
24 March 2017 | 16 replies
I'm closing on a 8 pad park in South Carolina next month.

8 February 2018 | 2 replies
Your link doesn't work, also you can try to see how yours stacks up on hot pads.

28 March 2020 | 16 replies
I will say, with smaller dogs, tenants will use the pee-pads, and I don't think I've ever seen a dog be 100%, and if they use pee-pads, I'd expect the whole house to be subject to dog pee, so just be weary of that with small dogs, and expect to replace carpet at move out.

17 October 2017 | 2 replies
Carpet and pad and drapes etc all has to go.

31 January 2018 | 6 replies
We also place bait stations in the cellar and around the property in the autumn and make traps (w/ instructions) available to tenants at the first sign of rodents.In our multi-unit buildings on the edge of more mouse populous neighbourhoods, we have a pest control service monitor and maintain a "trap line" in the properties.In all cases, a coordinated effort between landlord, tenant and {if present} pest control service, is essential to prevent a mouse or two from becoming a colony.

22 November 2014 | 26 replies
Keeps the mouse population down.

23 November 2014 | 2 replies
Bring up your picture in your linked-in profile.Step2. position 'pointer' over picture, right click on mouse, select 'save image as' from menu.Step 3.
9 September 2014 | 5 replies
If you have carpets they must come out, along with the pad.

2 July 2014 | 25 replies
And like someone else said above, it was probably livable with carpeting and pad which is forgiving to unlevel floors.

4 August 2015 | 20 replies
in my eyes...... unless it's diaper/toy/pad, the landlord is responsible. no matter what.