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Robert Green Robert Green is offline
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Default New a new refrigerator - any recommendations?

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On Sat, 3 Jul 2010 08:36:20 -0400, "Robert Green"


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On Wed, 30 Jun 2010 08:05:59 -0400, "Robert Green"
wrote:


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Staying home is hard work. I miss the lunches out, the camaraderie,

the
bigger paycheck and lots of other things. I don't miss the god-awful
commute and I've found that I make much more of a mess when I am home

that I
ever did working.

My commute was only five miles, but yes, I busted my butt when I

retired.
Well, I got sick for a couple of months, but then finished all those

jobs
I'd
started, but never finished, when I was working. ;-) Once I got all

that
done, SWMBO declared that I could no longer make messes (the house was

on
the
market - messes don't work). I got *really bored, so found a job

within a
couple of weeks. It was a contracting job out of state but I made out

like a
bandit for a year.


My wife declared a moratorium on science projects - anything with

trailing
wires or flashing lights - so we could show the house. But after having
troops of looky-lous but no firm contracts we decided we would sell

*after*
we moved even though that will limit seriously what we can buy.


Yeah, they are that way. Since I wasn't working there was no way to buy a
house without selling the one we had. I got an apartment in Ohio and went
alone while she sold the place, which she did in three months. Actually,

the
buyers made an offer about the time I left but they wanted the contract
contingent on their house selling. Since we had just put the house on the
market, I didn't like that idea. They sold three months later and bought
ours. I should have accepted the contingency. :-/


One day I will learn not to beat myself up over not having 20-20 hindsight.
It's not today, though. We almost sold and moved just before the crash but
mom got cancer and that took all our spare time and then some. 2008 was a
bad, bad year in so many ways . . .

I think empty houses always sell for more - just because they look

bigger,
but that's just personal observation. I am sure others have seen the
reverse.


All agents I know (and my wife worked for many) have told us the opposite.
People want to visualize how the layout works. For example, a bedroom is
easier to size up if there is a bed in it. Beds are standard so even if

it's
a queen and you have a king it's easier to visualize the fit than if there

is
nothing. In fact there are companies that just do "staging" for this

purpose.

We've got an unusally small home and lots of stuff. Agents were always
telling us to put as much as we could in storage. I guess the idea is to
have it looked "lived in" but not like a packrat's burrow. (-: Now my
wife wants me to get rid of the 20 or so PC's I've built starting with my
first IBM clone in 1985. They're lined up against the basement wall, doing
nothing, so I suppose it's time but it's so hard to dispose of something
you've spent so much time on, even if it's worthless now. I've promised I
would as soon as I've copied all the data off them. Ahem.

We're still not 100% on where we're going. It *was* San Diego, but both

the
city AND the state are in serious trouble so we're waiting until she

stops
working to get serious. Last two assignments have been abroad, next one
might be, too. It's strange how much a bad market can change all your

plans
if it hits at exactly the wrong time. I guess there's never a right

time.

I thought '07 was a bad time to sell, until '08 and '09. I found a

regular
job in '08, so we moved to Alabama and bought a house. We probably should
have rented before we bought but a year in an apartment was about all I

could
take. ;-)


That's what we're thinking. Renting before buying. That will give the
market time to recover but sometimes I wonder if it ever will.

Housing demand is really "adjustable" in that kids can move back in with
their parents when they get in a jam. I know several folks whose kids are
back in the nest and no one is happy about it, neither the kids nor the
parents.

I just read an article that said in NYC they have begun stringent
enforcement of partitioning laws to prevent people from taking apartments
and chunking them up into smaller units by dividing the LR into two more
bedrooms. The cause was the death of some firefighters whom the city claims
died because they became disoriented fighting a fire in an illegally
partitioned apartment.

BTW, we bit the bullet and bought a new GE fridge. It's SO quiet compared
to the old one but more importantly, it uses 1/4 the juice the old one did.
We should have done it much, much sooner. I was astounded when I compared
the Kill-o-Watt readings. Some of the reasons are obvious - the doors and
walls are perhaps three times as thick as the old unit and I am sure that
the motor is much more efficient.

I was worried from reports on the web that it wouldn't cool as quickly as
the old one, but it cooled quickly enough for my taste. $600 (included an
additonal two year warranty) but worth it - AND - we stimulated the economy!
Got it from HomeDespot and I must say, it was pretty painless (except for
the $ part) once a salesman actually showed up in appliances - took 20
minutes! The guys they sent were pros - had to take the side door off
(which we never use and whose hinge pins had rusted). Thank God for WD-40.
A two minute soak and that pin popped right out.

These two very small Hispanic guys managed to navigate some very awkward
turns by carrying it between them with just a big strap underneath. I was
impressed - not a scratch or mark anywhere. Showed up two hours early, too.
Took away the old box too, for free. Delivery and set-up was done by a
company called HBI - they also called three times after the install to make
sure I was happy. Good deal.

We figured that we could be staying here for a while so why not be happy and
cut the electric bill at the same time? Of course, now that we've made the
purchase, we'll find the perfect real estate deal.

--
Bobby G.