Hasn't Woodstock always been for sale?
| They have tried to be good conservators: For more than a decade, beginning around the 25th anniversary in 1994, they held Woodstock "reunions" that drew musicians and a few hundred to a few thousand spectators, who camped on their 40-hectare homestead for the three days in August near the anniversary dates of Aug. 15, 16 and 17. But they are getting older. They have had a long-running conflict with the town about permits and no-camping rules. And for a host of other reasons, they are ready to sell the house and retire to Arizona. They are asking $8 million (U.S.). And at that price, they are not adding any stipulation requiring new owners to open the property to future reunions. "Woodstock's nostalgic farmland up for sale" The Star |



Comments on "Hasn't Woodstock always been for sale?"
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Clinton Rage said ... (9:02 AM) :
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Anonymous said ... (1:05 AM) :
post a commentSo we are selling out now. So what’s the extra extra about lol.
By the price tag on the ground, the only avid buyers are going to be corporations IE: Sprint, or Verizon. Soon the last bastion of boomer nirvana will fall into the hand of the machine.
That is what the "revolution" is now. What was a anti-capitalist movement is not marketed trademark for a self-absorbed generation trying to relive their youth.