I think the OP got more than he wanted in this thread.
Where did I say the loan officer protected me from making bad financial decisions?
Make sure you can make the payments? Isn't that what you're supposed to do when you borrow money? That's why there's loan officers. To protect non money management morons from getting in over their head.
I'm in that position because I'm personally responsible with money.
If your credit rating is better than 99% of the folks in the country it is because you managed your money properly, it is not because a loan officer protected you from making poor financial decisions.
You lost me here. The government let the lending industry, which Fannie and Freddie are part of, go wild. Ask any mortgage lending official how many different schemes and plans were available to get someone qualified for a mortgage. It will make your head hurt. Regardless of the plan, you're still supposed to repay the money. But if I'm underwater in a property because the real estate market went bust, I can walk away from it like a rental property because I have no skin in the game.
I told you that. Most folks are pretty STOOBID when it comes to money management. Why do you think the government wants to control every facet of your life?
Make sure you can make the payments? Isn't that what you're supposed to do when you borrow money? That's why there's loan officers. To protect non money management morons from getting in over their head.
What the hell do ya' think I've been telling you for a half dozen posts????
WTF. Remind me not to use you as my financial planner.
With your logic I'm aimed at a disaster before it evens happens. Or in other words you're looking at running the financial ship so tight that you can't really afford to make the payments you agreed to.
This is piss poor financial planning. You're setting yourself up for financial failure.
Do you hold a key government financial planning job? That's the logic the folks in DC are using.
Financing hasn't been too easy?????????? Hello, McFly, is there anyone home up there? What the hell do you think caused the economy to implode? Are you in an economic information vacuum chamber? Take that as an insult if you want, because it's intended to be one.
Whats the difference between saving 60 months to buy a car or financing 0% for 60 months...?
There is no logic being applied. These are facts. If you save the money, you will have it and if you don't make the payments on a car loan you will lose the car and have nothing for all the payments you made.
The personal attack in the face of facts surprises me.
So what about that car ya' paid cash for that ya' have to sell to cover an emergency? Ya' want to talk about that?

The point is one only borrows money that allows you to make more money.
All other expenditures are money sinks...the money is borrowed and spent with no economic return. Borrowing money to add a garage results in a more expensive house which is less likely to resell and one will not recover the initial investment in the foreseeable future in this housing market..if ever.
The OP has not said that he is planning on any income producing venture that will result because of the garage additiion. In my past before getting garage space, I spent many years working on my vehicles in the driveway...with no cost of a garage.
As I said earlier...knowing that a new baby is on the way is cause for being very conservative with money..ask anyone where a birth did not go as planned. In addition, any baby represents additional cost to the family...and there are always expenses one never thinks of that arise.
A story..a true story...
Years ago on a small acreage that I drove by daily I watched a sad story of a family play out.
First a prefab house went up...cheap, fast and one that a newly married couple could get a loan for...with no garage.
Next I see a prefab shop go up..again, cheap, fast and againg one that a newly wedded couple could get a loan for...the husband got his garage.
About a year later I see vehicles change...from the hot cars that kids drive to a pickup and minivan...usually means a baby arrived.
About year later, the toys of a small child show up on the lawn...yeah..they have a kid.
About a year later....the minivan is gone..the pickup remains...fewer toys on the lawn...damn..I bet a divorce happened..and the father gets the kid on every other weekend.
About a year later...the toys are gone...the pickup disappears...someone just lost the house.
About six months later...the prefab shop is taken down and removed...leaving the concrete slab...someone just lost his garage.
Over the next two years...the yard becomes overgrown, no one is living there...the bank is holding a house they can't sell.
Last winter....someone's meth lab burns the house down...happens a lot in vacant houses.
This last summer...a bulldozer finally removed the remains of the house...but the slab of the garage remains as silent testament as to what past dreams had been there.
I still drive by that small empty acreage....and pass dreams that have died of a family that I never knew.
A very sad lesson of life if one wants learn what bad things can happen to a family living on the edge....
I agree with you. This type of topic and subject has very deep roots, planted at an early age, think about it...in school (public school up to grade 12) did anyone ever teach this stuff? Nope. Buying a home is supposed to be the american dream....who came up with that phrase? Probably mr j p morgan himself. But they get bail outs. I didnt get no bailout.I have seen a number of housing downturns.
With each one, owners were upside down for the better part of ten years..some held on, some sold, some lost the house.
They say one in seven people move every year...because of the job.
Houses are not build on wheels...if you have to move, you have some tough choices to make...or they will be made for you.
I know of people who dropped the keys to their house off at the bank as they left town, I know people who have rented their homes for 16 years because of the upside down nature of the loan while living half way cross the country...and I know more than a few who have lost homes while carrying the debt for years.
I guess the bottom line is realize that a house is just shelter...it doesn't make you money...and budget accordingly.
Annual tire change and brake check on my HHR. I love this lift and it's so much easier on my back.
If you save for 60 months, no matter what happens you'll have your savings. If you finance, if you don't make the payments you'll end up with nothing.
Nope, I'm done. You seem to be bent on proving you are somehow superior and further response is not worth my time.



Thanks for all the help!
I just sold about $3k worth of stuff this weekend so im getting close.
I am about $4k away from having my shop, with that said I am taking out a small personal loan. I can take up to $5k but probably wont have to take it all.
I am having another quote done by a guy. This next guy was referred by a good friend of mine and said this guy does pole buildings on the side for extra cash. He owns his own construction business that does bigger buildings like restaurants and other smaller business's. He does these pole buildings on the side just for extra cash for his business during the winter months.
I hope he is even cheaper and I guess he is really really fast. Guess you can do that when you have 20 workers vs 5 amish guys
So maybe I still wont need a loan
Thanks for all the help!
I just sold about $3k worth of stuff this weekend so im getting close.
I am about $4k away from having my shop, with that said I am taking out a small personal loan. I can take up to $5k but probably wont have to take it all.
I am having another quote done by a guy. This next guy was referred by a good friend of mine and said this guy does pole buildings on the side for extra cash. He owns his own construction business that does bigger buildings like restaurants and other smaller business's. He does these pole buildings on the side just for extra cash for his business during the winter months.
I hope he is even cheaper and I guess he is really really fast. Guess you can do that when you have 20 workers vs 5 amish guys
So maybe I still wont need a loan
When the neighbor woman had her barn built which I am guessing to be 80' x 100', it was up in 5 days complete. It was basically all framed the first day.Not trying to be a stinker here but does your zoning regs allow pole type buildings?
I hope that works for you! Really. I do. I hate to be negative, but this is how most horror stories begin.![]()
I'd put money on the five Amish guys being quicker than a contractor that has twenty.When the neighbor woman had her barn built which I am guessing to be 80' x 100', it was up in 5 days complete. It was basically all framed the first day.

I agree with you. This type of topic and subject has very deep roots, planted at an early age, think about it...in school (public school up to grade 12) did anyone ever teach this stuff? Nope. Buying a home is supposed to be the american dream....who came up with that phrase? Probably mr j p morgan himself. But they get bail outs. I didnt get no bailout.
why you say that?
YEs I live in the middle of no where..its what we build
Exactly. It's not taught anymore. Balancing a checkbook isn't taught anymore. Parents should also be as responsible as the school systems - I don't get it. I realize this makes me sound like an old curmudgeon but I couldn't find a neighborhood kid willing to use my mower and cut my grass for a healthy sum ($30/week for a 1/2 acre lot). Apparently kids don't do that anymore. .. Bahhh.
why you say that?
LOl...likely because they have done the math and can make more at other higher paying jobs with less effort.
What's the going rate at your location for a lawn care company to mow a lawn like that once a week?
Here it would be over $100/week cash up front using your riding equipment...trimming extra.
Awww, c'mon...it takes like 45 minutes. $30 an hour is a pretty good wage if you don't have to bring anything but yourself, I don't care who you are. I made good spending money through high school cutting yards larger than mine for $20 each. The pro guy charges me $45-$60 depending on the amount of trim work needed.
Awww, c'mon...it takes like 45 minutes. $30 an hour is a pretty good wage if you don't have to bring anything but yourself, I don't care who you are. I made good spending money through high school cutting yards larger than mine for $20 each. The pro guy charges me $45-$60 depending on the amount of trim work needed.
Hell, if you were closer I'd mow that yard for $30 every week. Half of summer before last I mowed the neighbors yard if she would show me her *****.
Times change...costs and wages are not what they were when we were kids.
Here in CA $100 wouldn't cover it...and that would be a cash transaction..it is a price of living where costs are higher.
As for time spent, it depends on the ground cover, terrain, machine used, trees, all the darn trimming, etc....and I for one would not want a hack job from somone mowing like a bat out of hell.
A real clue is what the pro guy is charging...lawn care guys do lots of mowing...and since the business is a cut throat one their charges are close to what it does cost to mow a lawn...because they make their real money in the extras like landscaping.
Actually this cost of lot maintainance is part of owning a garage and should be factored into any long term fiscal planning.
Cutting lot maintainance is a great way to meet the local zoning folks when the neighbors rat you out.
NO ! I'll take the cash.LOL..would he have to flash his chest to you?

...
Very few people save that much money, so you are doing well. Don't get garage fever and blow it right at the end.
.....
This is kinda getting away from my point - my point is that kids aren't doing these kinds of jobs today. Hell, it was competitive when I was a kid trying to get yards to mow. There was nowhere near the number of pros doing the residential work because the kids were all fighting for it. Things have changed beyond the cost of cutting grass.
^^^^^Exactly.
The amount of savings for a rainy day someone should have is generally expressed as the number of months of earnings a person should have saved. This is not a great way to look at setting this number in my opinion.
If you look at the data from people who declare bankruptcy and use this as an indicator of how people fail to plan for a rainy day you see this:
Medical Expenses (42%)
Recent studies have shown that 42% of all personal bankruptcies are a result of medical expenses. The study also reveals that 78% of those who filed had insurance.
Job Loss (22%)
Millions of Americans are unemployed, which makes them much more likely to file for bankruptcy. Unemployed individuals often pay for insurance out-of-pocket.
The cost of healthcare insurance is income independent. For a family of four a $5K/yr. deductible insurance policy will cost more than $12K per year. A visit to a hospital can chew through $12K in a blink of an eye, but maintaining healthcare insurance costs more than many people's mortgages.
No one plans on losing a job; no one plans on having a medical emergency, but your rainy day savings needs to be adequate to cover these possibilities. I'd plan on having $20K saved just to cover health care insurance and possible out of pocket costs in an emergency fund, plus whatever you need to cover your mortgage, utilities and living expenses for however long you feel comfortable with.
If/when you have kids you need to have even more rainy day savings. Notice, none of this has anything to do with how much you earn. It is primarily about how much you have to spend to feed yours family, maintain a roof over your head, and to be employable or might have to spend in the event you have a healthcare problem or some other misfortune.
Everyone should save and spend as they see fit, and some people take allot more risk in spending than others. That's all fine, but make sure you understand and appreciate the risk, so you know whether the return you get for spending is worth the risk.
I understand the point you were making.
And I pointed out that times have changed...kids can make more money elsewhere doing other work.
Where and how? How old are these kids? $30 to mow a lawn for a teenager would be good money! I made a whopping $5-$10 a lawn back in high school and I thought I was a high roller back then! $30 for 1 hours worth of work isn't that common around here so I don't know where they could make more.
Why don't you ask the kids?
I assume that some are likely working for the lawn care guy...who charges $60..
Or you can ask McDonalds what a McJob is paying.
My point is if you have no takers at $30, you are offering too little...that is free market in action. Raise the rates until you find a kid who will do it...as you said the lawn care guy will do it for $60...so the magic number is somewhere in between..but it is NOT $30 as your experience is showing.
I keep hearing over and over employers whine about how they cannot find qualified employees...and when you find out what they are offering for compensation...well what they are really saying is that they cannot find qualified employees that will work cheap.
The free market in action.....
I keep hearing over and over employers whine about how they cannot find qualified employees...and when you find out what they are offering for compensation...well what they are really saying is that they cannot find qualified employees that will work cheap.
The free market in action.....
I have to rant about this though...
Define cheap? I can have an opening in my area pay anywhere from $60-$100k per year not counting perks and I get next to no applicants. I even stretch to find "green" folks if they can show "potential" and still have difficulties filling a position. I can't even find non qualified people sometimes.
Why don't you ask the kids?
I assume that some are likely working for the lawn care guy...who charges $60..
Or you can ask McDonalds what a McJob is paying.
My point is if you have no takers at $30, you are offering too little...that is free market in action. Raise the rates until you find a kid who will do it...as you said the lawn care guy will do it for $60...so the magic number is somewhere in between..but it is NOT $30 as your experience is showing.
I keep hearing over and over employers whine about how they cannot find qualified employees...and when you find out what they are offering for compensation...well what they are really saying is that they cannot find qualified employees that will work cheap.
The free market in action.....

.....In my yard, I'm just looking for someone to run a mower back and forth for 45 minutes. ...
Or kids would rather live off their allowance and stay at home. I'm just saying the days of the neighborhood kids cutting lawns is gone. I don't live in a fancy schmancy neighborhood but the kids aren't even asked to cut their own yards. The work isn't worth it for them or someone's afraid of the liability or.... And, no, the pro does all the work for himself. Baaahh..
How did I get on this topic?
BTW, I run my own business and I understand the value of good labor. I pay my employees well above average for this kind of work to retain them and their gained skill. In return, I get dependable efficiency and care. In my yard, I'm just looking for someone to run a mower back and forth for 45 minutes. It's not a golf course, and you probably can't count the different types of grass with all the fingers on both hands.![]()
