Anonymous wrote:EXTRA LIVING SPACE. We moved from 1500 square feet to 3300 when we moved from the city to the burbs, and my life is better because of it. It is less cluttered, easier to clean, we are not on top of each other, everyone has their own space, kids can have friends over.
Anonymous wrote:Sigh. OP, why on earth would you buy a lake house to rent out at the expense of extra living space for your family?
What a hassle.
Anonymous wrote:IME if you get a beach house or lake house in a popular area with other amenities like good restaurants, then you'll use it or can rent it out if not.
Cabins in the woods are fun for novelty but not every weekend unless you're an avid hunter or fisherman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will you be going to the lake for all weekends and vacations? What happens if you want to see something else or have sports commitments? We have neighbors with vacation property and when their kids were little we never saw them as they were always there and didn't build as much community with their regular neighbors. Now kids are in sports and they don't go as often. It's all a time and money trade off. I wouldn't get vacation property as I don't want to be tied to one place. Eventhough we often do a week vacation at the same place but we rent it and don't have to worry about maintenance etc.
lol who cares about “building community with their regular neighbors?”
All the people on this site who complain that they have no friends, don't get invited to parties or sleepovers and are alone all weekends.
Anonymous wrote:Key is to buy a second home somewhere people want to be, and you would rather be. A house by a lake in WV isn't something anyone actually wants; it's a burden. A house in the Colorado mountains a couple miles from Breckenridge won't be a burden at all.
Anonymous wrote:We almost bought a house on the water in Annapolis when our first was little. Since it was only 35-40 minutes away, we could have gone all the time and we loved the idea of the kids having memories there together. Now they are 11, 9, and 6 and I'm really glad we didn't. We are already so busy on weekend with sports and other kid activities and the kids want to stay in town to do things with their friends and have sleepovers, etc. I know we would never really go to Annapolis. Even in the summer, there is summer swim team and then sleepaway camp. I think we will revisit the plan when our youngest is in high school and we will use it more as a step toward retirement.