Forum Replies Created
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zzz
ParticipantHas anyone watched Food Inc? Worthwhile to watch as are some of the books written by Michael Pollan. The movie argues that fast food IS cheaper to eat than if you were to buy healthy food and cook it yourself. This family could feed a family of 4 or 5 on a fast food dollar menu for say $7 a meal.
The correlation between poverty and obesity is high. I do believe it is very challenging for a family at poverty or near it can find it difficult to afford fresh food.
Many people are ignorant when it comes to what is healthy. There is also a huge laziness factor and I also believe that people like instant gratification. Just like we have a problem in our society with overconsumption of material goods, people overconsume food they feel tastes good. The same lack of discipline is pervasive in all aspects of their life.
They think that eating a highly processed frozen dinner with the marketing that its “Lean” is actually healthier than say eating a very lean piece of grass fed beef.
For those folks who don’t fall into the poverty category, there are people who are just cheap, or are not willing to pay for healthy food. I hear people say all the time they cannot afford organic vegetables for instance or grass fed meat. I ask them how much fruit and veggies they actually eat. Lets say its $15-20 of their weekly budget for 2 people. I ask them if they are willing to spend an extra $5-10 on that food. Forget the organic argument, people somehow feel adverse to spend $100 on raw veggies, fruit and meat/fish, but would rather spend $100 on processed, premade food or eating out.
Its affordable to some people, people just choose not to spend money on it. Some people are lazy and dont’ want to cook. So they justify that they cannot afford to eat so healthy. However those same people will spend $100/month on cable TV or their iPhone bills, but they wont’ buy healthy food.
I also believe you have to be self aware of what your body type is and what you easily digest and cannot. Stop eating the things that irritate you or make you gain weight. Some people cannot eat a lot of starches such as wheat or rice, highly processed or not. They gain weight, it raises their blood sugar, they get bloated, they have acid problems or IBS. Stop taking a pill and start listening to your body. If you stopped eating and just lived off an IV drip for a few weeks, IBS or whatever stomach/digesting issues would stop plaguing you because there is nothing in your stomach/colon to irritate it. People just aren’t always self aware to figure out what food types work for them and which ones dont.
Carbs are not bad, nor are starches, there are healthier ones than others such as quinoa, buckwheat, sweet potatoes, etc. Some agree with people, others dont’. Farm fed salmon is not necessarily healthier for you than meat. People need to better understand what they are eating, what the animal they are eating ate, and how their veggies/fruit were grown.
There are a lot of people who can eat a crapload of carbs, who eat more than the average person, but also work out regularly and are thin, fit people. I don’t believe in a “diet”. Its about moderation, eating what your body can process and feeds your metabolism versus slowing it down, and about burning more than you eat.
zzz
ParticipantHas anyone watched Food Inc? Worthwhile to watch as are some of the books written by Michael Pollan. The movie argues that fast food IS cheaper to eat than if you were to buy healthy food and cook it yourself. This family could feed a family of 4 or 5 on a fast food dollar menu for say $7 a meal.
The correlation between poverty and obesity is high. I do believe it is very challenging for a family at poverty or near it can find it difficult to afford fresh food.
Many people are ignorant when it comes to what is healthy. There is also a huge laziness factor and I also believe that people like instant gratification. Just like we have a problem in our society with overconsumption of material goods, people overconsume food they feel tastes good. The same lack of discipline is pervasive in all aspects of their life.
They think that eating a highly processed frozen dinner with the marketing that its “Lean” is actually healthier than say eating a very lean piece of grass fed beef.
For those folks who don’t fall into the poverty category, there are people who are just cheap, or are not willing to pay for healthy food. I hear people say all the time they cannot afford organic vegetables for instance or grass fed meat. I ask them how much fruit and veggies they actually eat. Lets say its $15-20 of their weekly budget for 2 people. I ask them if they are willing to spend an extra $5-10 on that food. Forget the organic argument, people somehow feel adverse to spend $100 on raw veggies, fruit and meat/fish, but would rather spend $100 on processed, premade food or eating out.
Its affordable to some people, people just choose not to spend money on it. Some people are lazy and dont’ want to cook. So they justify that they cannot afford to eat so healthy. However those same people will spend $100/month on cable TV or their iPhone bills, but they wont’ buy healthy food.
I also believe you have to be self aware of what your body type is and what you easily digest and cannot. Stop eating the things that irritate you or make you gain weight. Some people cannot eat a lot of starches such as wheat or rice, highly processed or not. They gain weight, it raises their blood sugar, they get bloated, they have acid problems or IBS. Stop taking a pill and start listening to your body. If you stopped eating and just lived off an IV drip for a few weeks, IBS or whatever stomach/digesting issues would stop plaguing you because there is nothing in your stomach/colon to irritate it. People just aren’t always self aware to figure out what food types work for them and which ones dont.
Carbs are not bad, nor are starches, there are healthier ones than others such as quinoa, buckwheat, sweet potatoes, etc. Some agree with people, others dont’. Farm fed salmon is not necessarily healthier for you than meat. People need to better understand what they are eating, what the animal they are eating ate, and how their veggies/fruit were grown.
There are a lot of people who can eat a crapload of carbs, who eat more than the average person, but also work out regularly and are thin, fit people. I don’t believe in a “diet”. Its about moderation, eating what your body can process and feeds your metabolism versus slowing it down, and about burning more than you eat.
zzz
ParticipantHas anyone watched Food Inc? Worthwhile to watch as are some of the books written by Michael Pollan. The movie argues that fast food IS cheaper to eat than if you were to buy healthy food and cook it yourself. This family could feed a family of 4 or 5 on a fast food dollar menu for say $7 a meal.
The correlation between poverty and obesity is high. I do believe it is very challenging for a family at poverty or near it can find it difficult to afford fresh food.
Many people are ignorant when it comes to what is healthy. There is also a huge laziness factor and I also believe that people like instant gratification. Just like we have a problem in our society with overconsumption of material goods, people overconsume food they feel tastes good. The same lack of discipline is pervasive in all aspects of their life.
They think that eating a highly processed frozen dinner with the marketing that its “Lean” is actually healthier than say eating a very lean piece of grass fed beef.
For those folks who don’t fall into the poverty category, there are people who are just cheap, or are not willing to pay for healthy food. I hear people say all the time they cannot afford organic vegetables for instance or grass fed meat. I ask them how much fruit and veggies they actually eat. Lets say its $15-20 of their weekly budget for 2 people. I ask them if they are willing to spend an extra $5-10 on that food. Forget the organic argument, people somehow feel adverse to spend $100 on raw veggies, fruit and meat/fish, but would rather spend $100 on processed, premade food or eating out.
Its affordable to some people, people just choose not to spend money on it. Some people are lazy and dont’ want to cook. So they justify that they cannot afford to eat so healthy. However those same people will spend $100/month on cable TV or their iPhone bills, but they wont’ buy healthy food.
I also believe you have to be self aware of what your body type is and what you easily digest and cannot. Stop eating the things that irritate you or make you gain weight. Some people cannot eat a lot of starches such as wheat or rice, highly processed or not. They gain weight, it raises their blood sugar, they get bloated, they have acid problems or IBS. Stop taking a pill and start listening to your body. If you stopped eating and just lived off an IV drip for a few weeks, IBS or whatever stomach/digesting issues would stop plaguing you because there is nothing in your stomach/colon to irritate it. People just aren’t always self aware to figure out what food types work for them and which ones dont.
Carbs are not bad, nor are starches, there are healthier ones than others such as quinoa, buckwheat, sweet potatoes, etc. Some agree with people, others dont’. Farm fed salmon is not necessarily healthier for you than meat. People need to better understand what they are eating, what the animal they are eating ate, and how their veggies/fruit were grown.
There are a lot of people who can eat a crapload of carbs, who eat more than the average person, but also work out regularly and are thin, fit people. I don’t believe in a “diet”. Its about moderation, eating what your body can process and feeds your metabolism versus slowing it down, and about burning more than you eat.
zzz
ParticipantHas anyone watched Food Inc? Worthwhile to watch as are some of the books written by Michael Pollan. The movie argues that fast food IS cheaper to eat than if you were to buy healthy food and cook it yourself. This family could feed a family of 4 or 5 on a fast food dollar menu for say $7 a meal.
The correlation between poverty and obesity is high. I do believe it is very challenging for a family at poverty or near it can find it difficult to afford fresh food.
Many people are ignorant when it comes to what is healthy. There is also a huge laziness factor and I also believe that people like instant gratification. Just like we have a problem in our society with overconsumption of material goods, people overconsume food they feel tastes good. The same lack of discipline is pervasive in all aspects of their life.
They think that eating a highly processed frozen dinner with the marketing that its “Lean” is actually healthier than say eating a very lean piece of grass fed beef.
For those folks who don’t fall into the poverty category, there are people who are just cheap, or are not willing to pay for healthy food. I hear people say all the time they cannot afford organic vegetables for instance or grass fed meat. I ask them how much fruit and veggies they actually eat. Lets say its $15-20 of their weekly budget for 2 people. I ask them if they are willing to spend an extra $5-10 on that food. Forget the organic argument, people somehow feel adverse to spend $100 on raw veggies, fruit and meat/fish, but would rather spend $100 on processed, premade food or eating out.
Its affordable to some people, people just choose not to spend money on it. Some people are lazy and dont’ want to cook. So they justify that they cannot afford to eat so healthy. However those same people will spend $100/month on cable TV or their iPhone bills, but they wont’ buy healthy food.
I also believe you have to be self aware of what your body type is and what you easily digest and cannot. Stop eating the things that irritate you or make you gain weight. Some people cannot eat a lot of starches such as wheat or rice, highly processed or not. They gain weight, it raises their blood sugar, they get bloated, they have acid problems or IBS. Stop taking a pill and start listening to your body. If you stopped eating and just lived off an IV drip for a few weeks, IBS or whatever stomach/digesting issues would stop plaguing you because there is nothing in your stomach/colon to irritate it. People just aren’t always self aware to figure out what food types work for them and which ones dont.
Carbs are not bad, nor are starches, there are healthier ones than others such as quinoa, buckwheat, sweet potatoes, etc. Some agree with people, others dont’. Farm fed salmon is not necessarily healthier for you than meat. People need to better understand what they are eating, what the animal they are eating ate, and how their veggies/fruit were grown.
There are a lot of people who can eat a crapload of carbs, who eat more than the average person, but also work out regularly and are thin, fit people. I don’t believe in a “diet”. Its about moderation, eating what your body can process and feeds your metabolism versus slowing it down, and about burning more than you eat.
zzz
ParticipantHas anyone watched Food Inc? Worthwhile to watch as are some of the books written by Michael Pollan. The movie argues that fast food IS cheaper to eat than if you were to buy healthy food and cook it yourself. This family could feed a family of 4 or 5 on a fast food dollar menu for say $7 a meal.
The correlation between poverty and obesity is high. I do believe it is very challenging for a family at poverty or near it can find it difficult to afford fresh food.
Many people are ignorant when it comes to what is healthy. There is also a huge laziness factor and I also believe that people like instant gratification. Just like we have a problem in our society with overconsumption of material goods, people overconsume food they feel tastes good. The same lack of discipline is pervasive in all aspects of their life.
They think that eating a highly processed frozen dinner with the marketing that its “Lean” is actually healthier than say eating a very lean piece of grass fed beef.
For those folks who don’t fall into the poverty category, there are people who are just cheap, or are not willing to pay for healthy food. I hear people say all the time they cannot afford organic vegetables for instance or grass fed meat. I ask them how much fruit and veggies they actually eat. Lets say its $15-20 of their weekly budget for 2 people. I ask them if they are willing to spend an extra $5-10 on that food. Forget the organic argument, people somehow feel adverse to spend $100 on raw veggies, fruit and meat/fish, but would rather spend $100 on processed, premade food or eating out.
Its affordable to some people, people just choose not to spend money on it. Some people are lazy and dont’ want to cook. So they justify that they cannot afford to eat so healthy. However those same people will spend $100/month on cable TV or their iPhone bills, but they wont’ buy healthy food.
I also believe you have to be self aware of what your body type is and what you easily digest and cannot. Stop eating the things that irritate you or make you gain weight. Some people cannot eat a lot of starches such as wheat or rice, highly processed or not. They gain weight, it raises their blood sugar, they get bloated, they have acid problems or IBS. Stop taking a pill and start listening to your body. If you stopped eating and just lived off an IV drip for a few weeks, IBS or whatever stomach/digesting issues would stop plaguing you because there is nothing in your stomach/colon to irritate it. People just aren’t always self aware to figure out what food types work for them and which ones dont.
Carbs are not bad, nor are starches, there are healthier ones than others such as quinoa, buckwheat, sweet potatoes, etc. Some agree with people, others dont’. Farm fed salmon is not necessarily healthier for you than meat. People need to better understand what they are eating, what the animal they are eating ate, and how their veggies/fruit were grown.
There are a lot of people who can eat a crapload of carbs, who eat more than the average person, but also work out regularly and are thin, fit people. I don’t believe in a “diet”. Its about moderation, eating what your body can process and feeds your metabolism versus slowing it down, and about burning more than you eat.
zzz
Participanthow important is it or how well do you like the interior and if you hate it, would you be looking to make a lot of changes? personally i don’t care for their choices in the kitchen, bathrooms, and some of their flooring choices in several rooms. if you like the interior, then this is a good price. if not, then i’d say pass
zzz
Participanthow important is it or how well do you like the interior and if you hate it, would you be looking to make a lot of changes? personally i don’t care for their choices in the kitchen, bathrooms, and some of their flooring choices in several rooms. if you like the interior, then this is a good price. if not, then i’d say pass
zzz
Participanthow important is it or how well do you like the interior and if you hate it, would you be looking to make a lot of changes? personally i don’t care for their choices in the kitchen, bathrooms, and some of their flooring choices in several rooms. if you like the interior, then this is a good price. if not, then i’d say pass
zzz
Participanthow important is it or how well do you like the interior and if you hate it, would you be looking to make a lot of changes? personally i don’t care for their choices in the kitchen, bathrooms, and some of their flooring choices in several rooms. if you like the interior, then this is a good price. if not, then i’d say pass
zzz
Participanthow important is it or how well do you like the interior and if you hate it, would you be looking to make a lot of changes? personally i don’t care for their choices in the kitchen, bathrooms, and some of their flooring choices in several rooms. if you like the interior, then this is a good price. if not, then i’d say pass
zzz
Participantsdr and everyone else, what is your opinion of the the neighborhoods i’m looking in for single family? mission hills, north park, university heights?
here are a few examples of homes that have sold this year, which many are not in the best locations, very small and some are not even updated, many i wouldn’t even consider buying, but this is what has sold
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100000487-4171_1st_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92103
Date Price Held Return Annual
02/11/2010 $575,000 5y 7m -18% -3%
07/07/2004 $699,000 3y 10m 225% 35%
08/18/2000 $215,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100010665-3672_Jackdaw_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
03/30/2010 $670,000 10y 8m 158% 9%
07/30/1999 $260,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090042836-3777_Lark_San_Diego_CA_92103
01/30/2010 $740,000 2y 6m -2% -1%
07/23/2007 $753,000 5y 5m 61% 9%
02/13/2002 $467,500 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100001229-3902_Bandini_San_Diego_CA_92103
03/18/2010 $1,175,000 1y 3m 36% 26%
11/24/2008 $865,000 11y 8m 129% 7%
03/27/1997 $378,000 9y 6m 28% 3%http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090059393-4094_1st_San_Diego_CA_92103
02/24/2010 $515,000 2y 10m -31% -12%
04/02/2007 $750,000 4m 6% 18%
11/16/2006 $705,000 3y 10m 101% 20%
01/06/2003 $350,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100008334-2222_Commonwealth_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92104
04/16/2010 $580,000 8y 2m 68% 7%
02/14/2002 $345,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100014226-3644_29th_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
03/30/2010 $742,000 2y 4m 39% 15%
11/15/2007 $535,000 13y 10m 252% 9%not updated.
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090049174-3098_Hawthorn_San_Diego_CA_92104
02/23/2010 $445,000 5y 1m -27% -6%
01/12/2005 $610,000 2y 11m 122% 31%
01/22/2002 $275,000 3y 4m 67% 16%
08/28/1998 $164,900 3y 5m 22% 6%not updated
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090069124-3652_Pershing_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92104
02/17/2010 $641,000 7y 3m 23% 3%
10/28/2002 $520,000 1y 12m 24% 11%
10/31/2000 $419,000 7y 2m 108% 11%http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090065319-3026_29th_San_Diego_CA_92104
01/26/2010 $595,000 1y 6m 21% 13%
07/25/2008 $493,000 n/a – –here are some listings that i think are overpriced, there are too many to list, but with some sales history in the 2000s
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100022337-3405_Olive_St_San_Diego_CA_92104http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100010221-3375_Palm_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100020224-2421_33rd_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100018726-2335_32nd_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100017412-2227_Commonwealth_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100013893-3321_31st_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100016334-3106_Maple_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100016820-3446_Alabama_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100020847-1516_Torrance_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100007715-2234_Guy_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100016487-234_W_Palm_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090048646-3141_2nd_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92103
zzz
Participantsdr and everyone else, what is your opinion of the the neighborhoods i’m looking in for single family? mission hills, north park, university heights?
here are a few examples of homes that have sold this year, which many are not in the best locations, very small and some are not even updated, many i wouldn’t even consider buying, but this is what has sold
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100000487-4171_1st_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92103
Date Price Held Return Annual
02/11/2010 $575,000 5y 7m -18% -3%
07/07/2004 $699,000 3y 10m 225% 35%
08/18/2000 $215,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100010665-3672_Jackdaw_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
03/30/2010 $670,000 10y 8m 158% 9%
07/30/1999 $260,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090042836-3777_Lark_San_Diego_CA_92103
01/30/2010 $740,000 2y 6m -2% -1%
07/23/2007 $753,000 5y 5m 61% 9%
02/13/2002 $467,500 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100001229-3902_Bandini_San_Diego_CA_92103
03/18/2010 $1,175,000 1y 3m 36% 26%
11/24/2008 $865,000 11y 8m 129% 7%
03/27/1997 $378,000 9y 6m 28% 3%http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090059393-4094_1st_San_Diego_CA_92103
02/24/2010 $515,000 2y 10m -31% -12%
04/02/2007 $750,000 4m 6% 18%
11/16/2006 $705,000 3y 10m 101% 20%
01/06/2003 $350,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100008334-2222_Commonwealth_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92104
04/16/2010 $580,000 8y 2m 68% 7%
02/14/2002 $345,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100014226-3644_29th_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
03/30/2010 $742,000 2y 4m 39% 15%
11/15/2007 $535,000 13y 10m 252% 9%not updated.
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090049174-3098_Hawthorn_San_Diego_CA_92104
02/23/2010 $445,000 5y 1m -27% -6%
01/12/2005 $610,000 2y 11m 122% 31%
01/22/2002 $275,000 3y 4m 67% 16%
08/28/1998 $164,900 3y 5m 22% 6%not updated
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090069124-3652_Pershing_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92104
02/17/2010 $641,000 7y 3m 23% 3%
10/28/2002 $520,000 1y 12m 24% 11%
10/31/2000 $419,000 7y 2m 108% 11%http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090065319-3026_29th_San_Diego_CA_92104
01/26/2010 $595,000 1y 6m 21% 13%
07/25/2008 $493,000 n/a – –here are some listings that i think are overpriced, there are too many to list, but with some sales history in the 2000s
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100022337-3405_Olive_St_San_Diego_CA_92104http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100010221-3375_Palm_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100020224-2421_33rd_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100018726-2335_32nd_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100017412-2227_Commonwealth_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100013893-3321_31st_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100016334-3106_Maple_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100016820-3446_Alabama_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100020847-1516_Torrance_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100007715-2234_Guy_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100016487-234_W_Palm_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090048646-3141_2nd_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92103
zzz
Participantsdr and everyone else, what is your opinion of the the neighborhoods i’m looking in for single family? mission hills, north park, university heights?
here are a few examples of homes that have sold this year, which many are not in the best locations, very small and some are not even updated, many i wouldn’t even consider buying, but this is what has sold
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100000487-4171_1st_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92103
Date Price Held Return Annual
02/11/2010 $575,000 5y 7m -18% -3%
07/07/2004 $699,000 3y 10m 225% 35%
08/18/2000 $215,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100010665-3672_Jackdaw_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
03/30/2010 $670,000 10y 8m 158% 9%
07/30/1999 $260,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090042836-3777_Lark_San_Diego_CA_92103
01/30/2010 $740,000 2y 6m -2% -1%
07/23/2007 $753,000 5y 5m 61% 9%
02/13/2002 $467,500 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100001229-3902_Bandini_San_Diego_CA_92103
03/18/2010 $1,175,000 1y 3m 36% 26%
11/24/2008 $865,000 11y 8m 129% 7%
03/27/1997 $378,000 9y 6m 28% 3%http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090059393-4094_1st_San_Diego_CA_92103
02/24/2010 $515,000 2y 10m -31% -12%
04/02/2007 $750,000 4m 6% 18%
11/16/2006 $705,000 3y 10m 101% 20%
01/06/2003 $350,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100008334-2222_Commonwealth_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92104
04/16/2010 $580,000 8y 2m 68% 7%
02/14/2002 $345,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100014226-3644_29th_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
03/30/2010 $742,000 2y 4m 39% 15%
11/15/2007 $535,000 13y 10m 252% 9%not updated.
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090049174-3098_Hawthorn_San_Diego_CA_92104
02/23/2010 $445,000 5y 1m -27% -6%
01/12/2005 $610,000 2y 11m 122% 31%
01/22/2002 $275,000 3y 4m 67% 16%
08/28/1998 $164,900 3y 5m 22% 6%not updated
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090069124-3652_Pershing_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92104
02/17/2010 $641,000 7y 3m 23% 3%
10/28/2002 $520,000 1y 12m 24% 11%
10/31/2000 $419,000 7y 2m 108% 11%http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090065319-3026_29th_San_Diego_CA_92104
01/26/2010 $595,000 1y 6m 21% 13%
07/25/2008 $493,000 n/a – –here are some listings that i think are overpriced, there are too many to list, but with some sales history in the 2000s
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100022337-3405_Olive_St_San_Diego_CA_92104http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100010221-3375_Palm_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100020224-2421_33rd_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100018726-2335_32nd_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100017412-2227_Commonwealth_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100013893-3321_31st_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100016334-3106_Maple_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100016820-3446_Alabama_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100020847-1516_Torrance_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100007715-2234_Guy_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100016487-234_W_Palm_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090048646-3141_2nd_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92103
zzz
Participantsdr and everyone else, what is your opinion of the the neighborhoods i’m looking in for single family? mission hills, north park, university heights?
here are a few examples of homes that have sold this year, which many are not in the best locations, very small and some are not even updated, many i wouldn’t even consider buying, but this is what has sold
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100000487-4171_1st_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92103
Date Price Held Return Annual
02/11/2010 $575,000 5y 7m -18% -3%
07/07/2004 $699,000 3y 10m 225% 35%
08/18/2000 $215,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100010665-3672_Jackdaw_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
03/30/2010 $670,000 10y 8m 158% 9%
07/30/1999 $260,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090042836-3777_Lark_San_Diego_CA_92103
01/30/2010 $740,000 2y 6m -2% -1%
07/23/2007 $753,000 5y 5m 61% 9%
02/13/2002 $467,500 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100001229-3902_Bandini_San_Diego_CA_92103
03/18/2010 $1,175,000 1y 3m 36% 26%
11/24/2008 $865,000 11y 8m 129% 7%
03/27/1997 $378,000 9y 6m 28% 3%http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090059393-4094_1st_San_Diego_CA_92103
02/24/2010 $515,000 2y 10m -31% -12%
04/02/2007 $750,000 4m 6% 18%
11/16/2006 $705,000 3y 10m 101% 20%
01/06/2003 $350,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100008334-2222_Commonwealth_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92104
04/16/2010 $580,000 8y 2m 68% 7%
02/14/2002 $345,000 n/a – –http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100014226-3644_29th_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
03/30/2010 $742,000 2y 4m 39% 15%
11/15/2007 $535,000 13y 10m 252% 9%not updated.
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090049174-3098_Hawthorn_San_Diego_CA_92104
02/23/2010 $445,000 5y 1m -27% -6%
01/12/2005 $610,000 2y 11m 122% 31%
01/22/2002 $275,000 3y 4m 67% 16%
08/28/1998 $164,900 3y 5m 22% 6%not updated
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090069124-3652_Pershing_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92104
02/17/2010 $641,000 7y 3m 23% 3%
10/28/2002 $520,000 1y 12m 24% 11%
10/31/2000 $419,000 7y 2m 108% 11%http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090065319-3026_29th_San_Diego_CA_92104
01/26/2010 $595,000 1y 6m 21% 13%
07/25/2008 $493,000 n/a – –here are some listings that i think are overpriced, there are too many to list, but with some sales history in the 2000s
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100022337-3405_Olive_St_San_Diego_CA_92104http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100010221-3375_Palm_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100020224-2421_33rd_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100018726-2335_32nd_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100017412-2227_Commonwealth_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100013893-3321_31st_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100016334-3106_Maple_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100016820-3446_Alabama_St_San_Diego_CA_92104
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100020847-1516_Torrance_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100007715-2234_Guy_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-100016487-234_W_Palm_St_San_Diego_CA_92103
http://www.sdlookup.com/MLS-090048646-3141_2nd_Ave_San_Diego_CA_92103
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