Living in a Caravan Vs Living in a house

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  • taffyY
    taffyY Forum Participant Posts: 326
    edited March 2018 #242

    It is a totally different thing to get paid for doing the same job as a man from a man sitting ( or lying) there watching a woman doing all the work!  laughing

  • Oneputt
    Oneputt Club Member Posts: 9,154
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    edited March 2018 #243

    I'm sure there must be C but i'm not one of them.  Other than putting up and taking down the awning together I do 99% of the outside chores.  Goes without saying if one is disabled then the other partner would take the lion share of task

     

  • Metheven
    Metheven Club Member Posts: 3,987
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    edited March 2018 #244

    My reply was to [Quote] "the jobs of a man" [Unquote]

    Not to a lazy man, or a lazy woman, or a slave driver or whatever. Just what are these 'jobs of a man', are they written in stone for all to obey, is there a list somewhere?

    In my book there is no defining, and all tasks are for each gender, and to be shared. Only limited by each of our own abilities.

    It was a poor choice of words by 'Cariadon'.frown

    laughing

  • cariadon
    cariadon Forum Participant Posts: 861
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    edited March 2018 #245

    It was a poor choice of words by 'Cariadon'

    If you say so.

  • cyberyacht
    cyberyacht Club Member Posts: 10,224
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    edited March 2018 #246

    I'm not too sure about the viability of the "additional bedrooms" in the weather were have had over the past few days. Anyone fancy the "guest room" at Malcolms?

  • EasyT
    EasyT Forum Participant Posts: 16,194
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    edited March 2018 #247

    Mea Culpa, I just let Fliss empty the house bins and go check the post and shut gate. As my arthritis is having a flare up I was glad to stay inside ..... I will be cooking the evening meal though as usual smile

  • Malcolm Mehta
    Malcolm Mehta Forum Participant Posts: 5,660
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    edited March 2018 #249

    You can spend as long away as you want to from your seasonal pitch. It just costs more to do so! There is also the freedom of the entire site network to choose from about where you want to stay!

  • Malcolm Mehta
    Malcolm Mehta Forum Participant Posts: 5,660
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    edited March 2018 #250

    That would be impossible in our situation, Metheven. Pizza Hut can't give my wife equal rights from me to a driving job for the simple reason that she hasn't got a full driving licence. So I go out to work whilst she pursues domestic tasks; which reminds me, I must get changed into my uniform  as I have to leave for work in 15 minutes. My wife is staying at home in the caravan whilst I'm at work this evening.

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176
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    edited March 2018 #251

    No, but the polite thing might be to give up your warm caravan bed to your guests and do the freezing awning annex bit yourself..... wink

  • onepjg
    onepjg Club Member Posts: 282
    edited March 2018 #252

    It seems to me that people need to remember that as MM said earlier in this thread, he can’t afford the deposit etc needed for a property. Under those circumstances I think some are a bit ‘heavy’ in their postings. Regardless of how the situation happened, it’s where he has ended up, and he is making the most of it. I suspect that if MM was able to have a mortgage free house and sufficient retirement income for a caravan and nice lifestyle, then he would grab it. Personally it’s not my cup of tea, and I’ve always tried to plan ahead, but sometimes life just kicks you. 

     

  • Milothedog
    Milothedog Forum Participant Posts: 1,433
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    edited March 2018 #253

    I have to disagree ? He is constantly trying to convince everyone that his lifestyle is better and has openly said he would hate to live in a house and not be able to move around the country. 

    Good like to him, but not for me cool

    Then there is the train of thought its all just a big wind up. wink

     

  • EasyT
    EasyT Forum Participant Posts: 16,194
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    edited March 2018 #254

    Then there is the train of thought its all just a big wind up. 

    I rarely take the train

  • Malcolm Mehta
    Malcolm Mehta Forum Participant Posts: 5,660
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    edited March 2018 #255

    It is true that owning property is unaffordable and therefore no longer an option for me. 

  • Malcolm Mehta
    Malcolm Mehta Forum Participant Posts: 5,660
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    edited March 2018 #256

    We did a lot of touring when we first bought the caravan in 2015, Oneputt: the Lake District, Scotland, the Peak district, Wales, Dorset and Cornwall. By November 2015 we had done six months of touring around UK before I got a job.

  • Malcolm Mehta
    Malcolm Mehta Forum Participant Posts: 5,660
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    edited March 2018 #257

    We accommodated 7 people in our outfit, including ourselves, Kj, whilst touring UK in June 2015 using club sites with full facilities. There was no queue for our caravan washroom because they used the club toilet blocks for their ablutions.

  • cariadon
    cariadon Forum Participant Posts: 861
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    edited March 2018 #258

    does that mean that if the money was there you would live in a house like the rest of us.

     

  • Malcolm Mehta
    Malcolm Mehta Forum Participant Posts: 5,660
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    edited March 2018 #259

    Probably not because I would prefer to have the money in the bank and use it to get a life! If I had a property worth half a million quid, I would prefer to sell it and have the money in the bank in cash savings. I could give up work and be fully retired and do a lot more touring.

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176
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    edited March 2018 #260

    You previously mentioned these were paying guests that you took on a tour. 

  • Malcolm Mehta
    Malcolm Mehta Forum Participant Posts: 5,660
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    edited March 2018 #261

    That's right, brue.

  • Milothedog
    Milothedog Forum Participant Posts: 1,433
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    edited March 2018 #262

    "I would prefer to have the money in the bank and use it to get a life!"

    So are you saying that despite all your previous post about how life on the open road (your quote) is great and your much better of than the rest of us because  we are all tied to bricks and mortar, that it's not quite as good as you would have us believe wink

  • KjellNN
    KjellNN Club Member Posts: 8,717
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    edited March 2018 #263

    I think the better plan, if all your assets were tied up in bricks and mortar, would be to sell that property, downsize to something half that price to keep as a base and use the other £250k to supplement the pension and spend on touring, if that was what you really wanted to do.

    That way you have the best of both worlds.

    The property could always be rented out if you really did not want to live in it for a long period.

    However, I think you would find that most retired/older people who have homes worth £500k+ also have substantial savings and/or good pensions that mean they have  no need to sell their homes to enjoy extended holidays and an enjoyable life.

  • Malcolm Mehta
    Malcolm Mehta Forum Participant Posts: 5,660
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    edited March 2018 #264

    I heard on the radio news this afternoon that a number of homes in Sussex and Surrey are without water due to burst pipes and other related problems because of the recent freezing temperatures. So I consider myself fortunate that I have avoided such problems by living in a caravan.

  • Malcolm Mehta
    Malcolm Mehta Forum Participant Posts: 5,660
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    edited March 2018 #265

    Renting out property can also have its problems, Kj. As a landlord, you would be responsible for the maintenance and upkeep of the property and all the expense that goes with it.

    Perhaps the best plan, if you really must have a house, would be equity release that would free up the money into cash savings.

  • cariadon
    cariadon Forum Participant Posts: 861
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    edited March 2018 #266

    You might have, but I think your poor wife had to struggle to carry water from the dishwashing area, and to defrost the waste outlet pipe. Yes I think YOU were very lucky.

     

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176
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    edited March 2018 #267

    Can I ask why you are liking your own posts?

  • Oneputt
    Oneputt Club Member Posts: 9,154
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    edited March 2018 #268

    Renting out property can also have its problems, Kj. As a landlord, you would be responsible for the maintenance and upkeep of the property and all the expense that goes with it.

    Have you ever rented out a house in the UK Malc?

     

  • Malcolm Mehta
    Malcolm Mehta Forum Participant Posts: 5,660
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    edited March 2018 #269

    Because I decided I like what I say, brue!wink

  • Malcolm Mehta
    Malcolm Mehta Forum Participant Posts: 5,660
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    edited March 2018 #270

    Yes, I used to rent out spare rooms to paying guests in the late 70s and early 80s and I remember it being fraught with problems.

  • Oneputt
    Oneputt Club Member Posts: 9,154
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    edited March 2018 #271

    Rooms in the 1970's and 80's hmm you still haven't told us what the fraught problems were.  Did you have planning for a HMO, or did you do it 'under the radar' so to speak?