Houseboats are the only sensible investment right now.
Well, only if you properly triangulate your ISA savings rate against the hull’s composite strength and the iceberg risk.
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Houseboats are the only sensible investment right now.
I have a friend who lives in a boat on the themes, it’s enormous inside, 2 bedrooms, 2 studies, 2 en-suites bedrooms and then a separate bathroom. Open plan kitchen with an island and even a corner sofa![]()
Houseboats are the only sensible investment right now.
Fake lawn on the roof?
They cost a small fortune to run annually though, more than houses in some cases if you want to stay in a nice convenient marina for part of the year.
I can rent you my boat when the time comes.dOnT oVeRsTrEtCh; i.e. buy a boat is the only safe and mediocre existence permitted.
If we live together I will pay you doubleI can rent you my boat when the time comes.
Caravans? Surely they are cheap. Just park up in public space. Even better - keep a couple of horses and use them to tow you from town to town
Just go the whole hog and wild camp in the middle of a roundabout. Basically a tramp but at least you will save the Benjamin's.
If I remember correctly there was an OCUK movement promoting groups to create bonfires in places like that to group-cook gruel. What ever happened to that lot?
Just go the whole hog and wild camp in the middle of a roundabout. Basically a tramp but at least you will save the Benjamin's.
Those talking about rising sea levels in the future affecting house prices; what do you propose is a safe amount above sea level then in the UK for the next X number of years? Surely this is not something we have to worry about in our lifetimes? A quick google suggests a couple of cm at worst annually in some specific areas? I would have thought this is only likely to affect the most extreme edge cases in coastal or specific low lying areas in the East Midlands?
if anything was going to happen .. do you think banks would be lending out £300k plus for a house near water ? yeah they don't mind if it's a once and a while thing .. there money is still safe ..but a tidal uplift of 15ft ??Tbh I think insurance companies will be the driving factor in viability of flood risk real estate long before the average Joe. York would be a classic example as it's a sought after area but prone to floods.
I'd imagine a majority of residents in the UK are ok with the once a generation flood risks until theyre more common and premiums go daffy or insurers refuse to cover flood dmg. Even then knowing us Brits there'd be the stubborn lot refusing to move or snapping up the houses at the bottom of the hill for big discounts xd
Here's a handy guideJust go the whole hog and wild camp in the middle of a roundabout. Basically a tramp but at least you will save the Benjamin's.