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Ren
ParticipantGot it just a few days ago (or what was left of it, anyway). We filed at the beginning of April.
Ren
ParticipantGot it just a few days ago (or what was left of it, anyway). We filed at the beginning of April.
Ren
ParticipantGot it just a few days ago (or what was left of it, anyway). We filed at the beginning of April.
Ren
ParticipantGot it just a few days ago (or what was left of it, anyway). We filed at the beginning of April.
Ren
ParticipantI’ve been a Temecula resident for 5 months now, currently working a contract job in Carlsbad near the airport. The commute isn’t as bad as I thought it would be, 50 minutes in the morning and 45-55 at night. That’s almost comparable to my San Marcos->RB commute just before the 15 improvements, but a good fraction of that was a parking lot in the morning, and I’m rarely in stop and go traffic now, which makes it much more livable. The drive isn’t bad, but the extra time away from family is.
There are a lot of redneck-types up here, I knew that going in, but my God, I’ve never seen so many lifted trucks in my life, most with a big white logo sticker on the back window to state “I identify with this brand.”
One thing I have noticed is that in general, people here are FAR nicer and more sociable than any I encountered in my previous cities of work/residence, which includes Escondido, San Marcos, RB, Carlsbad, Del Mar, and Carmel Mountain. If I was to keep a tally, the number of TV total strangers that smile and say hi would outnumber those in SD by 10 to 1, easily. In all my moves (maybe 12) I’ve never had a neighbor come over and introduce themselves, until I moved here.
So far, I’m glad I made the choice.
Ren
ParticipantI’ve been a Temecula resident for 5 months now, currently working a contract job in Carlsbad near the airport. The commute isn’t as bad as I thought it would be, 50 minutes in the morning and 45-55 at night. That’s almost comparable to my San Marcos->RB commute just before the 15 improvements, but a good fraction of that was a parking lot in the morning, and I’m rarely in stop and go traffic now, which makes it much more livable. The drive isn’t bad, but the extra time away from family is.
There are a lot of redneck-types up here, I knew that going in, but my God, I’ve never seen so many lifted trucks in my life, most with a big white logo sticker on the back window to state “I identify with this brand.”
One thing I have noticed is that in general, people here are FAR nicer and more sociable than any I encountered in my previous cities of work/residence, which includes Escondido, San Marcos, RB, Carlsbad, Del Mar, and Carmel Mountain. If I was to keep a tally, the number of TV total strangers that smile and say hi would outnumber those in SD by 10 to 1, easily. In all my moves (maybe 12) I’ve never had a neighbor come over and introduce themselves, until I moved here.
So far, I’m glad I made the choice.
Ren
ParticipantI’ve been a Temecula resident for 5 months now, currently working a contract job in Carlsbad near the airport. The commute isn’t as bad as I thought it would be, 50 minutes in the morning and 45-55 at night. That’s almost comparable to my San Marcos->RB commute just before the 15 improvements, but a good fraction of that was a parking lot in the morning, and I’m rarely in stop and go traffic now, which makes it much more livable. The drive isn’t bad, but the extra time away from family is.
There are a lot of redneck-types up here, I knew that going in, but my God, I’ve never seen so many lifted trucks in my life, most with a big white logo sticker on the back window to state “I identify with this brand.”
One thing I have noticed is that in general, people here are FAR nicer and more sociable than any I encountered in my previous cities of work/residence, which includes Escondido, San Marcos, RB, Carlsbad, Del Mar, and Carmel Mountain. If I was to keep a tally, the number of TV total strangers that smile and say hi would outnumber those in SD by 10 to 1, easily. In all my moves (maybe 12) I’ve never had a neighbor come over and introduce themselves, until I moved here.
So far, I’m glad I made the choice.
Ren
ParticipantI’ve been a Temecula resident for 5 months now, currently working a contract job in Carlsbad near the airport. The commute isn’t as bad as I thought it would be, 50 minutes in the morning and 45-55 at night. That’s almost comparable to my San Marcos->RB commute just before the 15 improvements, but a good fraction of that was a parking lot in the morning, and I’m rarely in stop and go traffic now, which makes it much more livable. The drive isn’t bad, but the extra time away from family is.
There are a lot of redneck-types up here, I knew that going in, but my God, I’ve never seen so many lifted trucks in my life, most with a big white logo sticker on the back window to state “I identify with this brand.”
One thing I have noticed is that in general, people here are FAR nicer and more sociable than any I encountered in my previous cities of work/residence, which includes Escondido, San Marcos, RB, Carlsbad, Del Mar, and Carmel Mountain. If I was to keep a tally, the number of TV total strangers that smile and say hi would outnumber those in SD by 10 to 1, easily. In all my moves (maybe 12) I’ve never had a neighbor come over and introduce themselves, until I moved here.
So far, I’m glad I made the choice.
Ren
ParticipantI’ve been a Temecula resident for 5 months now, currently working a contract job in Carlsbad near the airport. The commute isn’t as bad as I thought it would be, 50 minutes in the morning and 45-55 at night. That’s almost comparable to my San Marcos->RB commute just before the 15 improvements, but a good fraction of that was a parking lot in the morning, and I’m rarely in stop and go traffic now, which makes it much more livable. The drive isn’t bad, but the extra time away from family is.
There are a lot of redneck-types up here, I knew that going in, but my God, I’ve never seen so many lifted trucks in my life, most with a big white logo sticker on the back window to state “I identify with this brand.”
One thing I have noticed is that in general, people here are FAR nicer and more sociable than any I encountered in my previous cities of work/residence, which includes Escondido, San Marcos, RB, Carlsbad, Del Mar, and Carmel Mountain. If I was to keep a tally, the number of TV total strangers that smile and say hi would outnumber those in SD by 10 to 1, easily. In all my moves (maybe 12) I’ve never had a neighbor come over and introduce themselves, until I moved here.
So far, I’m glad I made the choice.
Ren
ParticipantThe letter of California law is 3 years mandatory disclosure of a death as SDR said. If it happened prior to 3 years ago, the seller doesn’t have to volunteer the information, but they still have to disclose if asked. (I KNEW I took those RE classes for a reason!)
Some states, Hawaii is one that I know of, require the seller to disclose hauntings. As much as skeptics like to pretend they don’t happen, they do (whether the cause is a ghost or something more down-to-earth), and if it was disclosed, I’m guessing it would affect the price.
The house we bought in Temecula had a suicide on the premises 6 months prior. She died at the hospital. The house was perfect, so for us, the location, etc. far outweighed the morbid history. No evidence whatsoever that she stuck around, but that didn’t stop us from feeling a teeny bit spooked for the first few weeks. For the most part we don’t think about it anymore.
Ren
ParticipantThe letter of California law is 3 years mandatory disclosure of a death as SDR said. If it happened prior to 3 years ago, the seller doesn’t have to volunteer the information, but they still have to disclose if asked. (I KNEW I took those RE classes for a reason!)
Some states, Hawaii is one that I know of, require the seller to disclose hauntings. As much as skeptics like to pretend they don’t happen, they do (whether the cause is a ghost or something more down-to-earth), and if it was disclosed, I’m guessing it would affect the price.
The house we bought in Temecula had a suicide on the premises 6 months prior. She died at the hospital. The house was perfect, so for us, the location, etc. far outweighed the morbid history. No evidence whatsoever that she stuck around, but that didn’t stop us from feeling a teeny bit spooked for the first few weeks. For the most part we don’t think about it anymore.
Ren
ParticipantThe letter of California law is 3 years mandatory disclosure of a death as SDR said. If it happened prior to 3 years ago, the seller doesn’t have to volunteer the information, but they still have to disclose if asked. (I KNEW I took those RE classes for a reason!)
Some states, Hawaii is one that I know of, require the seller to disclose hauntings. As much as skeptics like to pretend they don’t happen, they do (whether the cause is a ghost or something more down-to-earth), and if it was disclosed, I’m guessing it would affect the price.
The house we bought in Temecula had a suicide on the premises 6 months prior. She died at the hospital. The house was perfect, so for us, the location, etc. far outweighed the morbid history. No evidence whatsoever that she stuck around, but that didn’t stop us from feeling a teeny bit spooked for the first few weeks. For the most part we don’t think about it anymore.
Ren
ParticipantThe letter of California law is 3 years mandatory disclosure of a death as SDR said. If it happened prior to 3 years ago, the seller doesn’t have to volunteer the information, but they still have to disclose if asked. (I KNEW I took those RE classes for a reason!)
Some states, Hawaii is one that I know of, require the seller to disclose hauntings. As much as skeptics like to pretend they don’t happen, they do (whether the cause is a ghost or something more down-to-earth), and if it was disclosed, I’m guessing it would affect the price.
The house we bought in Temecula had a suicide on the premises 6 months prior. She died at the hospital. The house was perfect, so for us, the location, etc. far outweighed the morbid history. No evidence whatsoever that she stuck around, but that didn’t stop us from feeling a teeny bit spooked for the first few weeks. For the most part we don’t think about it anymore.
Ren
ParticipantThe letter of California law is 3 years mandatory disclosure of a death as SDR said. If it happened prior to 3 years ago, the seller doesn’t have to volunteer the information, but they still have to disclose if asked. (I KNEW I took those RE classes for a reason!)
Some states, Hawaii is one that I know of, require the seller to disclose hauntings. As much as skeptics like to pretend they don’t happen, they do (whether the cause is a ghost or something more down-to-earth), and if it was disclosed, I’m guessing it would affect the price.
The house we bought in Temecula had a suicide on the premises 6 months prior. She died at the hospital. The house was perfect, so for us, the location, etc. far outweighed the morbid history. No evidence whatsoever that she stuck around, but that didn’t stop us from feeling a teeny bit spooked for the first few weeks. For the most part we don’t think about it anymore.
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