| Making
$$$$$$$ on Vacation
By: Claude W. Diamond
Imagine
creating a lease purchase deal while on vacation which would
result in a 100K profit. Yep, I did it again. This is not
the first time I ventured doing some business while on holiday
with the wife and rugrats.
I began the creation of this wonderful deal while on vacation
at my secret hideaway in ****, Colorado. This is a small
town nestled away on the western slope of the Rocky Mountains
smack dab on the other side of the Continental Divide. My
family and I have been coming here for the last eight years
to enjoy the skiing, hiking and fresh air. It is a pristine
quiet place to get away from it all. Even though it has
a world class ski area and is only 70 miles from Denver,
it’s an area that remains unspoiled. I always get
to recharge my Lease Purchase batteries here. The town consists
of 500 full-time time residents and millions of acres of
sheer national forests and mountains. I always like places
where there are more squirrels than people. Another wonderful
quality is that it is not a celebrity hangout. This is what
ski towns were probably like 50 years ago before the mega
resorts took over. It has the usual array of ski shops,
eclectic restaurants and apres ski haunts, but a new library
is being built in the next town for the area. The developers
are starting to discover the area also, so some appreciation
is occurring. The greatest controversy that the town has
ever had was whether or not to allow a McDonalds to open.
The Search:
We had been talking about getting a home here for some time.
The grand plan (this is Grand County) was that we were going
to live here during the warm months, do a snowbird retreat
in the winter and use the home for ski season, too. We began
asking around if anyone knew of a house for sale or rent.
The local real estate agents were useless and did not return
calls (shocking isn’t it ?); some just didn’t
want to deal with a guy who loves Lease Purchasing. We spoke
with school bus drivers, the local ski bums, some bums without
skis and the hotel owner where we usually stayed. The hotel
owner told us he knew of a home for sale. We went to see
the place and it really fit the bill for us. I got excited
when I found out that it had (believe it or not) 9 separate
phone lines. The home was owned at one time by some boiler
room mail order house that probably sold non stick teflon
furniture in twelve easy monthly payments. To a full-time
Lease Purchase Investor/Consultant/Mentor who utilizes telecommunications
(two business phone lines, a fax, a modem, a cell phone
and voice mail not to mention a private family line) this
was heaven!
The Unmotivated Sarcastic Seller:
We spoke to the owner (Herr Ludwig Von Sheiskoff) who at
the time was building another home up the street. I asked
him if he would consider a rent-to-own arrangement. He laughed
at me and flat out said "no". He exclaimed "don’t
you realize that this is a sellers’ market" and
he mentioned that he might even raise the price because
so many potential buyers were looking at the home. The thought
of buying rather than lease purchasing and on top of that
paying retail is blasphemy to a creative real estate investor!
I told my wife (lovely CJ ) that the home in the mountains
would have to wait and she agreed. We decided that if we
were persistent the right deal, at the right price, would
eventually come along. (That’s what you say when you
have been living with an investor for a long time!)
The New Motivated Seller:
Well 6 months went by and we returned to our little mountain
town to do a some skiing. One day turned into a windy, cold
Rocky Mountain snowstorm and we decided to take the day
off from skiing. I began wondering whatever happened to
the home we had looked at. I just so happened to have the
phone number from Herr Von Sheiskoff in my Diamond Success
Planner (I save everything in this wonderful organizer).
I hesistantly gave the Von Sheiskoffs a call (remembering
my last humiliating experience) and he was delighted that
I called! "Of course I remember you Herr Diamond"
he exclaimed, "I will be right down to your hotel!"
"But it’s a blizzard outside!" I exclaimed.
"No problem, I have my four wheel drive. Please let
me give you a personal tour of my home and my lovely town".
About 15 minutes later he arrived at the hotel (it was still
snowing like the blazes). "Herr Diamond I am so glad
you and your delightful family are still interested in my
home. Please, tell me some more about that rent-to-own idea
of yours". I pondered why he was spreading the Bavarian
liverwurst charm on so thickly and wondered why he had had
this remarkable attitude change.
Next month in Creative Real Estate Magazine I will get into
the nitty gritty of my negotiations, terms and final deal
that resulted in a 100K profit with Herr Von Sheiskoff all
while the snow storm raged on! Auf Wiedersehen!
****Hey, if I told you where it was it wouldn’t be
a secret hidaway. There are enough clues here anyway to
figure out it all out just get a good Colorado Map.
Part II: Making $$$$$$$ on Vacation, the Anthology
of a great deal.
When I last left you*, my family and I were hibernating
(during a major snowstorm) in our hotel room in the wilds
of the Colorado Rockies. We were awaiting the arrival of
the miraculously transformed seller Herr Von Sheiskoff and
his four wheel drive wunderbar car. He was going to give
us a quick look at "his" town, view some local
real estate and to see his home, the one that we wanted
to lease purchase. This short trip turned into the extended
Gilligan Island 3 hour tour. He took us everywhere except
to the very place that we wanted to see; the house.
The Home: We finally got there and our host informed us
that the home was presently rented to a couple of nice skiers
(AKA: snowboarder/ski bums) who worked at the local ski
area. The good news was that they would be moving out at
the end of ski season. We looked over the home both inside
and out. We loved the house inspite of the untidy (nice
word for dirtbag) tenants. As creative real estate investors
for many years, CJ and I have seen many a home that had
potential if you could see past the dirty carpets, dishes
stuffed in the oven and BVDs™ hanging on top of the
TV rabbit ears. (Although I do believe that the underwear
improves reception).
Rule #1: Learn to see past the surface problems on a home
and look at the whole deal. There was nothing in this beautiful
home that a good cleaning and a little paint could not overcome.
Rule #2: Never try to sell a home conventionally with tenants
occupying the dwelling unless you are willing to substantially
discount. This unsightly appearance was what was turning
off most of the buyers (in a sellers’ market) who
were coming to take a look. To the seasoned investor, this
however, is an opportunity.
The home was located in a great developed section of the
small town with all of the modern conveniences. The house
was roomy enough for the two kids to have their own rooms,
large master bedroom, guest rooms and the requisite home
office. My Home Office is really important to me as I will
be doing my lease purchase business/deals from here the
majority of the time. The office comes with a killer view
of the great Continental Divide, but alas there was no wet
bar. I would have to learn to rough it, after all this is
the wild & woolly Rocky Mountains. The home appears
to have been designed by a local Frank Lloyd Wright wannabee
and had some unusual characteristics, such as a metal roof
designed to let the snow fall off. These are great amenities
in a ski country home that can receive close to 200 to 300
+ inches of snow per year. It is on a wooded acre lot in
a super neighborhood and has all the modern city services
like water, sewer, electric and of course, dedicated phone
service. (Phone service and availability of communication
lines are not to be taken for granted here!)
Remember this is a small town (approximately 500 people)
and many of the locals have three part-time jobs and are
still chopping wood for heat and sharing party lines for
telephone service.Note: Just because I like the small town
rustic style does not mean I want to become Paul Bunyan.
My idea of roughing it is wearing a flannel shirt in a Sheraton
Hotel without Cable TV. The Offer: We (CJ & I) discussed
in advance that we would contain any enthusiasm which could
be interpreted as a strong buying signal. (The Be Cool Rule).
My new pal Ludwig drove us to our hotel and as the kids
unloaded and began playing outside looking for yellow snow
(a NYC game that I taught them, whatta Dad), I began the
negotiation process in my usual delicate manner.
* See prior Creative Real Estate Magazine Article
Me: "Well Ludwig" (we were now on a first name
basis), "what's your bottom line here?" "What's
your best price on a three year Lease with an Option to
Purchase?" I then closed my mouth (hard for me to do)
and waited to see who would blink first.
Ludwig sat in silence for what seemed an eternity, but in
reality was only a few seconds. His face was contorting,
straining and turning various shades of red and purple.
He looked like he ate a bad wienersnitzel and then he broke
his silence.
Herr Sheiskoff: "Vell Claude, I vill do a one year
rent-to-own and I might even carry back the mortgage since
I own the home free and clear, but I couldn’t even
begin to consider selling my home for less than......"
He blurted out a price, that to my amazement was $69,000.00
less than his original asking price. The terms were great,
too; no bank and one whole year to exercise the mortgage.
My heart skipped a beat. This was where the fun began. This
is the stuff I love about creative investing and I was smiling
inside recalling how I was laughed at a few short months
ago just for inquiring about a rent-to-own. Now it was my
turn to laugh, but on the inside.
Part III: Making $$$$$$$ on Vacation, the Anthology
of a great deal.
or
Lease Option Heaven
Recap: This is the continuing (phew) story of my dealings
with Herr Von Sheiskoff structuring a Lease Purchase deal
100K under market in the wild and wooley Colorado Rockies.
Last time I left you, I was deep in negotiations and snow
while sitting with Ludwig Sheiskoff in his four wheeler
wunderbar car in our hotel parking lot (during a major snowstorm).
He had just dropped his sales price an astounding $69,000.00
in one swift swoop. This is the same man who 6 months ago
told me that it was a seller’s market and he would
never do a Lease with an Option to Purchase. It is amazing
what a few bad tenants and some complaining neighbors can
accomplish.
The Deal: Herr Von Sheiskoff and I got along like a couple
of Dachunds at a butcher shop staring at some Bratwurst.
He seemed relieved that I was still interested in his home
and he wanted me to do the lease purchase deal with him
ASAP. We negotiated a one year lease (I wanted longer) with
option to purchase for $1500.00 per month and $5000.00 down.
This same home would rent for that much per week during
the premium ski season. Remember this was a large home on
an acre of wooded land near a resort ski area. We shook
hands (on the tentative numbers), I told him that I would
discuss the deal with my better half and that I would call
him when I arrived home in San Diego the next day.
Lease Option Leverage Heaven: Wow ! I was going to control
a high six figure home for less than 1% of the purchase
price with an option to purchase, way under market sales
price and rent. Now that’s leverage America! A lease
purchase is basically the use of two distinct real estate
techniques; the rental and the option (right) to purchase.
If used properly, it can give you the most bang for your
buck with the same control as though you were the owner.
All this without the overhead, liability and in some cases
the higher payment. It can be utilized to get you into your
dream home and is a wonderful and profitable way to generate
consistent cash flow without the investment, tenant and
toilet headaches. All you need is the specialized knowledge
and the proper contracts.
Celebration: I went back to my hotel room "smiling"
and told my lovely CJ that I thought we had finally found
the right deal and we would have our mountain home. We decided
to have an early celebration and opened a good bottle of
California Merlot ($6.99 @ Price Club/Costco; Guru Shopping
Tip Dept.) and munched some cheese and imported crackers.
I felt like I had just left Monty Hall having chosen Door
Number 3 with the new Lincoln Towncar behind it. I should
have realized that this celebration was unbelievably premature.
Back Home: The next day we returned to 75 degree San Diego
weather with the kids, skis and an assorted oddball collection
of single ski gloves and socks. (Just where do those things
disappear to?) The first thing any good investor does when
he returns home is to get a cup of freshly ground Starbucks™
French Roast Coffee, check the mail and of course, return
telephone messages.
The Lease Purchase Agreement: I utilized one of my special
lease purchase agreements. I have eight different contracts
which I have personally designed and copyrighted just for
my lease purchase business. I punched the numbers into my
computer and watched the lovely contract spit out from my
inkjet printer. It was the short 3 page version that I like
to use. It has an absence of legal jargon and utilizes some
plain understandable English. It contains everything I need
without intimidating the Seller.
Contract Note: I often see contracts that are so long that
they make War and Peace look like a short story. They contain
so many conflicting paragraphs with so much ambigious language
that they are litigation heaven.
I signed the parchment, enclosed the $5000.00 check, placed
my best VooDoo goodluck spell on the contract and sent everything
overnight. I sat back in my comfortable home office recliner,
feet up on the desk and felt confident that this was a done
lease purchase deal.
The next day I checked my faithful Friday™ voice mail
machine.* I noticed that it was holding many messages including
three from my old friend Ludwig in his best Boris Badinoff
accent (remember Rocky and Bullwinkle)? I picked up the
phone with a little trepidation, after all, what could possibly
go wrong?
Little did I suspect that this was the beginning of a series
of crisis negotiations, lawyers and stuff that would ensue
with Mr. Sheiskoff and almost kill our deal.
I guess the old saying is true, ‘into every life a
little Sheiskoff must fall’!
Part IV: Making $$$$$$$ on Vacation, the Anthology
of a great deal.
or
Are there Lawyers in Heaven ?
Recap: The Contract Crisis. I have received a phone call
from the Seller Herr Ludwig Von Sheiskoff on our pending
lease purchase deal in Colorado. There are problems.
The Battle of the Contracts
Ludwig was yelling at me! He had decided that he didn't
like my contract and sent me his version of a lease purchase
agreement that was copied from some Guru’s $9.95 Book
that he bought from an infomercial on channel 989 Bombay,
India. We had entered an area that I fondly remember from
law school called the ‘Battle of the Contracts’.
We both wanted to use our own contracts. The only problem
was that the agreement that Sheiskoff used was reminiscent
of the old Florida Land deals (property under water that
was sold to naive buyers)! In fact, Sheiskoff’s contract
was so bad that he became confused and made a costly error.
He inadvertantly gave me $9,000.00 in rent credit which
we never even discussed in our negotiations, but he had
already placed in his contract. He was embarrassed, but
appreciated my honesty when I made him aware of his error.
In an effort to resolve our problems and reach a compromise
quickly, I came up with a reluctant solution.
Smart Note: Remember the successful LONG TERM creative investor
utilizes his specialized knowledge to become a problem solver.
I committed the ultimate sin and retained Rocky Mountain
Louie-Attorney at Law and part-time driveway snow plow man.
Louie was a very local Attorney who considered red checkered
flannel a contemporary fashion statement. Lou loved the
opportunity to get into the fricassee. I had brought Lou
into the deal in hopes to merge the two agreements into
something that was equitable for both of us. Lou basically
combined the agreements, but still retained many of my special
passages that gave me the control; passages such as the
right of assignment in a Lease with an option to purchase.
Honest Lawyer Department: His competence and honesty truly
surprised me. Rocky Mountain Louie actually turned out to
be just what we needed to save the deal (fairy tales can
come true). If this keeps up, next I’ll be writing
about honest politicians and hard working civil servants,
where will it all end? Esquire Lou sent Seller Sheiskoff
and I the contracts which were signed quickly and the battle
of the contracts was resolved. I then had a memorandum recorded
and a local title company was found to open escrow.
Rule #1: Always record a memorandum of your contract in
a deal that you value. A memorandum is basically a way to
let the world know of your interest in a property without
recording the entire contract.
Rule #2: Just because you have a signed lease purchase contract
doesn't mean that you are protected from the owner possibly
selling the home to someone else or over encumbering the
property with a new higher amount loan. Additionally, I
deposited my option money with the escrow/title company.
Rule #3: Create a paper trail. In the event that you have
a reluctant seller who attempts to back out of the deal
you want to prove the intent of the parties. Nothing works
better than coming into the courthouse with a wheelbarrow
full of paper to substantiate your case.
The New New Deal: All was quiet for several weeks and we
began to relax, when lo and behold the phone calls began
again. Herr Von Sheiskoff wondered if I would consider shortening
the lease option to six months instead of one year. I inquired
as to why the sudden request to change the terms. It seemed
that the neighbors were complaining quite strongly about
the renter/ski bums in the house, their loud parties and
assorted cars parked on the street. Herr S. basically wanted
to throw the bums out and stop being a Landlord.
I offered to flat out buy the property and forego the lease
purchase entirely if he would make it worth my while.
Our conversation went like this:
"Well Lugwig I really wasn’t even considering
exercising my option until next summer. What is the best
price you can give me inorder to induce me to close by June
of this year? I secretly was hoping for an additional 5
or 10 k discount.
He then spoke and for the second time in our relationship
I was at a loss for words.
"Ach du Lieber, Claude! I vill reduce the price $31,
000.00 to make it an even $*,***,***.** but zat ist all
I vill do!"
To my amazement he dropped the sales price a second time
significantly; for a total of $100,000.00! That my loyal
CRE reader is a lot of guacamole & chips! I agreed in
a heartbeat and quickly contacted good ‘ol Louie the
red flannel litigator.
"Hey Louie, we need a new contract with a few modifications."
I didn’t need a video phone to know that Lou was smiling
at the other end.
Part V: Making $$$$$$$ on Vacation, the Anthology
of a great deal.
Recap: I have just finished my final negotiations with Herr
Ludwig Von Sheiskoff concerning the closing of my new mountain
home in Colorado. We started with a lease purchase and this
deal has evolved for over 7 months into a sale of our future
semi annual home for 100K under market. We now need to find
the financing to do the deal, furniture to sit on and a
means to move it all!
The Loan:
We were really excited, we finally had our new home all
wrapped up legally. The next step was to get a loan. Frankly,
I expected this to be a snap since we had done so many loans
before on personal and investment properties with our lease
purchase biz. We had more than sufficient down payment and
great credit. I called several mortgage brokers in Denver
and was shocked to find that most conventional lenders would
only fund a home in a resort area with 30 to 40% down (even
with superb credit). I exclaimed to one lender that this
was going to be a full-time residence and it seemed excessive
to put that much down on a homeowner occupied dwelling.
His reply, "sure kid, we hear that line all the time."
Take it or leave it was his attitude, so we left it and
sought other resources. I decided to see if we could do
a reasonable loan in the same town where our new home was
located. A great mortgage broker was recommended to me who
had no problem doing the deal, the only problem was he lived
down the street from my new home.
Note: In a small town it is not the best idea to spill your
financial and personal portfolio guts to a new neighbor.
I decided as a last resort to go to the big local bank (two
tellers, no waiting) and see what they had to offer. A nice
friendly mountain lady (in flannel & cowgirl boots)
sent me to her competitor yonder down the road (what’s
a yonder ?) to an even smaller local bank. I went into this
bank and received 2 or 3 of the requisite "Howdys"
from the employees. (In New Yorkeese this would be the equivalent
of "How ya doin", ya know!)
I felt right at home immediately. There was a living room
arrangement set up right in the middle of the lobby. It
contained a lazyboy chair, a Wall Street Journal (only 2
days old) and fresh coffee (not Starbucks, but drinkable).
I meet the loan rep who said that a loan to purchase a local
home would be no problem (with reasonable terms). She was
right because we were approved for the purchase with full
underwriting in less than 3 days after we finished the application.
This is faster than any loan I have ever done in California.
I was congratulated by the bank president who was dressed
in jeans and a plaid open neck shirt. It is so incredibly
casual out here, we just love it!
The Furniture:
We next needed to figure out what furniture we should take
from our San Diego home to Colorado. CJ in a moment of feminine
inspiration immediately solved that problem, "Claude
let’s just buy new furniture." For those of you
who have never furnished a home from scratch it’s
equivalent to buying another home within a home. After 6
different furniture stores I have come to the decision that
in my next life I will not only deal in lease purchasing,
but in furniture as well.
MOVING:
DISCLAIMER: IF YOU HAVE SMALL CHILDREN OR SUFFER FROM ANY
MEDICAL ABNORMALITIES PLEASE LEAVE THE ROOM AND REFRAIN
FROM READING THIS NEXT SECTION!
Now I have to deal with another nightmare, it’s called
moving! I had a moment of temporary insanity. I was thinking
of renting one of those U Haul ™ - (U Get Exhausted)
rental trucks. Then I began to remember what it was like
when we came out to California in 1986 down Route 66 from
New Jersey in one of these torture wagons. Moving Math:
bad food and 55 miles per hour = a hemorrhoid bumper crop
for the cheapskate driver. I came back to sanity and decided
that I would forego that misery and hire a moving company.
We went to the yellow pages and found the national chain
of the Freddy Krugar Moving Company*. The company sent us
a dapper dressed salesman and told us his company only hired
the finest moving men. I signed about 30 documents for the
moving company (I could hear trees falling) and we were
done.
Two weeks later Freddy and the moving boys came to our California
abode. The elongated moving van ominously drove up and we
could hear the brakes squeal. Freddy and his helpers came
skulking into our kitchen walking on their knuckles. They
were all very hairy and looked as though they hadn’t
shaved or bathed for a week. I wasn’t sure if they
were capable of voice communication until I heard the following
grunt from Freddy’s helper Darwin, "Hey Mr. Diamond,
we sure could use some coffee and a couple dozen donuts
here."
All of a sudden The U Haul Truck ™ didn’t seem
like such a bad idea!
Part 6
Update: Well we finally closed the deal on the Rocky Mountain
home we had found while on vacation in Colorado.
As you recall we started out in May ‘96 with an offer
to our old friend Ludwig Von Sheiskoff and received a humiliating
rejection of our Lease Purchase Offer. Later in December
‘96 Ludwig, upon a second contact had morphed (due
to Tenant & Toiletitis) and now accepted our offer.
Around April ‘97 Ludwig made us a new offer to forego
the Lease Purchase and straight out buy the home at a deal
that was giving $105,000.00 under current market. Needless
to say, we took the offer! What follows is an accounting
of our first few days in our new environment and the conclusion
(phew!) of Making $$$$$ while on Vacation. (Unless I make
this story into a book!)
Day One - The Arrival:
We got to Colorado after about two days of some of the greatest
scenery you have ever seen. Make sure you check out Bryce
Canyon and Zion National Park in Utah. They give new meaning
to the words totally awesome (California Speak for WOW).
We pulled into our new small town (population 523) surrounded
with the beautiful snow covered mountains even though the
temperature was 72 degrees! There was a banner hanging across
Main Street, welcoming folks to the town and announcing
a rodeo and flamethrowing Chili Cookoff.
Since the moving truck with our furniture from the Freddy
Kruger Moving Company wasn’t due for another four
or five days we arranged to stay at the local hotel that
our friends owned. We were greeted with fresh coffee and
a homemade blueberry pie awaiting us inside our room.
Day Two - The Awakening:
We were awoken the next morning at 6:00 A.M. by a phone
call from our mover Freddy Krugar (notice the singular text).
Our conversation went as follows:
Freddy: Hey Mr. Diamond, I’m right down the road from
your hotel by the Mr. Mc Donut store.
Claude: Fred, you’re 4 days early!
Freddy: Didja know they have pretty good donuts in this
town!
Claude: (I finally got Freddy past his fascination with
donuts). Can we start moving the stuff into the house today
?
Freddy: Well we kinda have a little problem.
Claude: What ?
Freddy: I lost my helpers, the Igor brothers around Beaver,
Utah, but hey that’s the moving game. Let’s
just go around the town and find someone to help us.
I hired 3 locals after 2 hours of asking around the town.
(I felt like a panhandler in reverse!) My stuff on the van
consisted of 272 assorted pieces of furniture and boxes
and somehow I was not motivated to help carry any of it.
12 hours later after spending $132.00 to feed this crew
(4 dozen Mr. Mc Donuts, assorted pizzas, burgers and soda)
the move was finished. We had boxes everywhere, but the
house was starting to come together. Freddy informed me
that it is customary to tip the driver; so I gave him a
copy of the latest Lease Purchase Times©.
Day Three - The Neighbors: Early the next morning we hear
a banging noise coming from the backyard. I discover that
it’s the former owner and new neighbor Herr Ludwig
Von Sheiskoff. I sleepily yell out the window and ask Ludwig
what’s up ? "Vell Claude, I just wanted to make
sure your hot tub was all set up and in good working order.
You just go back to sleep Mein friend." Knowing from
past business experience with Herr Sheiskoff I couldn’t
help but feel a strange sensation of impending doom. During
the rest of the day we had several other neighbors come
over in a wonderful American small town tradition to welcome
us. One lady brought over some homemade oatmeal chocolate
chip cookies, another neighbor brought some Rocky Mountain
Wild Flowers and another brought a basket of wine, cheese
and goodies. This was beginning to feel like home.
Day Four - Something’s Wrong DAD!: I thought I would
awake early the next day, sneak out alone in the new four
wheel drive behemoth we had leased (of course) and check
out the views and local scenery. Just as I was starting
to pull away I heard the kids yell, "Hey Daddy, can
we come along?" (Caught again!) After packing them
in, we were tooling along when all of a sudden my 10 year
old Becca exclaims, "Hey, Daddy there is something
really wrong with this place!"
"Huh, what do you mean something wrong, it’s
beautiful here; mountains, trees, wildlife, clean air &
water. What could possibly be wrong", I asked ?
"Everyone we pass on the road here are always smiling
and waving to us and we don’t even know these people.
It’s weird Dad."
At that very moment I knew that moving to the country was
the right thing to do!
Day Five - The Asphalt Gypsies: (this is a whole story in
itself that I will write some other time, but just use your
imaginations).
Day Six - The Hot Tub Blues: Early in the morning I heard
some splashing in our backyard. I was greeted by Mr. and
Mrs. Sheiskoff in MY HOT TUB! "Guten Morgen (Good Morning)
Claude. The vater is fine, Ja !!" I finally figured
out why Ludwig was so diligently working on my hot tub the
previous day!
Science Tip: Sheiskoff does float in hot tubs.
Day Seven- The Reward: CJ and I are sitting on the back
porch with a good glass of delicious (California) Merlot
in hand looking at the sunset upon snow covered mountain
tops while colorful hummingbirds are zipping around us.
The only noise is that of the kids playing and laughing
in the background. This is heaven on earth!
Epilogue:
So there it is dear readers, how to start out controlling
a house in the Rocky Mountains 9200 feet above sea level.
I ended up leasing, optioning and then buying a home and
creating over 100k equity without going insane all within
one year while on vacation. This was only possible due to
one terrific concept called Lease Purchasing.
Thank You Max (my Mentor).
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