I thought everyday was a new season here..
As for the trees and rivers,this is a picture from out back door at in-lawsView attachment 252252
And this is a picture on my powerline R.O.W,View attachment 252253
Well, goes to show ya what I know! WOW!
I thought everyday was a new season here..
As for the trees and rivers,this is a picture from out back door at in-lawsView attachment 252252
And this is a picture on my powerline R.O.W,View attachment 252253
My brother-in-law has run a successful paving (blacktopping) company for many years. I think he has up to about 5 or 6 employees. He lives in a nice home and drives good cars and talks retirment....so I think he has done well. He mostly does residential and small commercial jobs....but has taken on some large parking lots at times (I think the small jobs are more profitable).
Anyway.....he is getting too old to cut the mustard (the paving biz is hot , hard work) .....and wants a younger guy to come in and take it over. Basically he'd sell the biz for the machinery value and his time during the year or so transition time. So far....he has not found anyone that can swing the deal with him. He says nobody wants to work....or has even a small amount of money...etc etc.
I would think there are other small biz owners (such as his) that want out too. Not sure how you find them.....but I'm sure they are out there.
As I like to say.....you gotta mine allot of dirt to find YOUR diamond.
As a native Californian I encourage you to "Get out of Dodge." We left two years ago for the Cumberland plateau in Tennessee. I can't say enough about how nice the people here are. Except for a couple of years in my early forties I lived in California all my life. Those other 2-1/2 I lived in rural East Texas attending school to get a teaching degree. While people were cordial enough, it was obvious that I couldn't become a part of the community, at least not for 10 years or more. Here it's a whole different story. The native Tennesseans and the migrants from all over the country have been genuinely nice, friendly and accepting. Land prices are quite reasonable compared to California, taxes are low ($900+/- on a $300K house) no income tax although sales tax is close to 10% and is levied on everything, including food. The politicians are sane and not trying to support everyone and his brother and don't try to restrict whatever you want to do. Currently gasoline is about $3.50. My car tags this year for a 2010 luxury vehicle were $14. I really like it here and wouldn't move back. Oh, and unless you get into a big city, you won't be seeing any traffic cams.
Nice idea, except just a word of advice. Yes there are areas in the northeast where farmers are just trying to hold on to their family owned farms that they have to sell soon.Reason is of course taxes , taxes, taxes! Upstate N.Y. has beautiful land no shortage of good clean water 4 seasons and beautiful landscapes, lots of trees and great soil, and many 100 acre farms all around me. We have it all, but the one thing that kills the dream here is cost, taxes, fuel for tractors, trucks, cars, home heating. Thread carefully, and good luck.
DevilDog
ya well high in relation to residential rates. My jet sky trailer costs $30 for a 10 year license tag. but my horse trailer costs $25 per year. they should both cost $3/year HEHE. Man im cheap.Auto tags are cheap for personal cars/trucks, but commercial rigs can get spendy (i pay $5.00/yr on a flatbed trailer, but pay $60/yr on my commercial van and $150 on my 2005 f350 4x4. My wifes 94 dodge is about $40/yr as i recall.
That's funny, :laughing: I can only dream of having those high commercial license rates. :drool: