The wood stove is certainly a part of the equation, still trying to determine how big a part of the equation it will be. At least it should be necessary during the milder seasons. And if we got really hard-up, I suppose we could retreat into the efficiency apartment during our hardest-hit months.
The attic was added later. What we've been told is that the walls are insulated, but that the attic currently is not.
Tell me more about this, please. Sounds like a good question to ask, but I need to understand it first.
Probably.
Interesting point, I didn't even notice a tree hanging on it. I will definitely take a closer look at that tomorrow. I did notice that some of the wood was rotten around the edge of the utility building roof, near where the chicken coop is.
If I can figure out how, and can find the time, I'd be plenty happy to do the work myself. Hell, it can't be rocket science, can it? The only reason I'd like to wrap some of the costs into the mortgage, is for simplicities sake, and to make sure the important things get done right, and get done now.
Of course it's impossible to tell the future, but I am not somebody who likes to move around much. I like to pick a place, and stay there, and I think my wife is much the same. I stayed working at my previous employers far longer than I should have, simply because I just like staying put. It is definitely my intention to have this be my "castle" until the day I kick it.
They started asking $139,000 in 2008, then dropped it $5,000 to $134,000. Then after 4 months, they gave up trying to sell it. Then in mid-October of this year they relisted it for $119,000... and two weeks later dropped it another $9,000 to $110,000. The property was last assessed for tax purposes in 2009 at $100,530.
Possibly, yes.
These sound like things we could add over time as improvements.
This right here sounds incredibly complicated and costly, I'd like to hear more about how high a priority this might be, and what the consequences might be of not doing this.
Sounds like another bargaining point to me! I'm really not concerned with resellability, I want it to be mine forever and ever.
But, that said, we've hit our first snag: If it does turn out the bank's appraiser determines that the house needs certain major repairs (most likely the roof), the bank will not give us a loan. Ordinary loans do not incorporate the cost of repairs into them, the bank expects the house to be in "normal" condition at the time of sale.
It looks like our next primary option is an FHA 203(k) loan, which is specifically intended to combine initial repair costs with the mortgage. But we would need to (a) find a bank that does these, (b) figure out the application process, which seems complicated, and (c) see if we can actually afford an FHA loan.
Any tips or links that anybody has on this process would be greatly appreciated. Here's what I've got so far:
http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/203k/203kabou.cfm
http://www.fhaloanpros.com/resource/...e-mortgage.php
Again, thanks for all the advice, guys!





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