Forum Replies Created
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February 15, 2011 at 10:28 AM in reply to: OT – Beach Culture. Florida, Texas, Hawaii, California? Which is best? #666627February 15, 2011 at 10:28 AM in reply to: OT – Beach Culture. Florida, Texas, Hawaii, California? Which is best? #667231
sdduuuude
ParticipantThere’s a beach in Texas ?
February 15, 2011 at 10:28 AM in reply to: OT – Beach Culture. Florida, Texas, Hawaii, California? Which is best? #667369sdduuuude
ParticipantThere’s a beach in Texas ?
February 15, 2011 at 10:28 AM in reply to: OT – Beach Culture. Florida, Texas, Hawaii, California? Which is best? #667710sdduuuude
ParticipantThere’s a beach in Texas ?
sdduuuude
ParticipantInteresting view. I’m wondering if “household income” has gone up due to more houses having two income earners.
I consider “free time” to be a major factor in determining quality of life. Has the amount of free time reduced to gain this extra income ? If so, we may not be in such good shape.
Also, it might be interesting to look at average mortgage costs of current owners rather than housing prices available to new buyers.
sdduuuude
ParticipantInteresting view. I’m wondering if “household income” has gone up due to more houses having two income earners.
I consider “free time” to be a major factor in determining quality of life. Has the amount of free time reduced to gain this extra income ? If so, we may not be in such good shape.
Also, it might be interesting to look at average mortgage costs of current owners rather than housing prices available to new buyers.
sdduuuude
ParticipantInteresting view. I’m wondering if “household income” has gone up due to more houses having two income earners.
I consider “free time” to be a major factor in determining quality of life. Has the amount of free time reduced to gain this extra income ? If so, we may not be in such good shape.
Also, it might be interesting to look at average mortgage costs of current owners rather than housing prices available to new buyers.
sdduuuude
ParticipantInteresting view. I’m wondering if “household income” has gone up due to more houses having two income earners.
I consider “free time” to be a major factor in determining quality of life. Has the amount of free time reduced to gain this extra income ? If so, we may not be in such good shape.
Also, it might be interesting to look at average mortgage costs of current owners rather than housing prices available to new buyers.
sdduuuude
ParticipantInteresting view. I’m wondering if “household income” has gone up due to more houses having two income earners.
I consider “free time” to be a major factor in determining quality of life. Has the amount of free time reduced to gain this extra income ? If so, we may not be in such good shape.
Also, it might be interesting to look at average mortgage costs of current owners rather than housing prices available to new buyers.
sdduuuude
ParticipantWe have had 2 mouse issues in the last few years. I found the most effective way was to plant little pieces of dog food for a few days to see where they liked to go. Then, I would bait the traps w/ dog food in the popular spots. After a couple kills, I replace the dog food without traps. When the food stops disappearing, it means no more mice. I have used the kind that SNAP and the kind that clamp. Both seem to work.
sdduuuude
ParticipantWe have had 2 mouse issues in the last few years. I found the most effective way was to plant little pieces of dog food for a few days to see where they liked to go. Then, I would bait the traps w/ dog food in the popular spots. After a couple kills, I replace the dog food without traps. When the food stops disappearing, it means no more mice. I have used the kind that SNAP and the kind that clamp. Both seem to work.
sdduuuude
ParticipantWe have had 2 mouse issues in the last few years. I found the most effective way was to plant little pieces of dog food for a few days to see where they liked to go. Then, I would bait the traps w/ dog food in the popular spots. After a couple kills, I replace the dog food without traps. When the food stops disappearing, it means no more mice. I have used the kind that SNAP and the kind that clamp. Both seem to work.
sdduuuude
ParticipantWe have had 2 mouse issues in the last few years. I found the most effective way was to plant little pieces of dog food for a few days to see where they liked to go. Then, I would bait the traps w/ dog food in the popular spots. After a couple kills, I replace the dog food without traps. When the food stops disappearing, it means no more mice. I have used the kind that SNAP and the kind that clamp. Both seem to work.
sdduuuude
ParticipantWe have had 2 mouse issues in the last few years. I found the most effective way was to plant little pieces of dog food for a few days to see where they liked to go. Then, I would bait the traps w/ dog food in the popular spots. After a couple kills, I replace the dog food without traps. When the food stops disappearing, it means no more mice. I have used the kind that SNAP and the kind that clamp. Both seem to work.
January 26, 2011 at 1:56 PM in reply to: Yes! It’s happening, or people are finally starting to acknowledge it, the double dip #659018sdduuuude
Participant[quote=CA renter]Though it’s counter-intuitive, I think we’ll see housing weaken as the rest of the economy improves. The housing market is being propped up **because the economy is weak.** Once the economy strengthens, it will become more and more difficult to justify spending so much money on artificially propping up the housing market (including the govt-backed mortgage market).
Cheap houses and plentiful jobs…now THAT would make for a healthy economy! ;)[/quote]
I like this theory, I think. I’m going to use it as if it were my own idea from now on 🙂
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