10 April 2011 | 33 replies
That's only 500 years.The Abbey around the corner was built in 1090, and there was an old church much older than that (but I can't find the date).If stuff is built to last, and it is taken care of, it lasts a very long time.The house was a framework of gorgeous enormous oak beams with the spaces in between filled with woven willow branches, horse hair, and plaster.

9 February 2008 | 7 replies
But, let them know they still need to leave… And evict them as necessary… They will almost always try to stall… But as already mentioned, don’t spend any time or money on it until you know it is 100% yours…I have done these before… And my theory was to leave the "sleeping dog" (The IRS) alone… If you think there is a chance they may redeem… Why bring it to their attention?

10 February 2008 | 9 replies
His question is a stall tactic intended to get you to start doubting your inspector.

9 February 2008 | 17 replies
can i kick this horse one more time...is your 35 an hour guy FULLY insured?

16 February 2008 | 6 replies
You could play a little game of “who’s got the deed”, “You’re it”… No “You’re it” with the lender… I would guess when they went to file for foreclosure it would nullify it since they already held title… Im sure people have done this as stall tactic… I can’t imagine I just though of this…I will have to check into this…

10 August 2019 | 12 replies
The land had horse stable and a riding ring.

26 September 2019 | 15 replies
Total scam........ they are often expensive, don't totally cover the items, the companies they use to "fix" claims are often crap and they will band aid the issue until the end of time......The single benefit is if you are OOS, you call them and they handle the claim, so you don't have to find your own repair people etc.....so its ease of use...... but you often have to manage the insurance company as they jerk you around, stall and band aid the actual issue.....Had one when I bought a rental in TX and then continued it when the initial expired..... regretted it to this day.I'll take one as part of the deal when I buy.... but wont keep paying for it myself.Better off building a network of repair companies you trust

30 December 2019 | 9 replies
Don't put the cart before the horse, in my opinion.

18 April 2020 | 2 replies
Even possibly partnering up with sellers thru equity sharing agreements or JV agreement (especially for fixer properties, or stalled remodeling and new construction projects).

15 February 2015 | 10 replies
Hey how's the weather up there, on your high horse?