Main Menu

Travel.

Started by Scrumpy, Yesterday at 01:39:02 PM

« previous - next »

Scrumpy

I have put this thread up because I was interested in what others were saying on Village News..

I have travelled to many countries...
As a child we were excited to go on a (yearly) coach trip to Littlehampton..
Mum would bake pies and make sandwiches .. We went with a group of friends.. Stopping off at a pub along the way.. We were all happy and sang as we travelled along..

My children/ grandchildren travel far today, thinking nothing of it..
They talk in thousands.. !!!  I don't remember having a thousand pounds when I was young..
I doubt I even said 'Thousand' when talking about money..
Don't ask me.. I know nuffink..

klondike

You need rather a lot of those to get a house these days. My first cost £2,500 but shortly after there was a huge boom in prices - I'm not sure quite why and when I moved about 18 month later it sold for £5,400 not that it helped me particularly as the one I bought cost more. I don't recall the exact price but know it was over £6,000. There were other houses I had that pretty much doubled in value but none in so short a timescale as that first one. It would be worth a bit over £200k now going by the prices others in that area sell for.


                  Checkout your Wordle stats

Mups

Yes Klondie, I remember those days too.
Our first brand new-build home at Irchester, was around  £2,400, too.   Hardly seems possible now, does it.
We had the option of having an attached garage built too,  for an extra £220.   
You could barely buy a decent tent for that now!

Mind you,   wages and cost of living  were also far less than they are now, too.

Michael Rolls

Susa n, my first wife, and I bought a three bed semi in 1958 for £5999. It. Was in Surbiton although not the most expensive area, a house we really liked was £10k.
A couple of years ago, perhaps a bit less, an identical house a couple of doors away was on the market 'offers over £750,000!'
Thank you for the days, the days you gave me
[email protected]

Mups

I wonder how these unrealistic house prices can be justified?   
I mean,  what's changed?  A house is still the same bricks and mortar,  garden size,  driveway,  etc that it always was,   so why such ridiculous  price increases?
And even many posher areas that were,  are no longer as desirable as they were years ago, with many new-builds swamping every bit of greenery there was.

klondike

Anything is worth what it can be sold for. More people want houses than there are houses available so prices are high.

I hasten to add that this has absolutely nothing to do with unfettered mass immigration into our wonderful multicultural society.


                  Checkout your Wordle stats

Mups

Quote from: klondike on Yesterday at 10:04:08 PMAnything is worth what it can be sold for. More people want houses than there are houses available so prices are high.

I hasten to add that this has absolutely nothing to do with unfettered mass immigration into our wonderful multicultural society.

But why?   Who are all these people who suddenly need a house,  regardless of price? Where do they get the money from?   Where are they all coming from if its not from abroad?

They are building on every field they can get their hands on round this way,  they are all going to be houses or solar panels soon.    Does that mean all farm animals will have to spend their miserable lives shut in barns soon, and never see a blade of grass or feel sunshine?   The labour and food costs involved will rocket the prices of meat and dairy, and no more free range eggs ever again.

klondike

Why indeed. A total mystery. I know it can't be mass immigration because our leaders have told us it isn't.


                  Checkout your Wordle stats

Michael Rolls

And we believe every word from the lying scum
Thank you for the days, the days you gave me
[email protected]