Property appraisers are deeply philosophical people. Only they know how relative everything is in our world. After my grandmother's death, when the property appraiser appraised her house with a yard and garden for probate, he found that the value of the whole thing was $30,000. Accordingly, a considerable tax had to be paid for the inheritance. After that, we were able to sell it all for $4,000. Since then I know that everything in the world is relative, especially values?
Gosh, what an experience!
Fortunately, we don't have to sell - we don't want to and couldn't do that because mom's husband still lives in the house.
I learned from my mother that you should never count on money that you don't have. And it really is easier to live that way. So no plans for inherited property that we don't really own yet. Maybe that's why there are neither quarrels nor disappointments.... ;-)
We also did not plan to sell the inherited property. But a mountain river flows near the yard and it constantly takes away part of the yard. We struggled with this in various ways, but we had to buy concrete slabs and order equipment to strengthen the banks. The village is remote, no one planned to live there, so it was too expensive.
It's good that you don't plan to sell anything. Fewer problems.