Mar-27-2020 10:33 AM
May-03-2020 07:18 AM
pnichols wrote:Slowmover wrote:
The point is to be outside. Shirtsleeve weather. Some extra clothing to cover a variety of conditions. The pleasure of cooking inside or out.
If my “ideal” was a lumbering, unstable 5’er to which I had to buy a commercial vehicle to drag it with, that sure takes the fun out of solo touring a region. Day trips.
Same with a Moho. It’s flat funny seeing the “toad” that only two people will ever use. A big family group it makes some sense. But repairs and maintenance are a pain as little is DIY. Two drivetrains has to be justified.
THE POINT is that many MAY NOT have made good choice when it came time to buy an RV.
The extra work of “bigger” is a huge turnoff. If not today, then tomorrow.
Highest reliability, longest-life and ease of travel were the priorities I learned as third generation owner of type.
Set-up and take-down shouldn’t be a burden.
There’s NEVER an end of things to do or see. A major city or an unknown region. Any budget.
A life of television has stunted many of you. Most of whom you might meet.
Throw it out, as it’s poison.
No one had them until reasonably priced solid-state portables were available in the mid-late 1970s.
Absolutely NO ONE missed them.
Examine assumptions. The rut you prefer is still just that.
The lifelong slave loves his collar too much to remove it.
An RV is maybe last chance to wake up in an unfamiliar place . . and allow the unfamiliar part of you come forward.
.
Well, unless your profile isn't up to date .... your RV setup is a PU truck towing a fairly good sized TT or 5'er of some type .... which seems to me to be a bit limiting.
It my opinion, the "RV'ing philosophy" of yours above seems to indicate this kind of a rig 😉 :
Apr-01-2020 04:41 PM
PawPaw_n_Gram wrote:Lantley wrote:DallasSteve wrote:Walaby wrote:
Maybe half as expensive, but while you're paying a mortgage, the house generally appreciates. You're paying half but you never recoup any of that... it's all lost to depreciation or rent.
Usually long term parks don't include electric.. they'll put you on metered. But then again, owning a house you pay electric as well.
There's too much other stuff I'd miss, at least right now. I like having my yard. Like my shop out back to work on old cars. Like the pool on a hot summer day after yard work etc... I see myself on the road 3-4 months, and then returning for 3-4 and then back out again, until I can't do it anymore. Then I'll just be here.
Mike
True, if the market is going up, as it usually does. The house needs to appreciate by more than $1,000 per month to win that race. Most don't. But, obviously, the biggest trade off is that you have much less space living in an RV.
How about property taxes. They are going up as well. There are no
property taxes with RV living. Lot of property tax with home ownership
Property tax on the last home I owned near Dallas was about $8,600 per year for a $200K value home. But DW was over 65 when we bought it - so our taxes were frozen, and with homestead exemption, our taxes were fixed at $2,800 per year.
A commercial RV park in Texas pays about three times per square foot more than a residential property. With no homestead exemption or freezing rates for residents over age 65.
Multi-family residences pay at least 2.5 times what a home owner pays.
In Texas, 70 to 80 % of property taxes goes to the school district. Most school district tax reports show the single family home owners pay 30 - 35 % of the costs of the school total tax collection.
Living in an RV park, there are still property taxes paid by each tenant. True the individual tax total for a 60x20 ft, 1,200 sqft RV spot is less than the average new development 65 x 85 ft, 5,525 sqft single family home lot with a $225K home sitting on it.
But the aggregate total works out to not a huge difference.
Heck, the Walmart pays more property tax than many 100 home subdivisions, unless the city, county and school district have waived taxes for several years to get Walmart to build a store within their limits.
Apr-01-2020 02:23 PM
Apr-01-2020 08:31 AM
Apr-01-2020 07:42 AM
Apr-01-2020 07:27 AM
Lantley wrote:DallasSteve wrote:Walaby wrote:
Maybe half as expensive, but while you're paying a mortgage, the house generally appreciates. You're paying half but you never recoup any of that... it's all lost to depreciation or rent.
Usually long term parks don't include electric.. they'll put you on metered. But then again, owning a house you pay electric as well.
There's too much other stuff I'd miss, at least right now. I like having my yard. Like my shop out back to work on old cars. Like the pool on a hot summer day after yard work etc... I see myself on the road 3-4 months, and then returning for 3-4 and then back out again, until I can't do it anymore. Then I'll just be here.
Mike
True, if the market is going up, as it usually does. The house needs to appreciate by more than $1,000 per month to win that race. Most don't. But, obviously, the biggest trade off is that you have much less space living in an RV.
How about property taxes. They are going up as well. There are no
property taxes with RV living. Lot of property tax with home ownership
Apr-01-2020 06:41 AM
qtla9111 wrote:
I could fit all my stuff into two boxes and be very content
Apr-01-2020 05:28 AM
Apr-01-2020 04:08 AM
DallasSteve wrote:Walaby wrote:
Maybe half as expensive, but while you're paying a mortgage, the house generally appreciates. You're paying half but you never recoup any of that... it's all lost to depreciation or rent.
Usually long term parks don't include electric.. they'll put you on metered. But then again, owning a house you pay electric as well.
There's too much other stuff I'd miss, at least right now. I like having my yard. Like my shop out back to work on old cars. Like the pool on a hot summer day after yard work etc... I see myself on the road 3-4 months, and then returning for 3-4 and then back out again, until I can't do it anymore. Then I'll just be here.
Mike
True, if the market is going up, as it usually does. The house needs to appreciate by more than $1,000 per month to win that race. Most don't. But, obviously, the biggest trade off is that you have much less space living in an RV.
Apr-01-2020 01:30 AM
Mar-31-2020 07:30 PM
Walaby wrote:
Maybe half as expensive, but while you're paying a mortgage, the house generally appreciates. You're paying half but you never recoup any of that... it's all lost to depreciation or rent.
Usually long term parks don't include electric.. they'll put you on metered. But then again, owning a house you pay electric as well.
There's too much other stuff I'd miss, at least right now. I like having my yard. Like my shop out back to work on old cars. Like the pool on a hot summer day after yard work etc... I see myself on the road 3-4 months, and then returning for 3-4 and then back out again, until I can't do it anymore. Then I'll just be here.
Mike
Mar-31-2020 07:17 PM
Mar-31-2020 06:42 PM
Super_Dave wrote:DallasSteve wrote:
It's very cheap, if you're just staying in one place and if you can tolerate the smaller living space.
All the places that I would like to stay for extended periods of time don't have real cheap monthly rates. I guess it is all relative. Not to mention if one is also making a monthly payment on the RV itself. In my case, it seems like it matches my mortgage payment on my stick and brick house.
Mar-31-2020 06:03 PM