Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
temeculaguy
Participantsd-maybe no problem, [email protected]
Cash, DW has a point, Temecula schools are not the only good schools, Poway is actually on Par and slightly better. I don’t pay for gas to commute to S.D. so for me it makes sense but for downtown S.D. commuters, don’t come here. Most of those who do commute are those want to be able to afford the mom to be a “stay at home”, if that’s your motivation, Dr. Laura would be proud but I don’t need the competition for Real Estate. Everyone just stay away until I get mine, then you are more than welcome to migrate.
temeculaguy
Participantsd-maybe no problem, [email protected]
Cash, DW has a point, Temecula schools are not the only good schools, Poway is actually on Par and slightly better. I don’t pay for gas to commute to S.D. so for me it makes sense but for downtown S.D. commuters, don’t come here. Most of those who do commute are those want to be able to afford the mom to be a “stay at home”, if that’s your motivation, Dr. Laura would be proud but I don’t need the competition for Real Estate. Everyone just stay away until I get mine, then you are more than welcome to migrate.
temeculaguy
Participantsd-maybe no problem, [email protected]
Cash, DW has a point, Temecula schools are not the only good schools, Poway is actually on Par and slightly better. I don’t pay for gas to commute to S.D. so for me it makes sense but for downtown S.D. commuters, don’t come here. Most of those who do commute are those want to be able to afford the mom to be a “stay at home”, if that’s your motivation, Dr. Laura would be proud but I don’t need the competition for Real Estate. Everyone just stay away until I get mine, then you are more than welcome to migrate.
temeculaguy
Participantsd-maybe no problem, [email protected]
Cash, DW has a point, Temecula schools are not the only good schools, Poway is actually on Par and slightly better. I don’t pay for gas to commute to S.D. so for me it makes sense but for downtown S.D. commuters, don’t come here. Most of those who do commute are those want to be able to afford the mom to be a “stay at home”, if that’s your motivation, Dr. Laura would be proud but I don’t need the competition for Real Estate. Everyone just stay away until I get mine, then you are more than welcome to migrate.
temeculaguy
Participantdharma, the answer to the question is wait on both ideas. The North County has only just started it’s decline and Temecula still has some more falling to do (check foreclosure.com there are 10 NOD’s a day and probably only one sale per day). Wait till it hits bottom and then you will have your question answered, for 2008, rent, even if it means moving again. Why ride out the bad years, be a buyer in them. Moving isn’t going to kill you. Search older posts, look for those started by someone with the moniker 23109, you are the new version of him. He showed up after his landlord tried to sell him his rental, started a new thread every day, rationalized his decision to buy based on three weeks of research and questions and low and behold…he was back here just a few months ago trying to figure out a way to walk away from his house to buy a bigger one for less nearby.
Will some of Temecula’s demographics go down, lower prices and rentals don’t justify it alone. The buyers from 2003-2006 were demographically renters anyway, all you needed was a pulse to buy. At half the price, less people can buy now because they actually have to afford it, be able to prove it and have a down payment (this is why prices are declining, those people cannot buy any longer) if they rent the same house, did the neighborhood change? There are areas neigborhoods that attract different types of people and certain housing styles do the same. High square footage but low bedroom counts, gated areas, HOA areas are my personal favorites for defensive tactics, but you first need to decide what it is you are hoping to avoid, you could be someone that i don’t want to live near and vice versa.
One argument in your husband’s favor, if you think fleeing to shadowridge to find better demographics you haven’t sone your research. Check Sandag for crime and demographic stats, education websites for school scores, you will find that even in the nice part of Vista, the numbers are far below Temec. SEH is another story, it will be higher.
temeculaguy
Participantdharma, the answer to the question is wait on both ideas. The North County has only just started it’s decline and Temecula still has some more falling to do (check foreclosure.com there are 10 NOD’s a day and probably only one sale per day). Wait till it hits bottom and then you will have your question answered, for 2008, rent, even if it means moving again. Why ride out the bad years, be a buyer in them. Moving isn’t going to kill you. Search older posts, look for those started by someone with the moniker 23109, you are the new version of him. He showed up after his landlord tried to sell him his rental, started a new thread every day, rationalized his decision to buy based on three weeks of research and questions and low and behold…he was back here just a few months ago trying to figure out a way to walk away from his house to buy a bigger one for less nearby.
Will some of Temecula’s demographics go down, lower prices and rentals don’t justify it alone. The buyers from 2003-2006 were demographically renters anyway, all you needed was a pulse to buy. At half the price, less people can buy now because they actually have to afford it, be able to prove it and have a down payment (this is why prices are declining, those people cannot buy any longer) if they rent the same house, did the neighborhood change? There are areas neigborhoods that attract different types of people and certain housing styles do the same. High square footage but low bedroom counts, gated areas, HOA areas are my personal favorites for defensive tactics, but you first need to decide what it is you are hoping to avoid, you could be someone that i don’t want to live near and vice versa.
One argument in your husband’s favor, if you think fleeing to shadowridge to find better demographics you haven’t sone your research. Check Sandag for crime and demographic stats, education websites for school scores, you will find that even in the nice part of Vista, the numbers are far below Temec. SEH is another story, it will be higher.
temeculaguy
Participantdharma, the answer to the question is wait on both ideas. The North County has only just started it’s decline and Temecula still has some more falling to do (check foreclosure.com there are 10 NOD’s a day and probably only one sale per day). Wait till it hits bottom and then you will have your question answered, for 2008, rent, even if it means moving again. Why ride out the bad years, be a buyer in them. Moving isn’t going to kill you. Search older posts, look for those started by someone with the moniker 23109, you are the new version of him. He showed up after his landlord tried to sell him his rental, started a new thread every day, rationalized his decision to buy based on three weeks of research and questions and low and behold…he was back here just a few months ago trying to figure out a way to walk away from his house to buy a bigger one for less nearby.
Will some of Temecula’s demographics go down, lower prices and rentals don’t justify it alone. The buyers from 2003-2006 were demographically renters anyway, all you needed was a pulse to buy. At half the price, less people can buy now because they actually have to afford it, be able to prove it and have a down payment (this is why prices are declining, those people cannot buy any longer) if they rent the same house, did the neighborhood change? There are areas neigborhoods that attract different types of people and certain housing styles do the same. High square footage but low bedroom counts, gated areas, HOA areas are my personal favorites for defensive tactics, but you first need to decide what it is you are hoping to avoid, you could be someone that i don’t want to live near and vice versa.
One argument in your husband’s favor, if you think fleeing to shadowridge to find better demographics you haven’t sone your research. Check Sandag for crime and demographic stats, education websites for school scores, you will find that even in the nice part of Vista, the numbers are far below Temec. SEH is another story, it will be higher.
temeculaguy
Participantdharma, the answer to the question is wait on both ideas. The North County has only just started it’s decline and Temecula still has some more falling to do (check foreclosure.com there are 10 NOD’s a day and probably only one sale per day). Wait till it hits bottom and then you will have your question answered, for 2008, rent, even if it means moving again. Why ride out the bad years, be a buyer in them. Moving isn’t going to kill you. Search older posts, look for those started by someone with the moniker 23109, you are the new version of him. He showed up after his landlord tried to sell him his rental, started a new thread every day, rationalized his decision to buy based on three weeks of research and questions and low and behold…he was back here just a few months ago trying to figure out a way to walk away from his house to buy a bigger one for less nearby.
Will some of Temecula’s demographics go down, lower prices and rentals don’t justify it alone. The buyers from 2003-2006 were demographically renters anyway, all you needed was a pulse to buy. At half the price, less people can buy now because they actually have to afford it, be able to prove it and have a down payment (this is why prices are declining, those people cannot buy any longer) if they rent the same house, did the neighborhood change? There are areas neigborhoods that attract different types of people and certain housing styles do the same. High square footage but low bedroom counts, gated areas, HOA areas are my personal favorites for defensive tactics, but you first need to decide what it is you are hoping to avoid, you could be someone that i don’t want to live near and vice versa.
One argument in your husband’s favor, if you think fleeing to shadowridge to find better demographics you haven’t sone your research. Check Sandag for crime and demographic stats, education websites for school scores, you will find that even in the nice part of Vista, the numbers are far below Temec. SEH is another story, it will be higher.
temeculaguy
Participantdharma, the answer to the question is wait on both ideas. The North County has only just started it’s decline and Temecula still has some more falling to do (check foreclosure.com there are 10 NOD’s a day and probably only one sale per day). Wait till it hits bottom and then you will have your question answered, for 2008, rent, even if it means moving again. Why ride out the bad years, be a buyer in them. Moving isn’t going to kill you. Search older posts, look for those started by someone with the moniker 23109, you are the new version of him. He showed up after his landlord tried to sell him his rental, started a new thread every day, rationalized his decision to buy based on three weeks of research and questions and low and behold…he was back here just a few months ago trying to figure out a way to walk away from his house to buy a bigger one for less nearby.
Will some of Temecula’s demographics go down, lower prices and rentals don’t justify it alone. The buyers from 2003-2006 were demographically renters anyway, all you needed was a pulse to buy. At half the price, less people can buy now because they actually have to afford it, be able to prove it and have a down payment (this is why prices are declining, those people cannot buy any longer) if they rent the same house, did the neighborhood change? There are areas neigborhoods that attract different types of people and certain housing styles do the same. High square footage but low bedroom counts, gated areas, HOA areas are my personal favorites for defensive tactics, but you first need to decide what it is you are hoping to avoid, you could be someone that i don’t want to live near and vice versa.
One argument in your husband’s favor, if you think fleeing to shadowridge to find better demographics you haven’t sone your research. Check Sandag for crime and demographic stats, education websites for school scores, you will find that even in the nice part of Vista, the numbers are far below Temec. SEH is another story, it will be higher.
March 21, 2008 at 9:02 AM in reply to: HELP! Landlord asking if we want to buy our rental as “short sale” #174219temeculaguy
Participantdharma, you can run an online grantee search to see if she has beed given the nod or the not. You will need her first and last name, if a notice of default is listed you have at least 90 days, if the notice of trustee sale is there, better start looking at rentals this weekend.
http://www.enetwizard.com/shop/affiliates/11467_01/default.asp
just enter her name, last name first, no commas, this site only works for riverside county. You don’t need to buy the docs or subscribe to anything, just the knowledge of when and what was filed is enough to give you the info you need.
you can also go to foreclosure dot come and choose pre-foreclosures after searching by zip code, then organize the data by street name, if there has been a nod filed, your days are numbered between 90 and 120 of the nod.
I know Redhawk as well as anyone on the boards, let me know the tract name or Rancho and I can tell you what the best deals or sales have been but 499 is not a reasonable price for anything here, 399 isn’t either. Anything and everything can be had for under 400k with most avail for under 300 if you look hard enough. If she tried to negotiate a short sale the bank will slow down the foreclosure process but you don’t want to agree to allow showings without considerable rent reduction, like half off because it is a pain since shorts are usually priced very low and have many showings.
March 21, 2008 at 9:02 AM in reply to: HELP! Landlord asking if we want to buy our rental as “short sale” #174560temeculaguy
Participantdharma, you can run an online grantee search to see if she has beed given the nod or the not. You will need her first and last name, if a notice of default is listed you have at least 90 days, if the notice of trustee sale is there, better start looking at rentals this weekend.
http://www.enetwizard.com/shop/affiliates/11467_01/default.asp
just enter her name, last name first, no commas, this site only works for riverside county. You don’t need to buy the docs or subscribe to anything, just the knowledge of when and what was filed is enough to give you the info you need.
you can also go to foreclosure dot come and choose pre-foreclosures after searching by zip code, then organize the data by street name, if there has been a nod filed, your days are numbered between 90 and 120 of the nod.
I know Redhawk as well as anyone on the boards, let me know the tract name or Rancho and I can tell you what the best deals or sales have been but 499 is not a reasonable price for anything here, 399 isn’t either. Anything and everything can be had for under 400k with most avail for under 300 if you look hard enough. If she tried to negotiate a short sale the bank will slow down the foreclosure process but you don’t want to agree to allow showings without considerable rent reduction, like half off because it is a pain since shorts are usually priced very low and have many showings.
March 21, 2008 at 9:02 AM in reply to: HELP! Landlord asking if we want to buy our rental as “short sale” #174568temeculaguy
Participantdharma, you can run an online grantee search to see if she has beed given the nod or the not. You will need her first and last name, if a notice of default is listed you have at least 90 days, if the notice of trustee sale is there, better start looking at rentals this weekend.
http://www.enetwizard.com/shop/affiliates/11467_01/default.asp
just enter her name, last name first, no commas, this site only works for riverside county. You don’t need to buy the docs or subscribe to anything, just the knowledge of when and what was filed is enough to give you the info you need.
you can also go to foreclosure dot come and choose pre-foreclosures after searching by zip code, then organize the data by street name, if there has been a nod filed, your days are numbered between 90 and 120 of the nod.
I know Redhawk as well as anyone on the boards, let me know the tract name or Rancho and I can tell you what the best deals or sales have been but 499 is not a reasonable price for anything here, 399 isn’t either. Anything and everything can be had for under 400k with most avail for under 300 if you look hard enough. If she tried to negotiate a short sale the bank will slow down the foreclosure process but you don’t want to agree to allow showings without considerable rent reduction, like half off because it is a pain since shorts are usually priced very low and have many showings.
March 21, 2008 at 9:02 AM in reply to: HELP! Landlord asking if we want to buy our rental as “short sale” #174579temeculaguy
Participantdharma, you can run an online grantee search to see if she has beed given the nod or the not. You will need her first and last name, if a notice of default is listed you have at least 90 days, if the notice of trustee sale is there, better start looking at rentals this weekend.
http://www.enetwizard.com/shop/affiliates/11467_01/default.asp
just enter her name, last name first, no commas, this site only works for riverside county. You don’t need to buy the docs or subscribe to anything, just the knowledge of when and what was filed is enough to give you the info you need.
you can also go to foreclosure dot come and choose pre-foreclosures after searching by zip code, then organize the data by street name, if there has been a nod filed, your days are numbered between 90 and 120 of the nod.
I know Redhawk as well as anyone on the boards, let me know the tract name or Rancho and I can tell you what the best deals or sales have been but 499 is not a reasonable price for anything here, 399 isn’t either. Anything and everything can be had for under 400k with most avail for under 300 if you look hard enough. If she tried to negotiate a short sale the bank will slow down the foreclosure process but you don’t want to agree to allow showings without considerable rent reduction, like half off because it is a pain since shorts are usually priced very low and have many showings.
March 21, 2008 at 9:02 AM in reply to: HELP! Landlord asking if we want to buy our rental as “short sale” #174665temeculaguy
Participantdharma, you can run an online grantee search to see if she has beed given the nod or the not. You will need her first and last name, if a notice of default is listed you have at least 90 days, if the notice of trustee sale is there, better start looking at rentals this weekend.
http://www.enetwizard.com/shop/affiliates/11467_01/default.asp
just enter her name, last name first, no commas, this site only works for riverside county. You don’t need to buy the docs or subscribe to anything, just the knowledge of when and what was filed is enough to give you the info you need.
you can also go to foreclosure dot come and choose pre-foreclosures after searching by zip code, then organize the data by street name, if there has been a nod filed, your days are numbered between 90 and 120 of the nod.
I know Redhawk as well as anyone on the boards, let me know the tract name or Rancho and I can tell you what the best deals or sales have been but 499 is not a reasonable price for anything here, 399 isn’t either. Anything and everything can be had for under 400k with most avail for under 300 if you look hard enough. If she tried to negotiate a short sale the bank will slow down the foreclosure process but you don’t want to agree to allow showings without considerable rent reduction, like half off because it is a pain since shorts are usually priced very low and have many showings.
-
AuthorPosts
