lol
Curling's so boring, though. How about hockey? We could put up a thousand-story goalie robot to block them. Maybe a couple of defensemen robots too.
I do curls when I go to the gym. I'm with otzi, I certainly wouldn't care to watch anyone doing them.
"timberridge is terminally vapid" -- a fortune cookie in Yueyang
I would do this: https://youtu.be/HXB0f7C-VQA
Assume you were home shopping and came across a 50s house with an underground oil tank that was never officially decomissioned. Would you consider making an offer on the house?
^^ not without an inspection by someone who knows that type of shit. I certainly don't, so trust the pros.
In a normal market, that's what I would do; in this market, apparently contingencies in your offer are a guarantee you won't win. Of course, having the "winning" offer and having to shell out for a huge remediation job would be the worst outcome. I admit I've been slightly swayed by a few friends who had to do this and had no leaking - "it wasn't a big deal", but yeah, it's a pig in a poke and a really bad outcome, while unlikely, would be a huge problem.
L.U.S.T.
As a point of reference the my wife’s grandparents had one at their house when they passed away. Took two years to jump through all the hoops and regulations before the tank was removed, ground deemed clean, and they were able to sell. Pretty much ate up the entire estate with the removal, disposal, and carrying costs before it could be sold.
House was all that was left of the estate. Rest of the cash went into permits, lawyers, and removal costs along with taxes and heating costs. Costs were way more than 10k, closer to 100k for just the clean up. Tank was under garage floor so that complicated things. It took 3 rounds of cleanup and testing before the state okayed the sale.
I would not assume that you can buy that house and only spend 5-10k for cleanup. Certainly not in VT with the state requirements and oversight.
Bookmarks