THIS IS A READ-ONLY ARCHIVE FROM THE SORABJI.COM MESSAGE BOARDS (1995-2016). |
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they didn't. i just got the word that we've been approved. getting a house is now within the realm of possibility...in fact, it's damn likely. like i could be outta here sooner than i ever expected. taking on such a massive payment kinda scares the bejesus outta me. then again, i really want my own place. i'm tired of landlords walking in on me whenever they please, tired of my shitty neighbors, just tired of the whole lack of privacy. the best house we've seen is in a boondock town. yep, even more boondock than THIS burg i'm presently sitting in. cowtown, USA. mooooooo. a place so rural it makes mayberry RFD look like downtown chicago. however, the house is almost a steal, considering how nice & spacious it is. huge fenced yard. there's another house we also like that's closer but it's got some problems (still, it's a lot cheaper). the main house we're looking at is a damn good house for the price...but also the most expensive place we're considering. anyway, i'm still tripping out. my credit is actually worth a damn. call ripley's "believe it or not". i may be a homeowner in a few weeks. holy sheeit. |
don't ever make a mortgage payment late. that's really bad. other than that, your credit is about to improve a buttload. oh, and be prepared for a thousand and a half offers for home equity credit card consolidation loans. get a good home inspection. enjoy escrow. it will pass. blah blah blah. |
we're also having a few issues w/ our own dear oswald. i think he wanted us to NOT get approved. he's pretty upset right now. he doesn't want us to move away. he's trying to be cool, bless his heart, but i know he's really freaked out right now. i'm trying to assure him that we won't be THAT far away & he can come stay w/ us in our new place. he's not taking it well. the one thing i wanted that i probably won't get is a band rehearsal space. all of the properties we can afford right now are jammed up too close to other people to really crank it up. i've always wanted a place where i can just let loose & play. it may not ever happen. |
my signature is much simpler now, too. writing off your interest will offset the 'twice your rent' payments. you can adjust your deductions on your W-2 so that you see that money on your paycheck instead of at the end of the year. when escrow closed i went and walked through the house smoking a joint. blew smoke in every dark corner. then lay on my back in the middle of the empty living room and the whole of home ownership just hit me. it's a great feeling. |
i've gotta crash. it's been a weird day. |
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when you buy a house, you and the seller agree to an escrow period -- say 30 days -- along with the rest of the deal. the buyer takes that thirty days to inspect the house and make sure everything is as described. the loan papers and title transfer are all completed. the loan funds, and on the last day title is transfered to the buyer and money is transfered to the seller. there are critera for exiting escrow included in the deal you make. a common critera is that the deal is off if the loan doesn't fund. this favors the buyer, who can change his mind at any time up until the end (unless he has his loan fund early, which would not be smart.) |
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my stupid neighbors have cranked their rap music up at deafening levels (just like they do every day). my other stupid neighbors are having another domestic quarrel. the stupid neighbors upstairs are banging shit around & playing bass really loud. i'm almost quivering w/ joy that this shit's gonna cease before long. i'm going to be SO out of here. my ultimate terror, naturally, is that i'm going to BUY a place & end up w/ neighbors that are even worse...& then i'll be stuck w/ the sorry bastards for YEARS. |
i think it came out to be about $5K total in my case, all the fees. i don't remember if it was wrapped into my loan, or if i forked it over on top of my down. crimson: are you getting your loan through a bank or a mortgage broker? have you made an offer yet? |
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check this out: karl's mortgage calc This helped me visualize a lot of things regarding my loan. Like how much difference in total interest a quarter point on your rate makes. this could be the difference between buying your loan from a bank and buying it from a broker. also, the button "monthly table" will show the monthly amortization table. you'll notice that at first you'll be paying mostly interest, and very little against your principal. what's neat about this if you pay your next months principal with your current months interest and principal, you'll essentially save a month's worth of interest. for example, the first three months on $100K 30 year at 8%: month, interest, principal Jan $666.67 $67.09 Feb $666.22 $67.54 Mar $665.77 $67.98 if in jan you pay your normal payment ($733.76) plus feb's principal, $67.54, in feb you'll actually be paying for mar. in other words, you save $666.22 over the life of the loan just by prepaying $67. |
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Anyway,you might also consider looking at properties out in the country,you can get acerage,and prices are usually lower.When I started looking at properties,I decided where I wanted to be centrally located to,and gave myself a 75 mile radious.I had the race horses,so needed the acerage to train on,but had to be close enough to haul my stock to the track.I ended up about 17 miles outside of a main city,got a great house plus acerage,and saved a bundle.Also,no hassle with annoying neighbors. |
Also look at a product that allows you to pay fortnightly, it's amazing how it saves you thousands over the long term. Owning a house makes me feel very grown up. I love having somewhere I can put myself into and it's nice to know there's somewhere that I really belong. Home is really important to me because we travelled so much when I was young and I never felt I had an anchor. |
the bank we're dealing w/ has a setup through my husband's workplace. everyone out there goes through this one particular bank. he thought he'd give it a try. he wasn't sure about going through VA (he's a vet) or other alternatives. i've had people telling me that you can't double up on house payments...that if you prepay, there's some kind of big penalty. don't know if that's true or not. that's just what i've been hearing. |
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*1500-666=834 834/12=69.5 |
crimson: i've taken three mortgages and never had prepayment penalties. it depends on the quality of your mortgage. all mine have been A-paper loans. a good mortgage broker will work to score you an A-paper loan. you can specify that your loan have no prepayment penalties. by all means investigate the VA loan. a friend of mine has a VA with 3.something interest rate. that's a huge savings. |
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this is kind of funny, to me anyway. check out my cousin's page. i don't even know him, i only see him briefly at funerals even though we've lived a half hour from each other all our lives. he's from the wealthy side of the family. i bet he's even a -gasp- republican. (i wonder if he checks referrer logs.) honestly though, the thrill of being a homeowner has pretty much worn off. |
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i dont understand how people could read this crap and not say something. |
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Could you please provide an instruction book for the above statement. Thanking you in advance for your assistance, Ms Cat |
thanks mgmt |
The above post was nothing more than cheap wordplay on the title of Eugene O'Neill's play, "Mourning Becomes Electra". I hope this clarifies matters, and look forward to future exchanges with you on this board. Amicably, Mr. Dougie |
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Thank you for your invaluable assistance in this matter. Cat Inc. will certainly use your translation services again should the occasion arise. Yours sincerely, Ms Cat CAT INC. |
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(rimshot) Antigone, you gonna be in tha Big Easy or no? If Pug can't be there for an ass-kicking, then you'd better. Just weighed myself last nigh, for the first time in about a month and a half. This was brought on by a self-observation that my workpants, which were tight at the beginning of fieldwork 3 weeks ago, so much so that my zipper kept coming unzipped, felt loose this week. So, I hopped on the scale, and 168! That's more than I have weighed in the last year, and actually probably closer to the last four years. But the pants were looser, though, and I thought I looked a little more svelte. So I took out the measuring tape, and it was about 36" around the waist, which makes it more mystifying for me, since it seems to be less down that region than before visually. Althoug I could have gained a bit of fat between the time I moved from Wis. and the itme I started fieldwork. So I grabbed my new Accu-measure bodyfat calipers. 10.7% bodyfat! What the hell? That's good, but am I just measuring wrong witht the tape? I also had eaten Wendy's a couple hours before, so I could have been a little bloated. Freakin' weird, but since I should be in the field for at least the next two months, I could be looking pretty good this summer. Ok, that's it for my little self-indulgence. |
that sounds pretty shitty, buddy. |
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Homeowning is great! Even if things break down at least you are in charge! It totally rocks! Good luck! |
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More info here: http://www.thehomebuyersbroker.com/ That's my broker's site. I'm sure things are a little different state to state but good general info. I hope you live happily ever after in yer new home! |
i do...when i own the place. |
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most of the houses i was shown today were dumps. one was particularly nasty. there were still people living in there. looked like someone had shat on the carpet. there were cigarette butts strewn all over the place. hideous brown stains all over the carpeting & every room was torn up. the good news: for the same price as the piece o' shit house, i think we may have found our home. our first choice for a house clocks in at $65K. that's a bit much, but we were willing to consider it (& we did get approved for it). but...we saw a great little place for $49K. it would put us, once again, next door to a cemetery (this seems to be our fate in life). other buyers are apparently not interested in this house because they don't want to live by a cemetery, the superstitious fucks. i don't care about that. i'm cool w/ having dead people for neighbors. i'm not prejudiced about it. i'm not one of these people who requires my neighbors to have an actual pulse. this is a little dollhouse. it's much smaller than the more expensive house but then again, there are only 2 of us living there. it has a brand new A/C unit, new stove, & the fridge comes w/ it (any appliance or piece of furniture that comes w/ a house is going to be an obvious plus for us). difference between the two houses: the more expensive house has one extra bedroom, a much larger backyard & more storage space. however, it also has an infestation of ants & spiders, as well as a massive A/C unit that's about to crap out at any moment. the linoleum in the kitchen is splitting up & is in need of repair. there's also a good-sized burn mark in the kitchen floor. the smaller house needs to be painted (like about ten years ago, it should've been painted). the inside looks great. hardwood floors. much smaller yard (more space in the front yard than the back). it's at the end of a street; one side of the house faces toward an open pasture w/ no other houses (i like this. cows are far less annoying than my present neighbors). then there's the cemetery, which has apparently run the property value down, but i don't care about having dead neighbors, because they, too, are less annoying than the bastards i'm living next to now. my husband is considering making an offer on this smaller house as early as tomorrow. |
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i'm completely in shock at the idea of a $65K house. i can't even comprehend $49K. fucking california. |
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oh, yeah...in the more expensive house, the water runs in the tub all the time. a steady small trickle that won't shut off. also, the bottom of the tub is messed up a bit (yellow-brown chemical stains & missing hunks of enamel). the bathroom in the smaller house appeared to be okay. the area we're considering moving to is apparently prone to ant infestations, something we don't especially have a problem w/ here. it's kind of weird. it's not all that far away, but the geography changes a bit. the land is flatter (more tornado-prone). i don't know how to explain this, but there's some kind of weird psychic difference between the two houses. the smaller house seemed more inviting & friendly. the larger house is somewhat dark & oppressive. if i got the smaller house, i'd eventually re-paint it...but i'd put the trim in some sort of pastel color (it's presently all white). it might make it look a little more cheerful (or deranged). getting the fridge & stove along w/ the house probably saves us about a grand or so. the stove is new & was just professionally installed a few weeks ago. the place has a utility room, as well. the yard is quite small. that's a drag because oswald damn near had me talked into raising sheepdogs. the smaller house is not sheepdog-friendly (but it'd be great for a toy breed, which means i might be able to rescue that pitiful little poodle-mix varmint awaiting the executioner down at the humane society). it's daunting, to think of spending so much money. but w/ the cheaper house, our payments would be slightly closer to what we're paying in rent (it'd be 2 times more, rather than 3 times more). we might be nuts to give up the larger home. however, there are issues w/ it that we may not have enough money to realistically address right now. one drag about the smaller house...in about 5 years, it may need new roofing. |
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i don't know if this is california only, or federal, but houses need to be explicitly sold as "as is" to be considered such. this isn't so important for problems you know about, but any problem the seller does not disclose is the seller's responsibility. things like paint and leaky faucets are easy to repair. that's what homeowners do for fun. things like bad foundations, etc, are costly and should be revealed when you have inspections done. do you have a downpayment? how much? has anyone told you you'll have to pay PMI (mortgage insurance)? $47K at 8% for 30 years should be about $345/mo. assuming you're at least $2500 into the 15% tax bracket, that is equiv. to $305/mo in rent (or less.) a VA loan will be a much better rate, no downpayment required and no PMI. (mortgage insurance is a ripoff and you shouldn't pay it unless you have to.) http://www.homeloans.va.gov/ i just checked with a friend of mine. his VA loan is at 3.5%. payments would be about $211 on $47K or $291 on $65K. $291 adjusted for your tax savings would be equiv to about $270 in rent. a buddy of mine pays $250 a month in rent for a tiny laundry room with no heat. fits his cot and a bookshelf. they drop an extension cord out a window above him so he can have electricity. |
I think the house at the end of the street next to a graveyard sounds great. I mean, is it a busy new graveyard or an old quiet graveyard? My boss lives next to a graveyard and says it's nice and quiet. Cows too - you'll just have to smell their cow-stink but otherwise it sounds lovely. You always can wait too, new places will always come up. I looked for a year and a half to find my home but it has everything I want. If you feel skittish, write a list of what you need, want, and are willing to accept, it helps you clarify in your mind what you want and also will help you say 'hey, this place has everything I want' when you see it. |
we don't know anything about mortgage insurance. we'll probably find out about that this week. we'll be making a downpayment, but i'm unclear as to how much. the more expensive house is in a residential neighborhood w/ lots of families. the smaller house is also in a residential neighborhood, but it's mostly populated by senior citizens (we'd be buying it from an elderly widow). that's one problem that the realtor pointed out to us. she said that reselling the house might prove difficult because no one wants to live in a small house in a neighborhood w/ a bunch of geriatrics (i.e., the main housing market is pitched toward yuppie families who wouldn't find their quiet elderly neighbors "family-friendly" & besides, the dorks don't want to live next door to the cemetery 'cos that's like scary or something...add to that the fact that you can't cram 6 kids in a two-person house). however, the way this area is growing, I think it'll only be a matter of time before the city starts encroaching on this small town. i secretly think that the property value can ONLY go up because the more populated areas have already swallowed up & annexed a number of nearby suburbs & the boom seems to be relentless (& it's pushing right in the direction of where we're thinking of moving). for my rent, i'm getting 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, kitchen, living room, central heat n' air. your basic apartment. one drag: the smaller house doesn't have central heat & air. the A/C is a window unit (brand new, somewhat large). we've been told that it cools the whole house. the upside is that we don't have to drop a grand or two on some behemoth of a cooling unit. the heat is gas, located in the center of the house. the more expensive place has central heat & air (but as i mentioned, the A/C is faulty & we were told we'd have to replace it). |
not including PMI, which, if you put less than 20% down is almost always a requirement. that should be about $60 a month on a $65K loan, until you have 20% equity. |
as for the cows, it's not like it's next to a dairy farm. not too many moos. couldn't smell anything at all, really. this particular house (the smaller one) is on a weird street. some of the houses are nice & some are kinda shitty. it's a total mixed bag. since it's a big area for seniors, my guess is that the more run-down houses belong to elderly people who've gotten too old to keep up w/ the repairs. i spoke privately w/ the widow who's selling the house & she pointed all up & down the street telling me who's just ill & who's terminal. |
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Every American should run out and buy property at 3.5%. That's practically no interest, and means you're paying off the capital at a much faster rate. |
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I think maybe in the next few months my boyfriend and I may have some lawyers draw up a contract so we can go in on a condo together. I know a gay man and a lesbian who bought a duplex together this way. he has the down payment, and I have the income. we want to split it so that at the point we want to sell, each of us will get a percentage of equity equal to the percentage of money we've put into it. either of us should be able to choose to withdraw from the contract at any time (meaning the one person would have to buy out the other's percentage of equity according to a current appraisal value, or we'd have to sell it). I bet this isn't much harder than it sounds. except I totally don't want this business agreement to start getting into common-law marriage, which is a shitty fucking thing, if you ask me. |
looking into the VA loan would seem foolish. Like you said...all they can say is no. do you think they may want to unravel the aforementioned student loan? i think being near a cemetary could be a unique quality about it. Where we lived in Raleigh, we were next door to the oldest cemetary in town, and some of the prettiest, most sought after old homes in the downtown raleigh area. |
that cemetery is weird. half of it's modern & half of it is old-fashioned & vaguely creepy. some of the old vaults are crumbling away & you can see right into them. some have glass cases w/ the rotted black victorian funeral wreaths still in them. just spoke w/ my husband on the phone. he's strongly considering going w/ the smaller house. if we really do that, then repairs will be far less of an issue. the A/C unit is new. there's a fridge (older) & a stove (brand new). we'll be left w/ buying a washer/dryer unit (i don't think the town even has a laundromat). the roof is the main thing. it'll need a roof job here in a few years. also, there's the matter of painting the house, but that's a relatively minor concern right now. i don't know where to start w/ the whole VA loan thing. maybe they're online. i'll check it out. i'd probably be nuts not to. |
i believe a mortgage broker can help with a VA. |
apparently a million seattle-area condos were built with this shit, which traps moisture and rain between the siding and the structure if not perfectly installed (and perhaps even then). supposedly the manufacturers have revamped the design a little, but they seem like big-time weasels and I still wouldn't trust the product. I'd even prefer asbestos composite. I wonder if similar problems have occurred with vinyl siding. anyway, buyers beware! |
Is it a shotgun style house? Maybe if its in the central room...and all the other rooms brnch off it, but if you have a hallway seperating the rooms...forgetboutit. if i didnt mention it...GOOD LUCK. Nico and I are tired of renting thats for sure. They are rredoing the entire plumbing in our joint now, after calliing Dept. Of Health, Bldg Inspectors Dept. and filing a complaint with the Dept. Of Realtors. They are in my apartment busting holes in almost all of the bed rooms...im so sick of that shit. So, taking a walk in our hood this weekend, looking at all the houses around our area...we really want to get out, as soon as her business gets in better footing. I really love my neighborhood and it would be great to take a place there, but the houses are goign to be at least 200k for something small and charming crammed into the hillside. |
i just tried to find VA loan stuff online. i got funneled toward this "instamortage" company...something like that. they're offering somthing like 6% (our bank's offering 7%) but still...i don't think it's the actual VA. it seems like a lot of places are trying to pose as the VA, only to steer the gullible (like yours truly, in this case) toward something else altogether. our realtor said that almost nobody uses mortgage brokers & that in the whole of her career, she's only had 2 people try it. |
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this is the one I know would love: Capitol Hill $239,950 1516 E Republican 9. 1 BR/1 BA spacious, beautiful light-filled Anhalt. Hdwds, leaded windows! but I can't start shopping yet. |
yeah crimson, thats the low end. granted I live in one of the more expensive areas in the city...right now anyway. the higher in the hills, the more $$$. A buddy of mine recently bought a modest sized 3 bedroom house in the hills,not too far up though, with no view, and a seperate studio and pool (granted its designed flawlessly in a post modern manner) but he paid about 800k for it. He's also the DP (director/producer) on videos for bands like tool and rage so homey's making bucks. a 2 bedroom bungalow, with a tiny yard and a 1 car garage went for around 400k about 6 months ago...around the corner from my house. there are cheaper parts of LA, but if Im going to invest in a house I don't want to be in area im not happy with. |
For that matter, how much is anyone who wants to disclose it paying? |
the more i think about it, the more i'm kinda spooked about the empty lot near the house (the smaller one). if it stays an empty pasture, that'd be great. my fear is that some developer is going to plop down some kind of yuppie "pre-planned community" on it. that's all the rage around here. developers keep building these little McMansions, all crammed up together. yankees come down here in droves & they just eat that shit up. they can't get a normal house. they live in "communities" w/ houses so close together it's unbelivable. then they try to sell the locals on the idea that it's fashionable to live that way. those things are going up like crazy around here. if you look at those places, you'll see an SUV in every single driveway & the houses all look exactly alike. not just kinda alike, but EXACTLY alike. anyway, i just have this creepy feeling that somebody's going to find a use for that pasture other than letting the cows graze. if not a set of McMansions, it'll be turned into a wal-mart super center. |
crimson, i would very seriously consider getting another realtor. she sounds like she sucks. it's the difference between buying jeans from the levi's outlet or a department store. sometimes you just don't want levi's. |
yeah...if they put some development in that pasture that we just can't roll w/ then we can always resell the place. everybody we've talked to locally has advised us to take the house that has fewer repair issues. the realtor (the main one we're working with) says that she works on behalf of the buyer & submits the paperwork to a number of different banks. something like that. |
man, that's wierd. |
Get that house inspected, top to bottom, and cite any problems when you're bidding. The bank WILL NOT finance a mortgage on a house that is not up to code or has serious problems, and that should be brought up. Cat, (I think it was you?) I am paying $100 a month to live in one of the shittiest hovels you have ever seen in your life. However, it also happens to be right on the ocean in Caspar, which is in Mendocino County--primo California real estate, in other words. Land like the patch my house is on goes for millions of dollars, so I deal with the shittiness to live here. I'd like to move, but I can't afford to buy here and I can't afford to move to a different house here because the rents are all in the quadruple digits. It's very hard to live in this part of CA if you're poor. I guess I could do a few miles over into the valley (not THE valley, just the county seat, which is in A valley. I do like that there's a street called Lover's Lane, though.), where land is cheap because it's all ag and it stinks of cows, but why? I like it here. A lot, apparently, to live in this dump...oh well. I wish we had houses to rent for $300, then maybe I could move somewhere nicer...alas. |
My Mom told me when she bought her house in the 70's the realtor helped her secure the mortgage. My realtor directed me and made sure my lender was on the up and up but didn't secure the mortgage for me. Have you already made an offer on the place? I'm sorta confused why your realtor is already helping you get the mortgage. I dream of most of your rents. Real estate is obscene in Boston. I was living in a 2 bed tenement with a roommate in Brighton, an area full of college students, with a roommate and the landlord evicted me because he was selling the place (it was a condo) to another owner who wanted it delivered vacant. We were paying $1100 a month which included heat (no central AC in the Northlands) and they were raising the rent to $1500 a month which they would get because there is nowhere to live here. The place I bought is in Jamaica Plain, a neighborhood away from students and in a 'mixed' area, at the crossroads between a Latino neighborhood and a very posh one for $150K, it is 4 1/2 rooms in a 6 family house with parking. I have a deal believe it or not. The place on the third floor just sold again for $182K. I was shocked. I just bought in August so the price went up over 30K in just 8 months??!! My mortgage and fees and stuff are just shy of $1000 and I could easily rent it for that or more. Sick! I still stick by the elderly neighbors. They'll be quiet and old! Plus, if the current owner is pointing out who is gonna die soon that neighborhood will be turning over in the next few years. As for development in the pasture, you just can't know. But since you say it is so undesirable because it is near a graveyard, why would a developer see it as desirable to build on? You can always move out and rarely would it happen that you'll lose $ in the end - I mean, think of how much cash you throw out now every month on rent. Plus you get a tax break. |
where i grew up in suburban atlanta...everything you fear crimson, happened. Now, most of those strip malls are vacant... be glad they if they do put a development up next to you, your property will indeed be valuable to someone with a 7-11 or a strip mall in mind, the two go hand in hand. Cat, I pay $850 for a 2 bedroom, 2 bath apartment in Silverlake. We have a great view, balcony, central heat, and 2 a/c boxes (no one has central a/c out here either) If we werent under rent control we'd be paying around $1200, as neighbors who recently moved in, admitted they are paying for their 2 bedroom. California in general, aside from the deserts (which are beautiful in their own way, but not ideally habitable) has beautiful god damn land. I can attest that where nate lives is god damn gods country...if we had the money, nico and i would buy a house in big sur or just outside monterrey hands down. all along the coast....and not just beachfront property..but inland, the chunk of land between the pacific and the San Joaquin valley is all beautiful mountainous country...so even there...houses are gonna cost. whats going on with you isolde? |
you can expect close to that anywhere in the area. i've seen 800 square foot homes in the foothills go for over $800K. |
from the LA WEEKLY Yuppification Dulls Silver Lake's Edge In Justin Tanner's 1998 hit theater comedy Coyote Woman, quirky boho characters took pride in the absence of a Starbucks coffeehouse in their Silver Lake neighborhood. But with yuppification proceeding apace, the area today has not only a Starbucks but Rudy's Barbershop, a Standard Hotel spinoff where the hip wait one and a half hours to sit in a fake retro chair for a $15 haircut. Some residents see a threat to the fabled "SilverLake Mix" - what one labels "the lesbian potluck thing that brings together old and young, gay and straight, white, Filipino and Latino people." The most immediate casualties, however, are gay businesses along the Hyperion corridor. Two gay sex clubs, Basic Plumbing and Exile (the old King of Hearts), have closed in recent months. While Slammers on Beverly (in a more commercial zone) is picking up the slack, it doesn't have the same homey feeling, patrons say. "Exile was kind of like a Costco, where you paid a fee to join," says "Costco member" Vern. Chichi gay-owned boutiques and restaurants appear to be safe; it's the less seemly businesses that are under fire. In some cases, club owners are cashing in on skyrocketing offers for newly valuable Silver Lake real estate. But police harassment may also be at work, some patrons charge. "At Akbar [a gay and straight hipster bar on Sunset in Silver Lake], no one's beating off, but everyone's smoking," a Silver Lake designer, who declined to have his name used, points out. "At Cuffs, the smoking ordinance is meticulously enforced." Cuffs is back in operation after a liquor-license suspension linked to an old lewd-conduct violation. The designer says the problem is not just jackbooted cops: "The demographics are shifting, and the [gay] people who bought those adorable boho cottages in the '70s are grown-ups now and not particularly interested in doing poppers in a dark bar," he says. "But these clampdowns are wrong." Gay bars like Le Barcito and the Silver Lake Lounge, which draw a working-class Latino crowd, seem to have escaped police attention, but they also have fewer public displays of nudity. Of course, gays aren't the only ones being displaced by yuppification. The cops in January lost their favorite watering hole, the Short Stop in neighboring Echo Park, which reopened as a retro lounge so hipster-friendly it made Vanity Fair's hot list this month. Police have decamped to the Red Lion, the ersatz Bavarian bar on Glendale Boulevard in Silver Lake, where they reportedly have received a rather chilly welcome from some of the female wait staff. -Sandra Ross |
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i'm not sure what happens now. i found the numbers to get the VA loan papers but can't seem to get anyone there (although I'll keep trying). they have forms you can download, but my computer can't read them & i can't print from this computer anyway. what we can do is talk to the realtor & tell her that we're interested in that specific house (my husband doesn't want anybody to come buy it out from under us, although i doubt that'll happen within the next day or so). from there, it's a matter of talking about financing. after we talk to the realtor, we'll find out more about how to proceed. i'm not sure what banks she'll be going through. i know that we've been approved for a more expensive house than this one through a bank already, for zero down (although we could make a down payment, if necessary). while all this is going on, i'll keep trying to get hold of the VA people as well. |
for example when we bought a car, we got the best offerthe dealer could offer, AKA Honda Fianance which is by Chase Manahatter (which paying off a car loan from them looks sparkly on your credit, so ive been told) and then we went and actually found a better finance rate through our personal bank. It just seems a conflict of interest to have your sales rep also handle the financing. |
If you're paying say $15,000 for a car, by the time you pay it off it will cost you $30,000 and then it will be worth $5,000. It's insane. Save up, buy a cheaper car, whatever you have to do, but don't get a car loan. |
we're going to check w/ our local bank, as well (& the VA & anybody else we can). she can do her number crunching & we'll do ours. |
I don't think it dumb at all. It was a must do. We needed a car right away, the other car was on its deathbed and we wanted extreme reliability. We paid the bank its fee or the fact the we didn't have 17k in hand, and im comfortable with that. With the exception of a new gas tank in the first 3 weeks because we hit a huge metal object in the road from a construction site, at night, in the rain (we tried to get the site to take responsibility, but it would have been hard to prove in court) we have no troubles at all. We have paid for nothing other than regular service..going on 5 years. As far as i am concerned, buying a car new, without a truly reliable mechanic at your disposal is the only way to go. Its an awesome car that has totally served us well and be one of the cheapest cars (aside from insurance) to maintain because it is so reliable. Besides we were doing a lot of long distance traveling (inlcuding cross country) and we didn't want to be crapping out in the desert somewhere. |
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finance through a credit union, get a low rate. anyone can make 8% with their money. if you borrow money for less than that, then you're better off borrowing. |
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now if you'd just buy a house, you could have bought the car with home equity and the interest would have been tax deductable. |
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I have wheels today, and if I could come up with the balance of what I owe in the next couple months, I'd be paying barely anything in interest. |
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if you plunk down the $7K up front, you lose $7K and get car. |
i hate the money game and i don't wanna play anymore. |
Financing a car is totally standard in the US. Like financing a house it makes it possible for people who don't have thousands of dollars up front to purchase things. Like any loan though you'd be better off paying off the loan asap. On the same topic you should never attach a car loan to your house though since you'll pay for it over 15-30 years and it will wind up costing many many times more than what the car could possibly cost. I'm gonna buy a new fridge this week I think. Man, you should see the fridges at Sears. The new ones do everything you could ever want. They are very exciting. |
i don't know if my realtor is the listing agent. we'll be walking through the house again soon. i'm a little concerned that it's a smaller house...but then again, it's quite a bit cheaper than the other place we were considering. there's one other house that we saw that i kinda liked for around 48K. i might ask to be walked through that one again. but the roof looked like trouble. i could just imagine it buckling in. my husband also didn't like the fact that it was right up on the highway. it was also right across the street from the baptist church. but i thought it'd be a fun diversion on sunday mornings to hang out & shoot BBs at the baptists. it's a small town. gotta do something for kicks. |
another thought: usually, there's a whole new batch of houses that come available every month. if you can afford to wait, you might consider what the next batch or 2 look like. it's really disheartening when you buy a home and, 2 months later, you happen to drive by a better, cheaper place. |
maybe im being an idiot (lobs one for nateboy), but im trying really hard to decipher this: "Well, if you can make $30K with the $7K in the interim your net on the money will be $5K and a car." yeah nate....totally...if i could just get a house...i mean, you know thats great and all you got everything figured out...you have all the answers, you can scratch your ass at night confident you got THE BEST DEAL, but you know...a house with a bitchin mortgage rate, a keen tax plan, investments that make you balls swell....but you know like dave, to me these things don't really matter. Sure i'll do my best, and not get majorly get ripped off, but you know...i got more important things to do. Life's to short to be caught up money managing possessions. Dave, from what i understand, Bush recently changed the bankruptcy laws to favor the wealthy and apparently those who owe thousands will have a harder time that those who owe millions. Apparently the major credit card companies have been pushing for this reform for sometime. but thats just my pussy liberal view... |
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buhleah. aren't you people listening? you have one life. you earn money for a limited time, so you need to make the money you get work for you as much as possible. if you can do this with other people's money, that's better! it's real cost v. preceived cost. say you have $10K to buy a car with. 1) Buy the car outright. Total cost of the car: $10K. In five years you have: A car worth $3K 2) Buy the car with $2K down, borrow $8K at 7% and invest the rest of your money making 9%. Total cost of the car: $11.5K In five years you have: A car worth $3K & $9.9K |
my dumbass neighbors are banging shit around & screaming. i can't believe how loud & moronic they are. i'll be SO glad to get out of this apartment. |
And Nate, your example assumes no loan fees, no deposit or other banking fees on the investment and a GUARANTEED interest rate 2% above the lending rate. However, I will conceed it's possible. I just think it's a bad idea to borrow money to invest, it's always risky and you can get caught. |
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Im not concerned about the value it has to the rest of the world, only the value it has to me. |
i can regularly get 10-12%. i can explain how to do it, but only in person, over beer or wine. associated fees really aren't that signifigant. |
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fuck you and the university your parents sprung for. |
My parents didn't spring for university because I didn't do the course they wanted me to do. No biggie, I got a scholarship. And I don't have a fat bank account. In fact, I have a zero balance in my bank account because any spare cash I have offsets my mortgage :p |
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holy poop!!! |
i sold drugs to get through college. |
just saturday I bagged out on a birthday fest at some trendy italian place. later on I heard that the bill for seven came to $550 before tax and tip. grazie but no. |
Once we had a BD party at a chi chi japanese/italian joint (go figure, its california) some of us didnt eat except the munchies that were put on the table...you know that japanese trail mix stuff. some didn't drink, some drank and ate...there we even same late evening bandits who came in and were just ordering liquor without regard. The bill came to just under a grand. Needless to say nico and i, being the nice ones dropped nearly a bill and half. Considering there were about 20 people in this private room....we totally got screwed. The birthday boy spent over $400...which he shouldnt have had to do and he's the budding big shot director....but even he still has a budget. |
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http://www.monkeyphonecall.com |
i use carwax for that. some people say toothpaste. don't believe them. what's a cd scratch remover machine? |
i'm tempted to call that number. |
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it's never been used and is sitting somewhere in my house. i should give it to someone. like a fruitcake. |
BTW, Nate, this was on the front page of sorabji.com just now, is it you, and if so, what context was it?: This is sorabji.com: Stop calling me. I'm not going to testify no matter how good you say your witness protection program is. I've seen the movies. No way. -Nate |
i don't want to talk about it. i just bought a P233 w/ 256MB ram a SCSI card, a sound card, a ethernet card and a harddrive of unknown size for $35. |
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i went back inside the house again today. it's nicer that i had remembered. it's a really neat little place. |
found myself combing through stores looking for furniture & goodies for the house. then it struck me what a hopeless old fart i've become. i wasn't out looking for meaningless crap for my own kicks. i was looking for useful things for an actual house. pass the geritol. |
Don't worry about being a hopeless old (homeowning) fart, you'll be one but you'll have a new pride in it soon. |
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always add something on top, always ask for extras.......you should have offerd 40k, knowing they will decline, maybe go to 47k, then you come back to 42k and then settle on 45k. ask for more, offer for less...eitherway good luck |
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but I went in with a bunch of web printouts about the car I knew I was going to get. they listed the dealer invoice, MSRP, and target prices for every option. I ended up paying $500-700 more for the car than the web sites suggested I should pay. but the sales guy was old and shaky and I felt sorry for him. pushover. |
the home inspection will happen within 10 days. we looked at the house again & it just seemed like the right place for us. we rode around the area...a short ride up the road & everything turns rural again. very pastoral. not the usual high ozark cliffs, but rolling hills & farmland (it starts looking more like eastern oklahoma, which it's not far from). but you can walk to the main part of town from the house. it's kinda like being in the town & the country at the same time. |
"it just seemed like the right place for us" read your home inspection carefully. don't be decided now. hopefully your offer and the counter offer you signed included a clause that would get you completely out of the deal if your loan won't fund. this will let you ride right up to the end of escrow and still be able to pull out if something isn't quite right. something you can do: when you get the home inspection look for things that are wrong but can be fixed. write up a list of improvements, make a high estimate of the cost of these. Take the list to your agent and tell her that you want to talk the seller into giving you cash back to fix these things. Your agent will tell you the maximum amount that can be given as cash back, I think it's 5% here. Your agent should be more than willing to do this counter offer. the sale price will be the same, and that's where her % comes from. The seller should be willing to do some dealing here. You're already in escrow. Especially if the house has been on the market for awhile, the seller should be ready to close the deal. It doesn't look so good to have someone come in and then back out. |
the house does seem rather nice & it's structurally sound, at least by outside viewing. of course, an actual inspection will tell us more. the seller is paying for pest control, too, if pests should be found. the VA loan is pretty much out of the question because of the age of the house. VA has stringent requirements on what they'll lend for. older houses don't fit the bill. my husband has pretty much decided on the bank he's going with. i'd rather shop around a bit more, but since he's the primary one who's making payments (since he makes much more than i do) it's really his choice at this point. anyhow, he thinks we can have it paid off in half the time we're being given. |
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it'll be weird, moving to a much less populated area. one of the main things i'll miss (very much) is being able to call pug & pilate. now it'll be long distance. |
It sounds like your neighbors are conspiring to remind you why you want to get away from them! |
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i should maybe install some voice recognition software. but not today. |
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i think everyone gets what they pay for |
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i guess the one advantage to living out in the middle of nowhere is that you can live more cheaply. the downside, of course, is that you really ARE in the middle of nowhere. your cultural opportunities consist solely of the monthly pot-luck down at the pentecostal church. if we'd have been able to move a couple of hours away from here, we could've gotten an even cheaper place w/ plenty of land to go with it. the problem is that it'd put us too far away from any work opportunities. obviously, it'd be nicer to live near the beach. but we can't afford that, at least for now. so we're heading for the sticks. eventually, we may be able to retire to the beach someday, if we play our cards right. |
Which beach will you retire to? |
we'd probably end up on the gulf coast. MS, FL or AL. our idea is to winter there. in the summer, we'd head for the hills (in the summer, the gulf is too hot & buggy...i've never seen such bugs). i'm also considering buying several small parcels of land in the southwest. that way, when we're old geezers in a winnebago, we'll have various places to park the thing. |
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the gulf is gorgeous.....the water is warmer, more clear...not much surf...but it's also pretty polluted in and around LA. Nico and i are convinced we'd like to end up somewhere in NoCal.....Big Sur, Monterrey....somewhere in that area. |
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Congrats, Crimson. |
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i like the central coast of california. the right blend of surf and sun and rain and nature and odd people. i think i'll be moving a little further south in the future. around slo, probably. |
My apartment is $880/month for two big bedrooms, bathroom, living room, dining room, smallish kitchen, with all utilities except electricity included. The neighborhood sucks, though. We're looking for a house in Montgomery Co., MD, and the market is fierce. But if you can't be rich yourself, have friends with rich parents who need to invest, I say. |
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I'm looking at a MONSTROUS farmhouse on 40 acres right now. I want it. |
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we be homeowners. one thing that's troubling me...net access in this area isn't looking good. there's one provider & nobody else in the world (not AOL, not anybody) provides service there. knowing they've got everyone by the balls, the ISP charges for net access by the hour...it's not cheap. there's no unlimited access plan available. then again, i suppose it's better than nothing. |
maybe it's time to start an isp? or look into satellite? you should be able to get something for $50 a month. which is suppose ain't cheap either. |
things that look like checks for $50K but aren't. |