Farms for Rent in Al Ahmadi Governorate (5 Ads)
About Al-Ahmadi Governorate
Al-Ahmadi Governorate is a Kuwaiti governorate that was established in 1962. It was called Al-Ahmadi after the name of the late Sheikh Ahmed Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, the tenth Emir of Kuwait, during whose reign oil extraction began. Al-Ahmadi Governorate is the second largest governorate by area in Kuwait, and it contains oil fields, including Burgan field, which is the second largest field in the world. Among the landmarks of Al-Ahmadi Governorate: the sea chalets, Al-Kout Complex.
Al-Ahmadi Governorate includes 28 areas (districts): Abu Halifa, Ahmadi Stables, Ahmadi, Julaiaa, Khiran Residential - Desert Side, Riqqa, Zour, Shuaiba Industrial, Sabahiya, Dubaiya, Dhaher, Egaila, Fahaheel, Fintas, Mangaf, Mahboula, Nuwaiseeb, Wafra Farms, Wafra Residential, Bnaider, Jaber Al-Ali, South Sabah Al-Ahmad Residential, Sabah Al-Ahmad Sea City - Khiran, Sabah Al-Ahmad Residential City, Ali Sabah Al-Salem - Umm Al-Hayman, Fahad Al-Ahmad, Mina Abdullah Port, Hadiya
Information About the Farms Listed for Rent in Al-Ahmadi Governorate
If you are looking for a farm, Jakhour, or rest house for rent in Al-Ahmadi Governorate, then Boshamlan real estate finder provides you with the ability to communicate directly with the advertiser through WhatsApp or direct contact. You can expand your search to include all areas of Kuwait. Farms and Jakhour are still considered as favorite destination for many people, despite the lack of public gardens in these areas, but visitors can spend some time in the open air there before they go to the vegetable market in it or the stalls in front of some of its farms to shop for fresh products and return to where they came from in the middle of a road Two-way safe evening light. There are central markets, restaurants and mosques in the agricultural areas. Farms have become destinations favored by some Kuwaiti citizens and residents during holidays and consider them better than hotels and tourist resorts, especially since their prices are much cheaper than most hotels. The daily rent price of a farm in Al-Ahmadi Governorate may reach between 100 and 200 KD, depending on each season. In winter, prices are more expensive than summer, as well as during the holiday seasons, where many families prefer to gather in the farm, which can accommodate large numbers of visitors. And you can find in the farm, for example, a very large green area, and it is possible that the farm includes a building that contains a hall, a number of rooms, bathrooms, an equipped kitchen, an indoor or outdoor swimming pool, and a diwaniya, in addition to some playgrounds for children. Some farms also provide a kind of agricultural entertainment, where they can enjoy participating in agricultural work and harvesting crops.
As for the Jakhour (rest houses), they are no longer the traditional Jakhour that were previously known. Rather, some Jakhour have become close to farms and rest houses in terms of features and facilities such as swimming pools, children's playgrounds, and others. The areas of most of the Jakhour in kuwait range between 1250 to 2500 square meters. It is worth noting that the Public Authority for Agriculture Affairs and Fish Resources handed over these Jakhour to animal breeders with the aim of using them to provide food security, i.e. breeding various animals such as cattle, sheep, goats, calves, cows and poultry, and selling their products in the local market. However, some of these Jakhour deviated from the purpose for which they were distributed, and some of them were used for other purposes such as warehouses, blacksmithing and construction workshops, and housing for labour, while others use them for rent, which is also forbidden. These uses are prohibited and in violation of the law. Teams affiliated with the Public Authority for Agriculture Affairs and Fish Resources sometimes raid the violating galleries, while threatening to revoke their licenses, in case the owners of these galleries do not amend the situation. Among the violations, for example, the absence of livestock or poultry in the Jakhour, or the breeding of prohibited or smuggled predatory animals, or the exploitation of the voucher in activities other than the activity designated for it, such as renting the Jakhour as rest houses or family parks.