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(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=socrattt]Article 7.1.9 of the Piggy Almanac states:
A poster may not revive his/her own post without a group vote. This is in strict violation of Pigg rules.
On a serious note, we’re screwed :).[/quote]
If your record is as good as Bubblesitter’s I think you can resurrect all the posts you want.
(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=jstoesz]Damn you all! LOOK elsewhere! Carmel valley really is sweet. Look at the schools and the manicured lawns. Pt. Loma only has strip clubs and bums to offer, not to mention Rosecrans GRIDLOCK!
It is a horrific place, especially the wooded area. All that exists in the wooded area is termites. Termites upon termites. That and ugly trees that infiltrate your sewer lines. Its called the wooded area, who wants trees anyways. It is SD after all, trees just kill the view and termites love them.[/quote]
Instant Classic.
Also, don’t forget all those crazy college kids hangin’ around that PLNU campus, all their partying, carrying on and what-not. Then there’s the military with all their dangerous death ray research going on. Oh yeah, then there’s those darn leaking oil tanks, and all that pollution from boaters emptying their sewage in the bay. And then theire’s airplane noise. Traffic backed up getting into Point Loma Seafoods. I guess the list of negatives never ends …
(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=jstoesz]Damn you all! LOOK elsewhere! Carmel valley really is sweet. Look at the schools and the manicured lawns. Pt. Loma only has strip clubs and bums to offer, not to mention Rosecrans GRIDLOCK!
It is a horrific place, especially the wooded area. All that exists in the wooded area is termites. Termites upon termites. That and ugly trees that infiltrate your sewer lines. Its called the wooded area, who wants trees anyways. It is SD after all, trees just kill the view and termites love them.[/quote]
Instant Classic.
Also, don’t forget all those crazy college kids hangin’ around that PLNU campus, all their partying, carrying on and what-not. Then there’s the military with all their dangerous death ray research going on. Oh yeah, then there’s those darn leaking oil tanks, and all that pollution from boaters emptying their sewage in the bay. And then theire’s airplane noise. Traffic backed up getting into Point Loma Seafoods. I guess the list of negatives never ends …
(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=jstoesz]Damn you all! LOOK elsewhere! Carmel valley really is sweet. Look at the schools and the manicured lawns. Pt. Loma only has strip clubs and bums to offer, not to mention Rosecrans GRIDLOCK!
It is a horrific place, especially the wooded area. All that exists in the wooded area is termites. Termites upon termites. That and ugly trees that infiltrate your sewer lines. Its called the wooded area, who wants trees anyways. It is SD after all, trees just kill the view and termites love them.[/quote]
Instant Classic.
Also, don’t forget all those crazy college kids hangin’ around that PLNU campus, all their partying, carrying on and what-not. Then there’s the military with all their dangerous death ray research going on. Oh yeah, then there’s those darn leaking oil tanks, and all that pollution from boaters emptying their sewage in the bay. And then theire’s airplane noise. Traffic backed up getting into Point Loma Seafoods. I guess the list of negatives never ends …
(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=jstoesz]Damn you all! LOOK elsewhere! Carmel valley really is sweet. Look at the schools and the manicured lawns. Pt. Loma only has strip clubs and bums to offer, not to mention Rosecrans GRIDLOCK!
It is a horrific place, especially the wooded area. All that exists in the wooded area is termites. Termites upon termites. That and ugly trees that infiltrate your sewer lines. Its called the wooded area, who wants trees anyways. It is SD after all, trees just kill the view and termites love them.[/quote]
Instant Classic.
Also, don’t forget all those crazy college kids hangin’ around that PLNU campus, all their partying, carrying on and what-not. Then there’s the military with all their dangerous death ray research going on. Oh yeah, then there’s those darn leaking oil tanks, and all that pollution from boaters emptying their sewage in the bay. And then theire’s airplane noise. Traffic backed up getting into Point Loma Seafoods. I guess the list of negatives never ends …
(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=jstoesz]Damn you all! LOOK elsewhere! Carmel valley really is sweet. Look at the schools and the manicured lawns. Pt. Loma only has strip clubs and bums to offer, not to mention Rosecrans GRIDLOCK!
It is a horrific place, especially the wooded area. All that exists in the wooded area is termites. Termites upon termites. That and ugly trees that infiltrate your sewer lines. Its called the wooded area, who wants trees anyways. It is SD after all, trees just kill the view and termites love them.[/quote]
Instant Classic.
Also, don’t forget all those crazy college kids hangin’ around that PLNU campus, all their partying, carrying on and what-not. Then there’s the military with all their dangerous death ray research going on. Oh yeah, then there’s those darn leaking oil tanks, and all that pollution from boaters emptying their sewage in the bay. And then theire’s airplane noise. Traffic backed up getting into Point Loma Seafoods. I guess the list of negatives never ends …
(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=briansd1][quote=jstoesz]
Lets hope there is more of this good news on the horizon. Everyone, ignore Pt. Loma. Carmel valley Rocks, look there please![/quote]
I’m with you jstoesz, everyone please buy in Carmel Valley.
I wouldn’t mind a fixer in Point Loma, at the right price, of course. ;)[/quote]
Me too. I still regret the 280K fixer in the wooded area I passed on in 1996. It was priced at more than 7x the median household income of 34k back then, so it didn’t make sense for us to to buy it until it dropped to about 4x median income (about 140k).
(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=briansd1][quote=jstoesz]
Lets hope there is more of this good news on the horizon. Everyone, ignore Pt. Loma. Carmel valley Rocks, look there please![/quote]
I’m with you jstoesz, everyone please buy in Carmel Valley.
I wouldn’t mind a fixer in Point Loma, at the right price, of course. ;)[/quote]
Me too. I still regret the 280K fixer in the wooded area I passed on in 1996. It was priced at more than 7x the median household income of 34k back then, so it didn’t make sense for us to to buy it until it dropped to about 4x median income (about 140k).
(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=briansd1][quote=jstoesz]
Lets hope there is more of this good news on the horizon. Everyone, ignore Pt. Loma. Carmel valley Rocks, look there please![/quote]
I’m with you jstoesz, everyone please buy in Carmel Valley.
I wouldn’t mind a fixer in Point Loma, at the right price, of course. ;)[/quote]
Me too. I still regret the 280K fixer in the wooded area I passed on in 1996. It was priced at more than 7x the median household income of 34k back then, so it didn’t make sense for us to to buy it until it dropped to about 4x median income (about 140k).
(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=briansd1][quote=jstoesz]
Lets hope there is more of this good news on the horizon. Everyone, ignore Pt. Loma. Carmel valley Rocks, look there please![/quote]
I’m with you jstoesz, everyone please buy in Carmel Valley.
I wouldn’t mind a fixer in Point Loma, at the right price, of course. ;)[/quote]
Me too. I still regret the 280K fixer in the wooded area I passed on in 1996. It was priced at more than 7x the median household income of 34k back then, so it didn’t make sense for us to to buy it until it dropped to about 4x median income (about 140k).
(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=briansd1][quote=jstoesz]
Lets hope there is more of this good news on the horizon. Everyone, ignore Pt. Loma. Carmel valley Rocks, look there please![/quote]
I’m with you jstoesz, everyone please buy in Carmel Valley.
I wouldn’t mind a fixer in Point Loma, at the right price, of course. ;)[/quote]
Me too. I still regret the 280K fixer in the wooded area I passed on in 1996. It was priced at more than 7x the median household income of 34k back then, so it didn’t make sense for us to to buy it until it dropped to about 4x median income (about 140k).
(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=Huckleberry]I stand by my original post…
The consumer is de-leveraging and paying down debt, not taking on risky high priced debt, such as depreciating assets (houses).
The housing market is dependent on demand. Higher mortgage rates remove potential buyers (demand).
Diminishing demand means no pricing power = lower prices (basic economics).[/quote]
If those higher interest rates are accompanied by a recovering economy (including jobs) then there may be no net reduction in the number of buyer(demand). If the recovery stalls or reverses, rates are likely to dip again.
(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=Huckleberry]I stand by my original post…
The consumer is de-leveraging and paying down debt, not taking on risky high priced debt, such as depreciating assets (houses).
The housing market is dependent on demand. Higher mortgage rates remove potential buyers (demand).
Diminishing demand means no pricing power = lower prices (basic economics).[/quote]
If those higher interest rates are accompanied by a recovering economy (including jobs) then there may be no net reduction in the number of buyer(demand). If the recovery stalls or reverses, rates are likely to dip again.
(former)FormerSanDiegan
Participant[quote=Huckleberry]I stand by my original post…
The consumer is de-leveraging and paying down debt, not taking on risky high priced debt, such as depreciating assets (houses).
The housing market is dependent on demand. Higher mortgage rates remove potential buyers (demand).
Diminishing demand means no pricing power = lower prices (basic economics).[/quote]
If those higher interest rates are accompanied by a recovering economy (including jobs) then there may be no net reduction in the number of buyer(demand). If the recovery stalls or reverses, rates are likely to dip again.
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