Coming up on 2 years as a homeowner, some thoughts

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Well, the last rental I had before I bought a home, I had to fix the appliances myself. When I told the landlady that the fridge was constantly breaking down and needed to be replaced, her response was that she was going to remove it and not provide a fridge for the rental, so I could buy my own. ! I learned also not to call her about any problems, because she'd hire some disreputable "handyman" who would wind up screwing things up more than they fixed.

I lived there 12 unpleasant years before I bought a house. In the new house, the two fridges worked OK (two kitchens) but I wound up replacing both to cut back electricity consumption to 1/3 of what the old ones cost.

Everyone's situation is different. Home ownership is a responsibility and not for everyone.
 
home owner for 42 yrs now...

in my 6th house, all paid for, and our summer home will be paid for in 2 yrs.
They will have to carry me feet first from my own abode, even if it's falling down around me, no apt or "home" for me!
 
Yes, home ownership is a full time job! There is always something to do, repair, replace, clean, fix or buy. But after almost 30 yrs of owning our own home we would never rent again. We knew that paying off our mortgage before I retired, or shortly thereafter was an important part of having a secure retirement. If we hadn't done so we wouldn't be able to continue to afford to live where we have both lived all our lives. The rent is out of sight here in Sonoma Co. Even the most ratty 1 bedroom apt commands at least $1500.00 per mo. rent. Since we have our home pd for we just have the property tax and HOA dues as a monthly expense, which is way less than the $2,000.00, or more that it would cost to rent a comparable home. Granted, we do have to pay for any interior maintanance, the exterior maintanance is covered by the HOA. And we have replaced our water heater, all the faucets, sinks, carpets and kitchen and bathroom flooring, windows, front door, all the interior door hardware(because we wanted a change), the stove and refrigerator. But these expenses have been spread out over 22 years of ownership, and haven't been crippling financially.

The most important thing any mortgage holder can do is PAY EXTRA towards the principal each and every mo.! This works out more effectively than one big extra payment per year because the interest charged is being correspondingly lowered every mo too this way. But if one can only manage the one big extra payment per mo. that is still better than paying only the reg paymt amt. We pd 1/12th extra pymt per mo., every mo. Also, when we got the PMI dropped, we added the that amt. extra to the paymt every mo. too. I also kept a running tally of what the principal bal was at all times and how much the monthly interest charge was. As soon as we reached the point where the mort interest and prop tax, combined with any other deductable exp weren't enough to be more than the IRS stand, deduct. amt. we paid that sucker off with funds we had been saving for just this purpose. And, yes this did require discipline and sacrifice, but there is no comparison for the peace of mind that a paid for home gives you.

And at the end of the mortgage, instead of a fist full of rent receipts we have a nest egg worth over $300,000.00. If we should ever reach the point where home ownership is too much for us, we can sell and the nest egg can easily pay for housing for the rest of our lives.

Eddie
 
Agreed on paying down the principal each month. Even one hundred or so dollars added to the payment and reducing the principal makes a large difference. Make sure you note on the check or electronic remittance, you want the additional funds to go against the principal and not towards the next payment. Very important

I have been in my home for 16 years now. I am not handy in the least so last week I spent one of my days off with a plumber replacing the 1968 toilets. I have the "gay decorating gene" and had a partner who had the handyman gene. When that dissolved eight years ago, I have a big house and a different job where I don't have to entertain.

The mantinance and utilities are at times crazy. Since the robbery, my heart changed for the home and I am seriously looking to sell and become a renter. I own the home outright but with several recent expenditures it feels like I have a mortgage again.

Was in a high rise before moving here and think since I no longer have a pet, a high rise will make me feel a bit more secure. Also no roof, HVAC, water heater maintenance.

I still think real estate is the best investment one can make especially if one can maintain it themselves.
 
 
I accelerated pay-off on both mortgages.  First one 10.5 years, second 8.5 years.  It's quite a feeling of release.  Be nice if taxes and insurance would be "finished" at some point.  :-/

I do what repairs I can to avoid hiring-out.  Recent was replacing the lift belt on the garage door opener.
 
Home ownership was a great thing for me financially (I was just lucky because of geography and timing) and emotionally, and then, after the family was gone, the emotional payoff went to zero. There was a time when I LIKED mowing the lawn (and even buying a lawnmower), but that time has passed.

So now, I rent a room in a large house with two roommates who own the house. They take care of everything, of course, and there is also a cleaning lady once a week. So my home obligations are very low. (That reminds me that I have to flip my laundry).

Half of my children are buying homes. I think it is part of the American Dream, and I hope it works as well for them as it did for me.
 
Here's another home ownership joy: Landscaping.

At the back of my property is a chain link fence that's about 12 feet high. It's been overgrown with English ivy, which looks better than the chain link, I suppose, but it's a real PITA. I have to get on tall ladders to keep it trimmed. A few years back I got up there and removed the barbed wire at the top of the chain link - it was making trimming the ivy impossible, and sections at the top of the fence posts (columns, really) were supporting the growth of ivy trees.

Anyway, I have been putting off with the ivy trimming this past year, and yesterday I decided to deal with some of it (along the driveway, only 6' high there) and got our the trusty Echo 30" single sided hedge trimmer. Well, I remember it was acting up the last time I used it, and this time it refused to rev. It idled OK, but as soon as the throttle was opened, it would die, even after warming up. I wound up taking apart the carburetor, found some stuff I didn't like, soak it in cleaner for a few hours and got online and ordered a rebuild kit and a spare carb. Just in case. Only about $45 shipped.

Today at lunch I put the carb back together (now very clean) but it still wouldn't start. Wouldn't even idle. Took out the spark plug, and noticed it seems to be kind of resisting unscrewing. Plug was soaked with gas so blew it off. After a lot of fumbling around for the right plug wrench (it's a 19mm plug), couldn't get it back in. That's when I noticed IT.

IT as a crack in the motor case between the plug area and the fins. I couldn't get a good view of how extensive the crack was, but I'd seen enough. I remembered that in the past I'd at least once dropped the trimmer from atop the ladder. It landed in a pile of ivy trimmings so I didn't think too much about it. But it must have started cracking from that impact.

I still need to trim the ivy at the driveway so I'll get out my older electric trimmer and use that. Today is the last dry day for about six days, you see.

Then later on I'll be back at HD or elsewhere to replace the Echo. I like it a lot so I'll be looking for the same thing.

What I really need is a hedge trimming drone.

LOL.
 
Your problem seems to be the same I had with my Echo trimmer. Problem was the crap they put into gas now gums everything up within weeks and my neighbor said go to Lowes and fill it with the gas you get there without that ethanol crap. Dumped the old gas out, put the canned stuff from Lowes, (forgot what its called) and it started on the first and every pull since. A quart is like 5 bucks and it saves alot of frustration.
 
Lowes tried to sell me some Husqvarna-branded gas in a quart can, though as I recall it was more like eight bucks a quart. No thanks. I know of a couple of stations that sell ethanol-free gas for a lot less than $32 a gallon! I've had no problems so far.

English ivy is the worst. I have a running battle to keep it in check. It's on a neighboring church property and has to be whacked back across the property line a couple of times a year. They are also letting it grow on some trees which will eventually be killed by it. I wouldn't care but it kind of worries me that they'll fall on my house one of these days...as ea56 says, it's always something.
 
New versus old, newer better?

Well, yes and no. 

The basics from the 1890-1920s in our house are repairable and enormously better quality than the stuff from the mid-50s. Everything from the mid-80s through the end of the 20th century was trash.

Recent electrical and plumbing is pretty decent. 

Windows, doors - you get what you pay for.

Paint? Glidden is now junk. Sherwin-Williams OK, but not worth the price.

 

Insulation? Way better.

Appliances? Worthless.

 

Generally speaking, the quality of construction materials (mainly due to quality control) is much higher than for many decades. Just, way too many companies are using that consistently high quality to cut corners, expecting the good materials to carry the extra load.

 

I'd say my parents' home from the late '30s was about the best level of quality I've ever seen.

 

Of course, I'm biased. My company gets called in when something goes wrong, not when something works right.
 
Echo gas

Nah, it's not the gas. It's the big crack in the motor block.

I'll be disassembling the shrouding around the motor to see just how bad it its, but even without that I can see the block is cracked inside the plug threads. And I was not able to screw the plug back in straight. Not good.

That'll teach me for subjecting it to 12 foot drops... LOL... Well, better to drop the hedge trimmer than myself. I did have a choice. Next time I might attach a cord to it, but I'd rather not have it swing back and bite me. It's got a pretty aggressive set of cutters on it.

UPDATE:

Good news! The motor block is not cracked. Just the one fin. I was eventually able to use a curved pick and restore the plug bore threads on the block and got a new spark plug to go in straight.

The best news is that after all that, the thing started up just fine and revved willingly. Well, as willingly as its low emissions carb would let it. So it's back in business.

Which is great. About 15 years ago I paid less than $250 at Home Depot for this 30" single sided Echo hedge trimmer. Just checked, the same size in an Echo or other brand now costs more than double that, $550. It looks like the carb rebuild kit and the spare carb won't go to waste, as they will fit the now working again HC-201.

Before I got the Echo running again, I wound up using the B&D "Hedgehog" to trim the ivy choking the runoff area on the courtyard. But it choked on the stuff growing on top of the 6' high chain link there. That's a job for the big Echo.

Tomorrow the rain is not supposed to start until late, say 9 pm, so I might be able to use the Echo to tame the ivy in that area after work before it gets dark. The 12' high fence in the back will have to wait for a longer dry spell... Oh, yes, the joys of home ownership.

I really detest English Ivy now. In fact I'm a bit allergic to it, and have to wear a full face respirator when I get into the heavy stuff. After all this rain the small amount I did today didn't bother me, but the little hairs on the leaves and stems have my eyes burning and my throat choking during dry weather. If I could I'd poison all the ivy on all the fences here, but the neighbors might revolt. The one in the condo in the back closest to 12' fence complained when I trimmed the ivy trees on top of it! I guess the ivy adds some privacy, but the same thing could be accomplished with slatting or other screening. Plus the birds eat the ivy berries and crap them all over the place, so I'm constantly weeding out rogue ivy in all sorts of inconvenient places. Sigh.

[this post was last edited: 1/31/2017-23:50]
 
1897 home ownership

I finished paying the house off in 2002. I paid 30k for it in 1982 and that was no down-payment and a contract for deed. My house payment was $289.51 per month. 10 rooms are nice to roam around in with 10 foot ceilings. I have done the following to it: 27 new windows, new furnace and central air, new kitchen right down to the studs, new wiring and plumbing, new front and side porches, new roof, which the insurance paid for due to a hail storm, insulation in the attic and the house repainted a couple of times using 20 gallons of paint each time.
Is it all worth it? Yes it is in my estimation. I intend to stay here as long as I can.
 
The crappy gas today is what was killing my JD tractor.Just didn't want to deal with it anymore.NOW-if someone made and sold a rechargeable rider mower-Would be interested!Glad the motor in the Echo trimmer wasn't cracked.I have been eying a Greenworks or Kobalt rechargeable Hedge shears.These are will built and just as heavy duty as a gas one.And the Greenwork would use the same batteries my Greenwork mower uses.
 
Oh, gods, don't get me started on fuel

We're over 6,000FT (We're at exactly 1900M, down to the third decimal point, to be exact!). Have to be extremely careful to buy gasoline with NO alcohol and NO detergent, etc.

It's tough. Tougher, getting casual labor using the post-hole digger to follow that rule. I loath replacing fuel lines and carbs because some ding-dong can't read the labels on the tools and the fuel tanks.

Alcohol is OK in a motor vehicle with a smart computer which can compensate. It's death for power tools.
 
Been a home owner

since 1988. It does limit you if you decide to relocate to another state because you have the hassle of selling first, unless you were fortunate to work for a large company that used to buy them and sell them after you transferred. Not many do it anymore.
It does feel like an accomplishment to burn a mortgage, many today will never be able to, and many seniors have to reverse mortgage.
That can have it's advantage if one is elderly when the market was bad like last decade after 2006.
I hope that doesn't happen again. For those with ehrs, it's nice to leave them something.
Otherwise, look at it like you are the caretaker for the next owners. We'll be leaving ours better than when they were built. One of them anyway for sure.
A few are fortunate enough to own a place outright by or sooner than retiring and buy a second place in a more favorable winter climate. It also helps to have a young adult relative to live in and maintain the primary residence, and pay the utilities, and a little rent while they save to buy their first place.
Prosperity and good health to all!
 
My home was in a neighborhood that became gentrified and it is how my first house became my second. I was nearly forced out by hipsters and thankfully was paid a handsome price for it.

So two years later a new to me volkswagen and a spacious 1960s split level with a two car garage is now my dream home. I put a new furnace and a/c by York. It needs other work but all in all not bad.

Paid off too.
 
No hipsters in my 'hood. I'm probably on the younger side of the age spectrum.

 

I'm confident I own more union made products than anyone in my 'hood.

 

 

Yo!
 
I can't imagine how hipsters could force a homeowner out of their abode, unless there were other issues (like behind in payments, etc.). Of course there's always lawsuits.

I'm probably the hippest dude on my block, which is not saying much. Mostly older retired or new Asian/Central American homeowners. The only problems seem to emanate from the renters, one house in particular. But even that has died down. I'll probably be here until I become too invalid. Hopefully that's a long way off. I might put in some ramps and widen the garden pathways in the meantime. You never know.
 

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