Crash???
https://www.compass.com/listing/730-...5728356242305/
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Crash???
https://www.compass.com/listing/730-...5728356242305/
Sent from my iPhone using TGR Forums
$100,000,000.00 and no ski racks or tuning room? fuckin' posers...
and what the fuck is with that statue of a dude jerkin off?
https://www.compass.com/m/48c3ebf08c...266/origin.jpg
The Farm To Market Bakery is the alter ego of The Rhododendron Cafe in Bow, and Breadfarm (she didn't even get the name right) makes the best bread in two counties. Both could be found in a tourism book (if that's still a thing) but there are way more interesting places in Edison.
Similarly, Old Town and The Horseshoe are Bellingham's oldest restaurants, the former being one of the best breakfast & lunch spots in town, and the latter being a greasy spoon on one side, and dive bar on the other. They, along with Spark museum are certainly Bellingham institutions, but the notion that they attract tourists is a stretch.
Gruff Brewing is a block away from Boundary Bay. I'm guessing the reason it was chosen over the dozen other breweries in town is the view. Same goes for Cider Co. (not meant as a put down - both are good).
Carnal and Makeworth are newer, and definitely still have a buzz. Rock & Rye is an offshoot from Bayou on Bay's bar side. They and Taylor Farms are de rigueur mentions for tourists who've never had real/fresh shellfish.
No, it’s down over the edge of the groomer, shielded by some trees and it’s near bottom of the mountain. The somewhat unique quality to Aspen Mountain is that there are only ~10 houses that actually have ski in/out access touching the resort and maybe 75-100 condos units.
Absolutely stupid price, but it’s a special house in a way.
Here's one for those who feel the Aspen house is a bit pricey: https://www.point2homes.com/CA/Home-...x=3&bsft_tv=26
That pool doesn't suck.
The austere staging makes it seem a bit cold and uninviting to me, though. Would not buy. :)
Big Sky pre-IKON.
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One would think the sheer unaffordability if all the cool places, and the nation in general, there will be some new cool places down the line.
Little towns that grow, where are they?
Fun little place. Done a ton of skiing right up the road. Thru hiked npt 3x. The adk is the home range
RE in the adk is pretty expensive these days. https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/2...ource=txtshare
That's a lot of land under the same ownership. A few giant Texas ranches have gone up for sale but the biggest I've read about was around 1/5 that size.
anyone looking for housing in Telluride? Unfortunately, the $12k/month rental price does not include utilities
https://www.telluridenews.com/classi...27cecf3e9.html
they are everywhere and I have a nice list going we can meet up someday and I"ll let you know the facts
anything on the rei/outside magazine best fucking places for dipshits to live list gets runned over and ruined
my ex is part owner of a 20k acre ranch in texas its just been part of the family for a few generations and she got stuck with a slice of it which she has never been to thrilled about meanwhile the family as a whole is one of the largest landowners in the country its alot to wrap your head around
45 million is fair price
but ski in and ski out walk to downtown private large lot that shit doesn't grown on trees like suburbs do
if aspen ever decides to let single family homes be built again (I thought breck was fucking up on their green building we care about the environment and the local worker shit and short term rental issues) but aspen is on a whole nother level of fucking stupidity I digress but you'd be able to squeeze one more house in on that acre of land or buldoze the dam thing and build a condo tower
the gorsuch family takes the winning for that right now
since aspen won't let people build homes anymore they just added a 40% surcharge to real estate prices gov't planning at it's best and since most of the town council in living in subsized gov't housing they don't really understand how the real world works
A couple weeks ago Snapt mentioned that hotel bookings in Teton Valley were down 75% compared to last year.
It has been an eerily quiet summer so far. Campgrounds that were full all last summer and the year before are at 1/3 capacity. Trailheads and boat launches have plenty of parking, etc. I think middle class people from SLC and Pocatello and Idaho Falls aren't willing or able to splurge for summer family vacation 2022.
Inventory is also way up, but asking prices are elevated still. Feels like something has to give.