Maybe I could sell all my cameras and fix it up
clint f.
Loc: Priest Lake Idaho, Spokane Wa
A little paint and some curtains it’ll be like new.
The roof only leaks when it's raining.
Goes for $250,000 in Los Angeles.
I think you may have to sell more than your camera...
bnsf wrote:
Sell it to Trump as his new house to live in.
Just had to get a political dig in, eh?
House fires are among the most devastating occurrences that can happen to a person. Unlike almost any other disaster, in a fire a person looses everything. Even metal objects melt.
WayneL wrote:
Maybe I could sell all my cameras and fix it up
Too much work there. Better to knock it down and build from scratch!
DougS
Loc: Central Arkansas
Curmudgeon wrote:
House fires are among the most devastating occurrences that can happen to a person. Unlike almost any other disaster, in a fire a person looses everything. Even metal objects melt.
Another thing with house fires... After a partial fire (mostly smoke/water damage), we had two years to replace what we lost, and MOST things are not replaceable exactly... Fortunately we did not lose everything!
NOTE to everyone! Take photos of every room, drawer, wall, and hidey hole in your home, then store those photos in an off site location (think relative(s) home or bank vault)! And yes, every toothpick! It makes things easier if you have proof of your losses! You can, relatively speaking, write off 2 years of your life replacing 'stuff'. Some things you will never replace. You will also think of things years later that were 'missed' in your inventory! I had a stack of old 12 cent comic books stored in my attic, the one on top was valued at $75! The stack fell thru the ceiling, wet from the fire hose. At the time I didn't think they were worth salvaging... 2009
Nice shots of the burned out structure.
Nice photo, but to late to make anything out of that building.
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