(CNN) The final countdown to the real estate sale of the century has begun.

Bigger than New York City and Los Angeles combined, Waggoner Ranch in Texas spans half-a-million acres, boasts more than 100 properties within its boundaries and oil reserves.

Potential buyers had until Oct 20 to submit their bids and according to the Wall Street Journal the ranch will be sold by the end of the year, with a price tag of $725 million.

"I can tell you it's not often you can dismiss out of hand an offer for several hundred million dollars -- you're not even getting on the dance floor with several hundred million dollars," he told CNN.

The realtor behind the sale of the property, Bernard Uechtritz.

Uechtritz, of Briggs Freeman Sotheby's International Realty, has a history of selling unusual properties. He was in charge of the sale of Jose and Kitty Menendez's Beverly Hills mansion after the couple were killed by their two sons in 1989, and evaluated both OJ Simpson's Brentwood mansion and his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson's apartment in Santa Monica where she was killed with her friend Ronald Goldman

"I've done this for 30 years and I've been involved in some interesting and hairy deals, and I've seen money arrive in suitcases at the court house," he said.

Waggoner Ranch, though, is different and is by no means a hard sell. Although Uechtritz has invested nearly two years of his life in the project, there have been 600 inquiries and he stands to make millions himself if the asking price is met.

The cowboy hat-wearing Uechtritz is no stranger to the hard sell but is adamant that it's not been required with this Texas property.

"It stands head and shoulders above everything else as it is head and shoulders above everything else," he said. "It's truly a one of a kind.

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"Where can you go with half-a-million acres under one fence with oil, cattle, natural resources and intellectual property. Nowhere, it's just not out there."

Located near Vernon in northwest Texas, Waggoner is America's largest ranch within a single fence spanning six counties in all.

It has enough water in one lake on the property to source the whole of the 105,000-strong population of nearby Wichita Falls and boasts 14,000 cows, 500 horses and 30,000 acres of arable land.

To view even a modicum of its vast borders requires a helicopter ride and a lot of time.

"If I take buyers on a viewing it takes about an hour and 45 minutes in a helicopter to get the rough overview," said Uechtritz. "I can then show you the highlights in one or two days but a more intensive tour takes three or four days.

"But it's worth it. It's just so beautiful, as I said, one of a kind. This is going to make ranching history."

As the realtor for the property, he has got to know the 120 staff that work across its boundaries and the families that rely on a smooth purchase for their own futures.

That, argues Uechtritz, brings with it a big responsibility.

"I'm driven by the scenario whereby it's win-win where the buyer of this ranch that has never been sold in 165 years continues the legacy and protects his or her purchase for another 165 years.

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"It's a very important part of cowboy culture and the greatest equestrian of all is the cowboy, it's from that that all other equestrians are born.

"But there is a tremendous amount of responsibility to the 120 families and cowboys that are the heart of this remarkable ranch. They're relying on me to put this in the right hands. I think the prospects for the new owner are great. We've already got some good quality buyers in our buying pool."

The reality is that only a limited number of people on the planet have the funds to purchase such a ranch.

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Said to be a favorite of the former U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt, the estate has a remarkable history.

There have been quirky family members from Electra Waggoner who during the 1920s spent $90,000 -- around $1.2m in today's money -- on a facelift of her Dallas mansion to house her wide range of fashion accessories, to her older brother Guy who was famous for marrying eight times.

Uechtritz admits there will an element of sadness when the day of sale comes as "it's been part of my life for a couple of years and you grow attached."

He admits to sometimes shaking his head how an Australian born in Papua New Guinea came to oversee the "the sale of the century."

"I know this equestrian world so well," he says. "I feel like it's in my DNA. I remember being on a horse from the age of five but am told I was on one even earlier. I'm an equestrian, a rancher, a polo and polocrosse player."

For anyone rich enough to have the funds there is just one catch to the sale -- 25% of the mineral rights will remain in the possession of the current owners. To date around one tenth of the ranch's land has been explored for oil.