Sunday, March 16, 2008

Clear !!


Ever since California has become an expensive to place to live, people have left the State and moved to places like Idaho. I am sure the fine people of Idaho are thrilled by this. If this sounds like just the change you need, then do your homework first and check the Boise Real Estate Market. I have traveled in that part of the nation and it absolutely beautiful up there.

The weather in Idaho isn't super cold in the winter or super hot in the summer. So, no griping about the weather anymore. You'll have to find something else to complain about...like all the stinkin' Californian's moving in.

To any realtors reading this, check out Real Estate CPR Advantage to help breath life into your career. They are the ACLS (advanced cardiac life support) team of real estate. Their services can help you gain advantage over your competition to win the business of all the Californian's moving into your state. Trust me, these burned out Californian's are going to need resuscitation, and the CPR Advantage is going to help you with the ABC's of the real estate business.

2 comments:

christiangustafson said...

Idaho is a nice enough state, but the California equity locusts have overbuilt large sections of it. It's very sad to see so much farmland succumb to sprawl in the Treasure Valley for example. Soon there will be REOs everywhere -- the Idaho economy simply cannot support $500K houses.

A super ski resort north of Boise called Tamarack is failing, with the developer filing BK. We visited it a couple of years ago, and I was stunned by the scale of it all. Idaho will be hurting in this downturn.

I Can't Sell My House inspired me to photoblog the crash and awful houses from a Seattle perspective. Come visit me at Deflation Land.

Anonymous said...

If you're looking at Idaho, check out Coeur d'Alene. This town is the picture by the definition of "God's Country." It's an absolutely stunning place just 45 minutes from Spokane in the western edge of the Bitterroot range of the Rocky Mountains.

Disclosure: My grandparents built a house on Coeur d'Alene Lake in the 1950's and we spent every summer there as kids. Outstanding.