Important

The shit stains in the hotel room below me stayed up until 3:30 this morning being louder than us at WF.........so I cranked up the diesel this morning at 5:15 and let it run outside their room window for 45 minutes....if the noise was not enough, the diesel exhaust coming into their hvac wall unit was :D
 
Still walking with the cain, hip still hurts pain level8 now down from a 9 a week ago, MRI is Wednesday at 8:30pm. Dr is talking L4L5 crap. Still no pain meds thankfully so at least i can poop daily. This not working thing is hard, light duty sucks. Sorry for the long winded whine
 
Thoughts on a fireplace in a rental property? We have tenants line up to move in to our house in ny but I'm not sure what to do about the fireplace that's there. I don't really trust people and put that any fireplace use would require written approval prior to it happening. People asked about it when our property manager was giving tours...thought? Just tell people no way? Or allow it with a receipt from a chimney cleaner and proof of insurance? I have to talk with our insurance company as well to get our insurance chamged anyway now that we have someone moving in.


I am happy though, we got the rate we wanted and after the property manager fee and mortgage we should be about $250 ahead each month. We are putting that into an account to help with repairs and upkeep.

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I need to look at the pictures on my phone more often.
 
I need to look at the pictures on my phone more often.

:wave:

I forgot all about that!

There's certainly worse things that can happen when you leave your phone laying around when your drunk buddies are over...
 
My buddy found some rolls of film in storage and had them developed recently, he said there were pics from early college years on there.....and some of what appeared to be nut sack close ups.....
 
That was discussed, but I would have needed to be way drunker.
 
Thoughts on a fireplace in a rental property? We have tenants line up to move in to our house in ny but I'm not sure what to do about the fireplace that's there. I don't really trust people and put that any fireplace use would require written approval prior to it happening. People asked about it when our property manager was giving tours...thought? Just tell people no way? Or allow it with a receipt from a chimney cleaner and proof of insurance? I have to talk with our insurance company as well to get our insurance chamged anyway now that we have someone moving in.


I am happy though, we got the rate we wanted and after the property manager fee and mortgage we should be about $250 ahead each month. We are putting that into an account to help with repairs and upkeep.

Sent from my XT1650 using Tapatalk

put a gas insert in it.
renters will love it
risk goes down.
 
Thoughts on a fireplace in a rental property? We have tenants line up to move in to our house in ny but I'm not sure what to do about the fireplace that's there. I don't really trust people and put that any fireplace use would require written approval prior to it happening. People asked about it when our property manager was giving tours...thought? Just tell people no way? Or allow it with a receipt from a chimney cleaner and proof of insurance? I have to talk with our insurance company as well to get our insurance chamged anyway now that we have someone moving in.


I am happy though, we got the rate we wanted and after the property manager fee and mortgage we should be about $250 ahead each month. We are putting that into an account to help with repairs and upkeep.

Sent from my XT1650 using Tapatalk

Make sure your insurance is high enough to cover the fire damage, increase your security deposit and let it roll.

I wouldn't rent a house that had a fireplace if the landlord said I couldn't use the fireplace. I'd be insulted.

But burning your rental down and having the insurance company pay for it isn't such a bad thing either.
 
put a gas insert in it.
renters will love it
risk goes down.

Gas inserts are nice. Burn clean and no real cleaning required other then a yearly check. I would be using ours if it wasn't for my daughter. It can heat up our front room in no time. If not a sealed unit, could even do s'mores over it.
 
Make sure your insurance is high enough to cover the fire damage, increase your security deposit and let it roll.

I wouldn't rent a house that had a fireplace if the landlord said I couldn't use the fireplace. I'd be insulted.

But burning your rental down and having the insurance company pay for it isn't such a bad thing either.
I'll have to see if our policy covers it once we change it. Right now I'm paying $10 a month for a renters policy in our new apt that has $350,000 in liability on top of the personal property replacement. If a tenant has a policy with that much personal liability then I wouldn't have an issue with it, but their insurance should cover it IMO. Our current mortgage insurance is about 5 times more than the value of our house...not sure what the new policy will be. I am calling the insurance company tomorrow to get it squared away.
 
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