My wife does this all the time, and if I don’t check before I spritz I get an unexpected ball splash.

NSFW for potential topic sensitivity I guess.

  • remotelove@lemmy.ca
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    11 months ago

    If a toilet stinks, it’s not cleaned properly, there is an issue with the trap or the floor seal is cracked or damaged. If there is a toilet that constantly smells like rotten eggs, it needs to be inspected to ensure sewer gasses are not leaking into your house. (Depending on where you live, water may contain more sulphur which also smells like rotten eggs. That can only be fixed with a good water filter system.)

    None of the 7 or 8 toilets that I own stink because they are cleaned and maintained.

    It’s only “sanitary” to close the lid when you flush it when there is a higher chance that poo water may spray out. Otherwise, water is just going to sit in there and evaporate.

    • Denvil@lemmy.one
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      11 months ago

      7-8 toilets? Either you have a large house, or are a very enthusiastic toilet collector

      • remotelove@lemmy.ca
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        11 months ago

        Two houses. My first house was cheap enough not to sell when I moved to another state so I keep it as an investment property. It’s also the house where I learned how to do most of my own repairs since I was fairly broke back then. Either you pay someone a lot of money to do home repairs or you learn how to fix things properly so they don’t break again.

        Home ownership is expensive so it pays to learn everything you can about home repair. As a perk, I take pride in my work so I know it will get done properly. However, I’m not perfect and have made my fair share of costly mistakes. Those mistakes taught me how not to be lazy, so that is nice.

        Also, I was ripped off a few times by shady service people. That pissed me off enough to learn how to inspect other peoples work and verify that something is actually broken and that a repair cost is valid. (HVAC companies are the fucking worst, btw.)

              • m-p{3}@lemmy.ca
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                11 months ago

                It’s gonna be treated as an investment for as long as there aren’t safeguards to avoid it (extra taxes on secondary homes, homes that are not permanently occupied, etc)

                The best incentive to free up these houses would be to increase the financial burden of multi-property owners.

                • remotelove@lemmy.ca
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                  10 months ago

                  I pay taxes on both properties. To be honest, my old neighbors don’t even want me to sell and I may even move back as my career starts to wrap up. I’ll gladly ditch the house I am living in now if that is the case.

                  When I bought the house back in 2008, it was at the peak of the last housing boom. When prices tanked, I was basically stuck with the house unless I defaulted or waited the market out to just break even. Now that I am getting closer to retirement, I can’t just give the house away now since there is real equity involved. I am honestly hoping to break even when, not if, the prices collapse again.

                  We rented it once for way below market prices. The person still managed to cause thousands in damages to the house. After that experience, we are done with trying to rent. We don’t want that hassle and we don’t want to pay a management company that would force us to charge high rent.

                  But yeah, I agree. It doesn’t make sense for me to sell that home now and there are no extreme financial penalties for me to keep it. If voters decide I should pay additional penalties, so be it. It won’t be financially viable for me to keep the house.

                  Home ownership is not easy or cheap and some people don’t understand that. I don’t flip houses for a living and I don’t own hundreds or thousands of empty homes. Families that own a home or two are not the problem. The issues with housing are at a much grander scale.

              • remotelove@lemmy.ca
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                11 months ago

                Building assets (and options) for retirement is also a basic need. Owning another property, at a minimum, is just a hedge against inflation.

                If you have any bright ideas to supplement my retirement in addition to my savings and other financial investments, I am all ears.

                I highly doubt that you are going to support me.

                • SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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                  10 months ago

                  No, you’ve already arranged to have someone else support you.

                  Feel free to invest in anything that doesn’t extract wealth from people trying to fulfill their basic needs.

                  • remotelove@lemmy.ca
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                    10 months ago

                    What? I don’t rent. I tried that once and the person caused thousands of dollars in damages. We were renting as a favor and were charging half of what we should have.

                    When you have a point or a valid argument, let me know.