Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never buy a house with gas. We specifically looked for all electric and found one, if we had found a house that was only gas we would not have bought it, or we would have converted to electric only. I don't understand what's so great about a gas stove. Yes, our electric bills are quite high but I think part of that is cathedral ceilings and an old heat pump.
Well that would certainly limit your options in the DC area.
Of all the OCD hangups.. why on earth would you demand "NO GAS?" Is it because of the aliens? Irrational fear of your house blowing up? There's really no downside to having gas that I can think of. All energy-using devices are much cheaper to operate, it's better for the environment, and you get a lot more BTUs locally so your water heater will recover faster, house heat up faster, and so on.
As far as cooking, if you don't know what's so great about a gas stove then I assume you've never used one or just think of cooking as something you have to do once in a while. I didn't have one in our prior house for a few years. It was miserable. I got used to it after a while, but when I finally moved back to a house with a gas stove, it was like a great burden had been lifted off my back.
Again - if you aren't much of a cook, or the microwave oven is your go-to kitchen appliance, then I get that; personally, I would never do it again.
Yiu forgot chem trails, LOL!
The only person I know with a gas fear has major anxiety issues. Along with that she is "gluten free", thinks deodorant and cell phone give you cancer, and has to take xanax to function.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never buy a house with gas. We specifically looked for all electric and found one, if we had found a house that was only gas we would not have bought it, or we would have converted to electric only. I don't understand what's so great about a gas stove. Yes, our electric bills are quite high but I think part of that is cathedral ceilings and an old heat pump.
Well that would certainly limit your options in the DC area.
Of all the OCD hangups.. why on earth would you demand "NO GAS?" Is it because of the aliens? Irrational fear of your house blowing up? There's really no downside to having gas that I can think of. All energy-using devices are much cheaper to operate, it's better for the environment, and you get a lot more BTUs locally so your water heater will recover faster, house heat up faster, and so on.
As far as cooking, if you don't know what's so great about a gas stove then I assume you've never used one or just think of cooking as something you have to do once in a while. I didn't have one in our prior house for a few years. It was miserable. I got used to it after a while, but when I finally moved back to a house with a gas stove, it was like a great burden had been lifted off my back.
Again - if you aren't much of a cook, or the microwave oven is your go-to kitchen appliance, then I get that; personally, I would never do it again.
Anonymous wrote:Nobody who can actually cook would ever get an electric stove. It’s always completely ridiculous when dumb realtors claim that there’s a “gourmet kitchen” but there’s an electric stove... sigh.
Anonymous wrote:I'd be more likely not to buy an all electric house.
I don't like electric heat. It dries out the house. I like radiator heat and they have gas furnaces.
I also vastly prefer a gas cooktop (electric oven, however, is ideal).
I also like having gas in case the power goes off. Imagine a winter storm taking down the lines and there's no heat in your house! Power outages from snowstorms happened to us a few times when I was a kid but we still had heat and a gas stove so it was completely fine.
Anonymous wrote:I would never buy a house with gas. We specifically looked for all electric and found one, if we had found a house that was only gas we would not have bought it, or we would have converted to electric only. I don't understand what's so great about a gas stove. Yes, our electric bills are quite high but I think part of that is cathedral ceilings and an old heat pump.