Tallahassee Florida Homes For Rent - Available

3Bed/1Bath

$1290/month

Click here for info

Click here for map
Click here for photos

819 Miccosukee Road, Tallahassee Rental Homes
829 Miccosukee Road, Tallahassee Rental Homes

Grouse Moore Drive North Carolina - Available

3Bed/3Bath - $1350/month - Banner Elk, NC


Sugar Mountain Banner Elk North Carolina House For Rent

Beautiful home, 3 Bedroom 3 Bathroom, fully furnished, in Banner Elk, at 5000 Ft. with 80mile views from porch.  Minutes to town, or to ASU or Boone.


Click here for more info

Click here for map | Photos

For information about this North Carolina Home Rental, Phone or Send Email

Sugar Top Condo North Carolina - Available

2Bed/2Bath - $850/month - Sugar Mountain, NC


Sugar Top Condominium For Rent

Big 2 Bedroom 2 Bathroom Sugar Top condo, Top Floor, incredible views. Full use of pool, hottub, sauna, steambath and exercise room.

Click here for more info

Click here for map | Photos

For information about this Sugar Top Condo Rental, Phone or Send Email

Sugar Mountain House Rental - Sleeps Ten

 

As low as $149/night. For rates and availablility, Click here.

 

Sugar Mountain HouseThis spacious home sleeps has three bedrooms and three full baths, plus two additional sleeper sofas.  See long range views from wraparound deck or sit back in front of the fireplace and watch the snow fall outside.  Easy access to town and slopes with 5 minute drive. The North Carolina mountains are a favorite vacation destination for all seasons--winter, spring, summer or fall. The ski mountains of western North Carolina are the finest in the region. The North Carolina Mountains have some of the finest hiking in the country. Linville Caves are a favorite destination. Sugar Mountain, Beech Mountain and Hawks Rise have challenging skiing and snowboarding for all skill levels.

Sugar Mountain House
Sugar Mountain Bedroom
Sugar Mountain Fireplace

SugarTop condominiums are located on the very top of Little Sugar Mountain. It overlooks Sugar mountain ski areas and a free mountain shuttle brings you directly to the ski area. There is an inner-tube run for non-skiers or those with young children. Mountain lodging and accommodations include hotels, motels, ski lodges, homes and condos for rent. In the spring, you can sit in the hot tub and look out through the steamed atrium windows to the early season buds bursting. Summer in the North Carolina Mountains is perfect for hiking, swimming and boating. Autumn may be the most picturesque season. Go no further than your balcony to see the mountains leaves painted with blazing red, orange and yellow. Winter again and time for another ski season. Forget the beach. Don’t ski Colorado or Utah, don’t ski Wyoming, Montana or Idaho. Forget Vail, Sun Valley, Tahoe and Park City. Don’t even THINK of going to Canada to ski. Places like Whistler or Calgary or Baanf. They’re way far away, take too long to get there, and too long to get back. Oh, and they're incredibly expensive. SKI NORTH CAROLINA, SKI NC, TUBE NORTH CAROLINA, SNOWBOARD NORTH CAROLINA. You’ll be glad you did. Great skiing, great price, perfect for kids, easy to get there. Come visit Western North Carolina and vacation in the North Carolina Mountains. The land of Daniel Boone. Looking for a Winter Rental, Spring Rental, Summer Rental or Fall Rental? Come stay with us, for a day--or a season.

north carolina mountain rentals, www.YesNC.com banner elk north carolina, www.YesNC.com sugatop, www.YesNC.com ski sugar mountain, www.YesNC.com boone, grandfather mountain, www.YesNC.com ski beech mountain, www.YesNC.com ski hawknest mountain, www.YesNC.com ski wolf laurel mountain, www.YesNC.com ski appalachian mountain, www.YesNC.com ski blue ridge mountains,www.YesNC.com roan mountain tennesee, www.YesNC.com wooly wooley worm festival, www.YesNC.com tweetsie railroad, linville falls, www.YesNC.com linville caverns, elk falls, www.YesNC.com hiking the blue ridge parkway trails

Sugar Top Condo Rental - Sleeps Six

 

NEW: Click here for special discounted rates

 

As low as $175/night. For rates and availablility, Click here.

 

Visit the Western North Carolina Mountains! Spring, Sugartop, Sugar Mountain, Condo Summer, Fall, or Winter, there is no place like it! We offer great rates on our condominium and discounts on the house rental, too. Email us for information on special low prices. We can help you keep the cost of your vacation low. Looking for available rooms or vacancy in the North Carolina mountains? We often have space available for rent, but the earlier you email us, the more likely it is that we will have something for you.

 

Sugar Top Resort sits atop one of the highest mountains in North Carolina, Sugar Mountain North Carolina, and has panoramic views of the region including Grandfather Mountain. Our unit at Sugar Top Resort is on the tenth floor (the highest floor) and is nicely appointed in a warm, country style. It's 1100 square feet of living space has one king bedroom, two twin beds, with an additional pull-out sleeper sofa to sleep six adults comfortably. Resort has mega, indoor heated pool with hot-tub, jacuzzi hottub, sauna, steambath and full exercise room facility.

Why it makes dollars and sense to rent in todays housing market...

 

Home Not-So-Sweet Home

By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: June 23, 2008
While homeownership rose as the housing bubble inflated, temporarily giving Mr. Bush something to boast about, it plunged — especially for African-Americans — when the bubble popped. Today, the percentage of American families owning their own homes is no higher than it was six years ago, and it’s a good bet that by the time Mr. Bush leaves the White House homeownership will be lower than it was when he moved in.
But here’s a question rarely asked, at least in Washington: Why should ever-increasing homeownership be a policy goal? How many people should own homes, anyway?
Listening to politicians, you’d think that every family should own its home — in fact, that you’re not a real American unless you’re a homeowner. “If you own something,” Mr. Bush once declared, “you have a vital stake in the future of our country.” Presumably, then, citizens who live in rented housing, and therefore lack that “vital stake,” can’t be properly patriotic. Bring back property qualifications for voting!
Even Democrats seem to share the sense that Americans who don’t own houses are second-class citizens. Early last year, just as the mortgage meltdown was beginning, Austan Goolsbee, a University of Chicago economist who is one of Barack Obama’s top advisers, warned against a crackdown on subprime lending. “For be it ever so humble,” he wrote, “there really is no place like home, even if it does come with a balloon payment mortgage.”
And the belief that you’re nothing if you don’t own a home is reflected in U.S. policy. Because the I.R.S. lets you deduct mortgage interest from your taxable income but doesn’t let you deduct rent, the federal tax system provides an enormous subsidy to owner-occupied housing. On top of that, government-sponsored enterprises — Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Banks — provide cheap financing for home buyers; investors who want to provide rental housing are on their own.
In effect, U.S. policy is based on the premise that everyone should be a homeowner. But here’s the thing: There are some real disadvantages to homeownership.
First of all, there’s the financial risk. Although it’s rarely put this way, borrowing to buy a home is like buying stocks on margin: if the market value of the house falls, the buyer can easily lose his or her entire stake.


This isn’t a hypothetical worry. From 2005 through 2007 alone — that is, at the peak of the housing bubble — more than 22 million Americans bought either new or existing houses. Now that the bubble has burst, many of those homebuyers have lost heavily on their investment. At this point there are probably around 10 million households with negative home equity — that is, with mortgages that exceed the value of their houses.
Owning a home also ties workers down. Even in the best of times, the costs and hassle of selling one home and buying another — one estimate put the average cost of a house move at more than $60,000 — tend to make workers reluctant to go where the jobs are.
And these are not the best of times. Right now, economic distress is concentrated in the states with the biggest housing busts: Florida and California have experienced much steeper rises in unemployment than the nation as a whole. Yet homeowners in these states are constrained from seeking opportunities elsewhere, because it’s very hard to sell their houses.
Finally, there’s the cost of commuting. Buying a home usually though not always means buying a single-family house in the suburbs, often a long way out, where land is cheap. In an age of $4 gas and concerns about climate change, that’s an increasingly problematic choice.
There are, of course, advantages to homeownership — and yes, my wife and I do own our home. But homeownership isn’t for everyone. In fact, given the way U.S. policy favors owning over renting, you can make a good case that America already has too many homeowners.
O.K., I know how some people will respond: anyone who questions the ideal of homeownership must want the population “confined to Soviet-style concrete-block high-rises” (as a Bloomberg columnist recently put it). Um, no. All I’m suggesting is that we drop the obsession with ownership, and try to level the playing field that, at the moment, is hugely tilted against renting.

And while we’re at it, let’s try to open our minds to the possibility that those who choose to rent rather than buy can still share in the American dream — and still have a stake in the nation’s future.