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January 3, 2011 at 9:39 AM in reply to: This news is good for those who haven’t bought, yet. #647464January 3, 2011 at 9:39 AM in reply to: This news is good for those who haven’t bought, yet. #648049
SD Realtor
Participantsdr nailed it. You can never get the feel for anything online. This requires more legwork but not from your realtor, from you guys. Before we went to rent in Scripps we hung out at Jerabak and Cypress as well. We pretty much did the things he said but that was all for just renting and not even buying! We did the same for UC because my brother lives there and he really likes it. We found that to many of the neighbors had kids in high school rather then our kids age. Overall the neighborhood was a bit aged compared to what we wanted. Great location though. In the end a commute does not bother either of us compared to living where we think it is best. Now to bad we can’t find the home we really want to buy. I am okay there but my wife wants a more rural setting like some places out in Poway. Again, okay by me, longer commute but we can eventually get a bigger lot which is what we want for the kids and we can have alot of animals and stuff. Our needs and requirements are way different from the norm. Yours, from what I gather do not seem to be. Just use your instincts and trust your judgement and do the legwork. Your earlier post about knowing that a particular home is it, when you walk in, rings very true. If the neighborhood matches, then bingo you are done.
Don’t rush and don’t get to frustrated.
January 3, 2011 at 9:39 AM in reply to: This news is good for those who haven’t bought, yet. #648186SD Realtor
Participantsdr nailed it. You can never get the feel for anything online. This requires more legwork but not from your realtor, from you guys. Before we went to rent in Scripps we hung out at Jerabak and Cypress as well. We pretty much did the things he said but that was all for just renting and not even buying! We did the same for UC because my brother lives there and he really likes it. We found that to many of the neighbors had kids in high school rather then our kids age. Overall the neighborhood was a bit aged compared to what we wanted. Great location though. In the end a commute does not bother either of us compared to living where we think it is best. Now to bad we can’t find the home we really want to buy. I am okay there but my wife wants a more rural setting like some places out in Poway. Again, okay by me, longer commute but we can eventually get a bigger lot which is what we want for the kids and we can have alot of animals and stuff. Our needs and requirements are way different from the norm. Yours, from what I gather do not seem to be. Just use your instincts and trust your judgement and do the legwork. Your earlier post about knowing that a particular home is it, when you walk in, rings very true. If the neighborhood matches, then bingo you are done.
Don’t rush and don’t get to frustrated.
January 3, 2011 at 9:39 AM in reply to: This news is good for those who haven’t bought, yet. #648510SD Realtor
Participantsdr nailed it. You can never get the feel for anything online. This requires more legwork but not from your realtor, from you guys. Before we went to rent in Scripps we hung out at Jerabak and Cypress as well. We pretty much did the things he said but that was all for just renting and not even buying! We did the same for UC because my brother lives there and he really likes it. We found that to many of the neighbors had kids in high school rather then our kids age. Overall the neighborhood was a bit aged compared to what we wanted. Great location though. In the end a commute does not bother either of us compared to living where we think it is best. Now to bad we can’t find the home we really want to buy. I am okay there but my wife wants a more rural setting like some places out in Poway. Again, okay by me, longer commute but we can eventually get a bigger lot which is what we want for the kids and we can have alot of animals and stuff. Our needs and requirements are way different from the norm. Yours, from what I gather do not seem to be. Just use your instincts and trust your judgement and do the legwork. Your earlier post about knowing that a particular home is it, when you walk in, rings very true. If the neighborhood matches, then bingo you are done.
Don’t rush and don’t get to frustrated.
January 3, 2011 at 6:54 AM in reply to: This news is good for those who haven’t bought, yet. #647327SD Realtor
ParticipantI have had clients in San Carlos before. The neighborhoods vary over there CAR. I am not saying they are bad neighborhoods at all. However they did not have the same feel as mine in Scripps. Our cul de sac had friendly neighbors, bbqs, there would be alot going on at either park near my home. There was alot of community feel to it. I didn’t get that in San Carlos. Some other clients of mine bought a place in 92128 and when we drove to it to see it on a Monday in May at about 5:30 pm there were so many kids it was ridiculous. My clients were sold on the home before we walked in to see it. On the flip side when we lived off of Calle Cristobal in a cul de sac, it was not like that at all. The neighbors were nice enough but there was not as much…. neighborliness… We would walk the kids, (they were in strollers then) to the park at the end of calle cristobal and they would play there but again, it was not even close to the same as what goes on at cypress canyon or jerabak. It is just different. I don’t even really care about API scores because learning and teaching are all based on how you as parents work with your children. Looking at this thread you see people pushing neighborhoods and homes on Scarlett when in reality all they are doing is looking at API scores and home prices.
In the end that is not really the way the best way to evaluate your purchase.
January 3, 2011 at 6:54 AM in reply to: This news is good for those who haven’t bought, yet. #647399SD Realtor
ParticipantI have had clients in San Carlos before. The neighborhoods vary over there CAR. I am not saying they are bad neighborhoods at all. However they did not have the same feel as mine in Scripps. Our cul de sac had friendly neighbors, bbqs, there would be alot going on at either park near my home. There was alot of community feel to it. I didn’t get that in San Carlos. Some other clients of mine bought a place in 92128 and when we drove to it to see it on a Monday in May at about 5:30 pm there were so many kids it was ridiculous. My clients were sold on the home before we walked in to see it. On the flip side when we lived off of Calle Cristobal in a cul de sac, it was not like that at all. The neighbors were nice enough but there was not as much…. neighborliness… We would walk the kids, (they were in strollers then) to the park at the end of calle cristobal and they would play there but again, it was not even close to the same as what goes on at cypress canyon or jerabak. It is just different. I don’t even really care about API scores because learning and teaching are all based on how you as parents work with your children. Looking at this thread you see people pushing neighborhoods and homes on Scarlett when in reality all they are doing is looking at API scores and home prices.
In the end that is not really the way the best way to evaluate your purchase.
January 3, 2011 at 6:54 AM in reply to: This news is good for those who haven’t bought, yet. #647984SD Realtor
ParticipantI have had clients in San Carlos before. The neighborhoods vary over there CAR. I am not saying they are bad neighborhoods at all. However they did not have the same feel as mine in Scripps. Our cul de sac had friendly neighbors, bbqs, there would be alot going on at either park near my home. There was alot of community feel to it. I didn’t get that in San Carlos. Some other clients of mine bought a place in 92128 and when we drove to it to see it on a Monday in May at about 5:30 pm there were so many kids it was ridiculous. My clients were sold on the home before we walked in to see it. On the flip side when we lived off of Calle Cristobal in a cul de sac, it was not like that at all. The neighbors were nice enough but there was not as much…. neighborliness… We would walk the kids, (they were in strollers then) to the park at the end of calle cristobal and they would play there but again, it was not even close to the same as what goes on at cypress canyon or jerabak. It is just different. I don’t even really care about API scores because learning and teaching are all based on how you as parents work with your children. Looking at this thread you see people pushing neighborhoods and homes on Scarlett when in reality all they are doing is looking at API scores and home prices.
In the end that is not really the way the best way to evaluate your purchase.
January 3, 2011 at 6:54 AM in reply to: This news is good for those who haven’t bought, yet. #648121SD Realtor
ParticipantI have had clients in San Carlos before. The neighborhoods vary over there CAR. I am not saying they are bad neighborhoods at all. However they did not have the same feel as mine in Scripps. Our cul de sac had friendly neighbors, bbqs, there would be alot going on at either park near my home. There was alot of community feel to it. I didn’t get that in San Carlos. Some other clients of mine bought a place in 92128 and when we drove to it to see it on a Monday in May at about 5:30 pm there were so many kids it was ridiculous. My clients were sold on the home before we walked in to see it. On the flip side when we lived off of Calle Cristobal in a cul de sac, it was not like that at all. The neighbors were nice enough but there was not as much…. neighborliness… We would walk the kids, (they were in strollers then) to the park at the end of calle cristobal and they would play there but again, it was not even close to the same as what goes on at cypress canyon or jerabak. It is just different. I don’t even really care about API scores because learning and teaching are all based on how you as parents work with your children. Looking at this thread you see people pushing neighborhoods and homes on Scarlett when in reality all they are doing is looking at API scores and home prices.
In the end that is not really the way the best way to evaluate your purchase.
January 3, 2011 at 6:54 AM in reply to: This news is good for those who haven’t bought, yet. #648445SD Realtor
ParticipantI have had clients in San Carlos before. The neighborhoods vary over there CAR. I am not saying they are bad neighborhoods at all. However they did not have the same feel as mine in Scripps. Our cul de sac had friendly neighbors, bbqs, there would be alot going on at either park near my home. There was alot of community feel to it. I didn’t get that in San Carlos. Some other clients of mine bought a place in 92128 and when we drove to it to see it on a Monday in May at about 5:30 pm there were so many kids it was ridiculous. My clients were sold on the home before we walked in to see it. On the flip side when we lived off of Calle Cristobal in a cul de sac, it was not like that at all. The neighbors were nice enough but there was not as much…. neighborliness… We would walk the kids, (they were in strollers then) to the park at the end of calle cristobal and they would play there but again, it was not even close to the same as what goes on at cypress canyon or jerabak. It is just different. I don’t even really care about API scores because learning and teaching are all based on how you as parents work with your children. Looking at this thread you see people pushing neighborhoods and homes on Scarlett when in reality all they are doing is looking at API scores and home prices.
In the end that is not really the way the best way to evaluate your purchase.
SD Realtor
Participantsorry forgot you were out of cali… not sure what the corp costs are in florida.
SD Realtor
Participantsorry forgot you were out of cali… not sure what the corp costs are in florida.
SD Realtor
Participantsorry forgot you were out of cali… not sure what the corp costs are in florida.
SD Realtor
Participantsorry forgot you were out of cali… not sure what the corp costs are in florida.
SD Realtor
Participantsorry forgot you were out of cali… not sure what the corp costs are in florida.
SD Realtor
ParticipantI am NOT an accountant.
The safest bet would be to create two entities, one for the tech biz and one for the baseball biz. If you wanna go cheapo make them propreitorships or if you wanna go more expensive then make them s-corps. Not really any need for corps here unless you feel liability protection is needed. If you are gonna have kids in the cage then you may want to consider the liability ramifications. I am the first one to hate when people call for liability protection for every damn thing but your accountant would most likely bring that up as well. The s-corp costs 800 smackers a year.
Also I had considered the home office expense as well because I do ALOT of work from home and my wife and I have 2 corps and one propreitorship. However we did not do it because we didn’t want to raise any red flags with the man. We already are pretty liberal with our business expense writeoffs and are content to take advantage of them without piling on the old home office as well.
If you are gonna undertake the tech instruction definitely open a business for that. You can expense alot of stuff. Again I am not an acct and you should talk to one.
Home batting cage is awesome. I cannot even begin to imagine how cool that would be. I have a 4 and 5 year old and am prepping them for that as well but it appears they like hockey more then baseball at this point.
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