4 October 2025 | 1 reply
If you can buy it right, creative terms could make it work, but at $240k cash or full sub2, yeah… you’re squeezing a pretty dry stone, I really hope this helps you a bit, I sent you DM on BP and hope you can assist.
11 October 2025 | 23 replies
They are designed to get wet and then dry.
12 October 2025 | 437 replies
I guess the well has run dry.
15 October 2025 | 72 replies
So many of the builds I've visited, some multiple times, seem to be frozen in time: the homes are dried-in (roof paper, windows and doors), tiled floors, drywall installed, and then a dead-stop.
1 October 2025 | 1 reply
But for me, If I am wholesaling, Ill be at one of the higher ends of the investor offer ratio and they know they will be able to sell it rather than having a wholesaler string them along for two weeks and leave them high and dry when they cant find a buyer.
2 October 2025 | 32 replies
It dries fast, walk able within 24 hours.
9 October 2025 | 22 replies
Hmmm, that's like saying I'll become a firefighter next year when I learn how to connect a hose and dry it when finished.
6 November 2025 | 192 replies
We have winter dry out with fans.. the guy who owns that has thousands of fans going in the northwest..
1 October 2025 | 9 replies
Directmail has dried up, and now we rely on MLS which becomes saturated with other wholesalers and ourselves lol.
1 October 2025 | 13 replies
A thousand gallon tank, which would be about the size of a small-to-average septic tank, with a cabin with 2-4 people staying, is likely going to fill up in less than a week unless they've piped the grey water (washer, shower, kitchen sink) somewhere else like a dry well.