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The Watercooler
3 years and I am getting a tiny house, real tiny.
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<blockquote data-quote="Mattsmom277" data-source="post: 563432" data-attributes="member: 4264"><p>We at my house are fascinated by these homes! S/O and I truly believe we would be happy as clams living in one of these once we are empty nesters. Meanwhile, easy child has begged to not wait for her to do high school and go off to uni. She begs regularly for us to buy two and fashion some sort of enclosed glassed in "sunporch" that could be accessed via inside doors of both houses, so that it could be possible for her to live in one, s/o and I in the other, but technically in the same residence due to the connector portion. She would then take her tiny house to uni and save living costs during her uni life. We thought we were crazy in that we are hugely considering it! I have about 12-18 months until I will be getting a crim. injuries comp payment, and I pledged to spend it on something that won't be fleeting. We are considering paying outright for 2 of these. I feel less crazy reading another member is considering it! We have spent many an hour reading online, website searching, checking out the pros of new vs used (the market for used is huge, and some even come with land ownership for more semi permanent structures), and oh my youtube has videos galore. People sure love to do videos about tiny houses. I say power to you if you go this route! It is obviously not for everyone. But it sure can hold tons of advantages for those who can handle the small space. I find it cozy personally. I love that you can go more simplistic (and obviously less expensive) or you can go more detailed for extra cash outlay. I've seen some pretty rustic tiny houses. And I've seen some utterly beautiful ones. I know for sure I'd have a more than run of the mill wood stove. And mine would be artsy feeling. easy child moved on from studying tiny houses, to checking out gypsy wagons. I would never handle those, but it is unreal how gorgeous some people make them.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mattsmom277, post: 563432, member: 4264"] We at my house are fascinated by these homes! S/O and I truly believe we would be happy as clams living in one of these once we are empty nesters. Meanwhile, easy child has begged to not wait for her to do high school and go off to uni. She begs regularly for us to buy two and fashion some sort of enclosed glassed in "sunporch" that could be accessed via inside doors of both houses, so that it could be possible for her to live in one, s/o and I in the other, but technically in the same residence due to the connector portion. She would then take her tiny house to uni and save living costs during her uni life. We thought we were crazy in that we are hugely considering it! I have about 12-18 months until I will be getting a crim. injuries comp payment, and I pledged to spend it on something that won't be fleeting. We are considering paying outright for 2 of these. I feel less crazy reading another member is considering it! We have spent many an hour reading online, website searching, checking out the pros of new vs used (the market for used is huge, and some even come with land ownership for more semi permanent structures), and oh my youtube has videos galore. People sure love to do videos about tiny houses. I say power to you if you go this route! It is obviously not for everyone. But it sure can hold tons of advantages for those who can handle the small space. I find it cozy personally. I love that you can go more simplistic (and obviously less expensive) or you can go more detailed for extra cash outlay. I've seen some pretty rustic tiny houses. And I've seen some utterly beautiful ones. I know for sure I'd have a more than run of the mill wood stove. And mine would be artsy feeling. easy child moved on from studying tiny houses, to checking out gypsy wagons. I would never handle those, but it is unreal how gorgeous some people make them. [/QUOTE]
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3 years and I am getting a tiny house, real tiny.
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