Professor Frink
No offence but that just makes me laugh.
It is getting developed and that is what scares me.
Drive 2-2.5hrs north of perth and you will hit the "Boom" central of the north coast, called jurien bay. It's a great little seaside town, just the kind of place you might want to retire, now I only ever went there about 3 months ago so I don't know what it use to look like but given that everything looks brand new (roads, shops, kerbs, footpaths, everything) I said damn this place is really booming. Now if you had nothing to do with your time and could travel back to the big smog at a pins drop and didnt mind that there is only one supermarket (a big deli) and a couple of other shops you would probally love living there. But with a population of a couple of thousand and a 2+ hour drive back to civilization I shudder at the asking price of a block of land. Ocean views demand prices in excess of 500k(and Im being conservative here). Sure the views are nice and all that but that is a heck of a lot of money for a slab of dirt in the middle of next to nowhere.
Hell drive another 1-1.5 hrs and you will hit dongara where there are land releases coming out of there but's (at least it is less than an hour to gero) and the price tag's ar'nt much cheaper. Everthing in between is doing pretty much the same, only on a lesser scale.
I mean the joke in perth these days is that if you go to the most northern suburb your in south Geraldton. while it is,nt quite that bad it is pretty bad.
Also what isn't getting developed is still farm land.
What's my point?
Well basically I think to myself wouldn't it be nice to live in a place like this (if you are able to, eg retired), and I answer yes, then I ask myself, I a block of dirt 2hrs from perth really worth more than $500k? I don't think so. If things turn around and my 350k property 6km's from the CBD becomes worth 250k, what will that 500k block of dirt fetch?
Probally I could trade my place for two or more blocks of dirt.
Anyway that's just what I think, could be that China and commodities are stronger for longer and those blocks end up fetching 3-4 million each.
No offence but that just makes me laugh.
It is getting developed and that is what scares me.
Drive 2-2.5hrs north of perth and you will hit the "Boom" central of the north coast, called jurien bay. It's a great little seaside town, just the kind of place you might want to retire, now I only ever went there about 3 months ago so I don't know what it use to look like but given that everything looks brand new (roads, shops, kerbs, footpaths, everything) I said damn this place is really booming. Now if you had nothing to do with your time and could travel back to the big smog at a pins drop and didnt mind that there is only one supermarket (a big deli) and a couple of other shops you would probally love living there. But with a population of a couple of thousand and a 2+ hour drive back to civilization I shudder at the asking price of a block of land. Ocean views demand prices in excess of 500k(and Im being conservative here). Sure the views are nice and all that but that is a heck of a lot of money for a slab of dirt in the middle of next to nowhere.
Hell drive another 1-1.5 hrs and you will hit dongara where there are land releases coming out of there but's (at least it is less than an hour to gero) and the price tag's ar'nt much cheaper. Everthing in between is doing pretty much the same, only on a lesser scale.
I mean the joke in perth these days is that if you go to the most northern suburb your in south Geraldton. while it is,nt quite that bad it is pretty bad.
Also what isn't getting developed is still farm land.
What's my point?
Well basically I think to myself wouldn't it be nice to live in a place like this (if you are able to, eg retired), and I answer yes, then I ask myself, I a block of dirt 2hrs from perth really worth more than $500k? I don't think so. If things turn around and my 350k property 6km's from the CBD becomes worth 250k, what will that 500k block of dirt fetch?
Probally I could trade my place for two or more blocks of dirt.
Anyway that's just what I think, could be that China and commodities are stronger for longer and those blocks end up fetching 3-4 million each.