The 60-Second Overview
Steeplechase Farms is a named equestrian plat of roughly five-acre wooded lots in Morriston, at the southeastern edge of Levy County — and more to the point, at the trailhead of Goethe State Forest. The subdivision carries deeded rights to riding and carriage trails that connect into Goethe’s 53,000+ public acres, which is the single asset everything else here prices around. Five miles down the road sits Black Prong Equestrian Village, one of the country’s premier carriage-driving venues, which gives this quiet corner a serious horse economy.
There are no HOA dues and no CDD. A voluntary community association (the Steeplechase Farms board) exists for shared identity and trail matters, but nobody bills you monthly. Lots are described high and dry, with electric and roads available — the classic Florida acreage formula of cheap land plus real site work.
The forest is the amenity. The deeded trail rights are the moat. The 3x spread in lot prices is just diligence wearing a price tag.
The verified land market: a 5-acre parcel closed at $70,000 in August 2022; a current-era listing asks $34,900; another 5-acre lot sits pending at $110,000. That is a three-fold spread inside one plat — explained by position, clearing, road frontage, and utility readiness, which is exactly the homework this guide walks through.
The Fee Stack: $0 Dues, Real Deed Rights
The cost structure is the simplest we publish: no HOA dues, no CDD, no club. Your carrying cost is property taxes on five rural acres, insurance if improved, and upkeep. A voluntary community board maintains the plat’s identity and stewards trail matters — worth a conversation before you buy, both to confirm its current activity and because it is the best source of ground truth on the trail network.
What you are buying instead of dues is recorded rights: the deeded trail access and any plat restrictions that protect the community’s equestrian character (home-only requirements and similar). Those recorded documents are the contract — pull them for the specific lot, because in plats like this the restrictions can vary by unit or phase, and the trail-rights language is precisely what you are paying a premium for over random acreage a county road away.
Goethe, Black Prong & the Trail Rights
Goethe State Forest is the draw: 53,000+ acres of longleaf pine and live-oak country with one of Florida’s best networks for pleasure riding and — rarer still — carriage driving. Steeplechase Farms sits at a trailhead with deeded access, which means you hack out from your own property instead of trailering to a parking lot. For endurance riders and drivers, that single fact reorganizes daily life.
Five miles away, Black Prong Equestrian Village hosts national-caliber driving events, clinics, and boarding — an anchor institution that keeps farriers, vets, and hay suppliers in practical range. Two honest notes: state-forest trail access rules and permits can evolve, so confirm current Goethe access requirements with the Florida Forest Service; and verify that your lot’s deed actually carries the trail rights rather than relying on subdivision-level marketing.
Lots & the Occasional Mini-Farm
This is primarily a land market. Most parcels are wooded five-acre tracts in various states of readiness; a thin stock of custom homes and mini-farms has accumulated over two decades, and a handful list in a typical year. When finished properties trade, they price on acreage readiness and horse infrastructure — barn, fencing, cleared pasture, well capacity — far more than on interior finishes.
For buyers, the build-vs-buy math is real: a $35K–$70K wooded lot plus clearing, well, septic, power connection, driveway, fencing, and a modest custom build lands well into the $400Ks before the first horse arrives. A fairly priced existing mini-farm with infrastructure already amortized is often the value play — when one exists. We watch for them.
Building Here: The Readiness Math
The 3x lot spread is a readiness ledger. Before any lot purchase, establish in writing: (1) power — electric runs along the roads, but service at your lot line versus a pole-extension quote are different facts; (2) water — neighboring well depths and quality, and whether your soil percs for conventional septic; (3) access — road condition and any maintenance arrangement; (4) clearing — a real dozer quote for the pad, driveway, and first paddock. Stack those numbers on the cheap lot and compare honestly against the pending-at-$110K build-ready parcel — the gap usually shrinks to nothing.
Schools
Steeplechase Farms zones to Levy County School District — depending on the parcel, the feed typically runs to the Williston schools (Williston Middle High rates 4/10 on GreatSchools, with a 92% graduation rate) or the Bronson schools. The honest read: ratings are mid-tier across the district, and most buyers here are equestrian households for whom schools matter mainly at resale. If they matter to you now, verify the exact assignment with the district and weigh the Gainesville-side alternatives.
More on Living at Steeplechase Farms
The depth without the wall of text. Open what matters to you.
Location and errands
The carriage-driving scene
Wells, septic, and site work
Connectivity and practicalities
5 Mistakes Buyers Make at Steeplechase Farms
In a thin land market with a 3x price spread, the same five mistakes do the damage.
Buying the cheap lot without the readiness ledger
$34,900 sounds unbeatable until clearing, well, septic, power, and driveway quotes arrive. Stack the real numbers against the build-ready lot at $110K — the bargain often evaporates, and sometimes it genuinely is a bargain. Know which.
Assuming the trail rights ride with every deed
The deeded Goethe access is the premium you are paying for. Verify the recorded language on the specific lot — not the subdivision brochure — before you price it in.
Pricing a mini-farm on square footage
Out here the barn, fencing, cleared pasture, and well capacity carry the value; the house is often the cheapest part to replicate. Comp the infrastructure or you will misread the listing in either direction.
Calling the listing agent
The agent on the sign works for the seller. In a market with three listings and no pressure, evidence and patience are your only leverage — bring representation that gathers both.
Skipping the association conversation
No dues does not mean no community. The voluntary board is the ground truth on trail maintenance, restriction enforcement, and neighborhood plans — a 20-minute call that has changed buyers’ minds in both directions.
Which Lots Hold Value Best
In a trailhead plat, proximity and readiness are the resale insurance
Every lot is five acres; they are not equal. Cleared, build-ready parcels and positions closest to the trail connections resell first and strongest — the readiness money you spend is largely recoverable, the location premium fully so.
The mistake is paying near build-ready money for raw woods. We quote the readiness gap in dollars before you offer.
What to Check Before You Offer
Before you write on any Steeplechase Farms parcel, run this list.
- Recorded trail-rights language on the specific deed — not subdivision marketing
- Recorded plat restrictions for the lot’s unit or phase
- Power at the lot line or a written extension quote
- Perc/soil evaluation and neighboring well data on vacant land
- Real clearing and driveway quotes against the build-ready alternative
- Goethe access rules — current Forest Service requirements for riders and drivers
- Infrastructure valuation on improved parcels: barn, fencing, pasture, well capacity
- The association conversation — trail maintenance and any planned changes
Steeplechase Farms is a one-asset community, and the asset is the forest. Everything else — the no-dues structure, the five-acre geometry, the Black Prong neighborhood — orbits the deeded Goethe access, which is why verifying that access on the specific deed is the first thing we do and the last thing buyers think of. The second thing we do is turn the 3x lot spread into a ledger: power, water, perc, clearing, driveway. Most of the time the spread is rational, and occasionally it is not — that is when our buyers move.
Cross-shop it honestly against The Village at Hidden Lakes if you want a gate and internal trails with the forest a haul away, and against Meadow Wood Farms if Ocala-side convenience outranks trailhead access. For riders and especially drivers who want public-land miles from the back gate at the lowest carrying cost in the corridor, this plat is the answer.
Steeplechase Farms vs. Comparable Communities
The honest way to place Steeplechase is against the other equestrian land plays a Levy–Marion corridor buyer is weighing.
| Community | How it compares to Steeplechase Farms |
|---|---|
| The Village at Hidden Lakes | Gated with internal deeded trails and custom homes in the $500Ks–$600Ks — more polish, more rules, modest dues. Steeplechase counters with public-forest scale and zero dues at a lower entry. |
| Meadow Wood Farms | Ocala-side acreage with a deeper horse-services bench and shorter WEC runs, at higher land prices and Marion taxes. Choose on geography: forest trailhead versus town convenience. |
| Drake Ranch | Bigger tracts near Dunnellon for buyers who want maximum land per dollar — but no deeded forest trailhead and a thinner equestrian identity. |
| Williston Highlands | The no-HOA quarter-acre value plat with golf — same county, completely different product. Relevant only if you are choosing between land freedom and equestrian land specifically. |
Steeplechase’s case: the cheapest deeded gateway to 53,000 public acres in the region, with carriage culture next door. The case against: remoteness, a thin resale market, and the fact that every dollar of readiness comes out of your pocket after closing.
The Honest Trade-offs
Pros
- Deeded riding and carriage access into 53,000+ Goethe acres.
- No HOA dues, no CDD — the cheapest carry in the corridor.
- Black Prong Equestrian Village five miles away.
- High-and-dry five-acre lots with power along the roads.
- Entry land from the mid-$30Ks (verified listings).
- Custom-build freedom on your own timeline.
Cons
- Genuinely remote — Williston is the nearest errand run.
- Thin market: few listings, fewer comps, slow resale.
- All readiness costs — well, septic, clearing — are yours.
- No built amenities inside the plat.
- Mid-tier rural school ratings.
- 3x lot-price spread punishes skipped diligence.
The Steeplechase Playbook
How prepared buyers win here, in order:
- Verify the trail rights on the deed before anything else — it is the asset
- Build the readiness ledger: power, water, perc, clearing, driveway, in writing
- Compare build-vs-buy honestly — an amortized mini-farm often beats the cheap lot
- Talk to the association — 20 minutes of ground truth on trails and neighbors
- Be patient and pre-positioned — the right parcel here is a watch-list game
Questions We Ask Before You Offer
When Momentum represents you here, these go out before the offer is drafted:
- To the title agent: does the recorded deed carry the trail rights, and what do the plat restrictions say?
- To the utility: is power at this lot line, and what would the extension cost?
- To the county health dept: what does the soil evaluation say for septic on this parcel?
- To the neighbors/drillers: well depths and water quality on adjacent parcels
- To the Forest Service: current Goethe access rules for riders and carriage drivers
- To the association: trail maintenance status and anything changing in the plat
Is Steeplechase Farms For You?
The honest fit check — this plat serves a specific life.
Consider elsewhere if you want
- Amenities, gates, and a managed community
- Town conveniences within ten minutes
- Move-in-ready inventory to choose from
- Strong school ratings driving the purchase
- Quick resale liquidity
- City utilities and low site-work risk
Steeplechase fits if you want
- Public-forest riding and driving from your back gate
- Five acres with zero dues, forever
- Carriage culture and Black Prong next door
- A custom farm built your way, on your timeline
- The lowest equestrian carrying cost in the corridor
- Quiet that managed communities cannot sell
