city release its grip somewhere around the Catskill exits. Two hours later, the road narrows, the signal fades, and you turn into a driveway that disappears into 5 acres of your own quiet. This is the version of you that wakes up slowly, that hears the creek before the alarm, that finally has the room to think.A covered front porch faces the trees, deep enough for two chairs and a kettle that takes its time. Stone and clapboard out front, a 2-car garage ready for the Subaru full of waders or the cooler full of trout. Inside, a chandelier throws warm light over a dining table where Saturday night stretches longer than it has any right to, and the eat-in kitchen opens around an island built for the small rituals: a paper map of the Beaverkill spread out with breakfast, pizza dough rolled out at sunset, the wine bottle that never quite makes it back into the fridge. Three bedrooms hold the upper floor in their own quiet. The walk-out basement opens to the back like an unfinished sentence, waiting for whatever you decide it should be. A workshop. A den. A bunk room for the friends who keep asking when they can come up.The primary suite is where the house slows you down. A sunny bedroom opens to a sitting room generous enough for a reading chair, a record player, the small library you've been meaning to actually read. A washer and dryer hide in their own closet so Sunday laundry never crosses the rest of the house. Off the bedroom, a walk-in closet so big it reads as two rooms, already rough-plumbed for a primary bath. You get to choose the soaking tub, the tile, the flooring, the brass or matte black of every fixture. The bones are here. The taste is yours.Five acres means the neighbors are deer and wild turkey. It means coffee on the porch with no one watching, a fire pit you'll dig wherever you want it, a garden the deer will absolutely test you on. It means quiet that settles into your shoulders by Saturday morning and stays with you all the way back to the city Sunday night. The house needs a little sweat to become exactly what you've been picturing, and that's the part of the deal that makes it yours instead of someone else's idea of finished.Livingston Manor is the reason you came here. Built up in the 1870s when the O&W Railroad arrived and the hemlock tanneries followed, the village is widely credited as the birthplace of American fly fishing. The Willowemoc Creek runs right through town, and Junction Pool in nearby Roscoe, where the Willowemoc meets
Estimated Payment
$ 3,286.15 per month $2,527.77 Principal & Interest $612.58 Property Tax $145.80 Homeowner's InsuranceListing By
Agency Name: Keller Williams Hudson Valley
Agency Contact: 845-610-6065
Shown By
Agent Name: Sabrina Demiris
Agent Phone: Cell: (516) 547-2649
Agency Title: Coldwell Banker American Homes
114 Turkey Hollow Lane | MLS# 1002065
This single family home located at 114 Turkey Hollow Lane , Livingston Manor, NY 12758 is currently listed for sale with an asking price of $499,900. This property was built in 2005 and has 3 bedrooms and 2 full and 1 partial baths with 2128 sq. ft. Turkey Hollow Lane is located within the Rockland school district. Search Livingston Manor real estate on sdemiris.cbamhomes.com today.