
25 July 2025 | 24 replies
Just another perspective, food for thought.

20 July 2025 | 17 replies
The 50/30/20 rule says: -- 50% of your take-home pay goes to required things like food, your mortgage, taxes, insurance, car payment, utility bills, etc.,-- 30% goes to optional things, restaurants, hobby expenses, vacations; and -- 20% goes to savings (to be reduced in value by inflation).

18 July 2025 | 11 replies
@Dan Ikon opportunities might include food trucks that cater to the international palate

21 August 2025 | 310 replies
The thing changing the most, by far, is not autos, gold, homes, food etc, IT'S THE DOLLARS PURCHASING POWER.

24 July 2025 | 100 replies
I'd buy a food truck and find a chef who's keen on a side hustle to see what he can make happen.

16 July 2025 | 17 replies
Both do list food spoilage due to power outages or equipment failure as something that can be covered under renters insurance, depending on the specific policy and circumstances.This is a quote from Allstate's website: "If your refrigerated products spoil because of a power failure or mechanical failure, you may be eligible to have those products covered by your insurance policy."

13 July 2025 | 2 replies
I’ve been exploring potential ways to utilize and develop the property, and a few ideas that have come to mind include creating a food truck community, a garden or dog park, or a space for outdoor recreational activities.I’m open to advice, creative suggestions, or even potential investment/partnership ideas — would love to hear your thoughts!

18 July 2025 | 14 replies
This is what CA Investor I know is doing buying commercial in the South and Midwest (fast food, coffee shops, medical office space) and his NNN tenants pay the property tax, insurance and maintenance costs).I guess if you can work remotely with your high tech CA paying job and move to another state that could work but I personally wouldn't start selling your CA properties off without some well planned strategy.

18 July 2025 | 12 replies
Core PPI (excluding volatile food and energy) was flat MoM and 2.6% YoY, both also lower than expected.Fun fact, PPI came in lower than all 50 economists in Bloomberg’s survey predicted.What’s the difference in CPI and PPI?

13 July 2025 | 7 replies
At the same time they keep a compost bin not far from the nest, which, from my research, is something yellowjackets are drawn to as a food source and could be the reason the nests were established in that area in the first place.