I remember when I was a kid, my dad got it in his head that we needed to buy and move to one of those "hobby" farms. My mom, knowing my dad well (of course) knew it was a bad idea (for various reasons). Thankfully one of her friends lived on such a "farm" (they had horses, and ran a small stable for extra income, basically so they could afford to have that farm). (They also ran a home building business out of a barn too, so they did have a good reason to have a "farm"). So they offered to show my dad how it was to have one. He helped out for a couple weeks when he was not working (the union he hated was on strike, and Indiana wasn't right to work then).
After that he never talked about a hobby "farm" again. Ha ha ha. It would have been a really bad idea.
Today, I sell real estate, including those hobby farms. Most people have no idea what they are getting into and how expensive and how much work (including pretty hard labor) they are. I have a list very similar to the one posted here that I give those folks. I think many think they are going to save huge money by living out in the country, but in my area (Northwest Indiana, just outside Chicago) its just not the case, we just are not far enough from the urban area. Its not very affordable. There is a reason most are estate type property, not little "farms".
Thankfully most figure it out and buy something they can handle. Like a normal house in a subdivision. For most an acre is enough space. But there are some, no matter what you do, they buy something they shouldn't. Then they lock horns with a next door neighbor, real farmer with his real business. Now for that farmer, its his business (unlike your day job somewhere else), and your bellyaching about something is getting in the way of his business. Not good. There is no way your going to get a farmer to stop doing something he and his family as been doing for the last century and a half. They have been there a long time, you haven't.
There are now subdivisions within sight of my mom's friends "farm" now, and someday they will need to develop their property. Granted they managed to live there almost 40 years but the reality is that its time is almost up. And people fight that fight every time and they lose that fight every time too. Its not staying rural no matter what you do. When you are that close to Chicago, its not going to be a farm anymore. Especially with the city repelling so many people now a days.