I'm over here trippin' seeing all these guys talkin' 'bout in their 30's and house paid off?? and I'm like What-the-what?? Then I look over and see their Geographical location being midwest and the like and I'm like "Oh.. right."
You guys have no idea how much ire it induces to those of us out here like in Kommiefornia (especially SoCal)... when we're watching one of those property shows... and you see some couple... and their *itching about the price on a house... and it's like, I dunno, freakin' 4000 sq ft living space... some amount of lot space that actually uses acres in the measurement rather than sq ft... and there over here whining about having to pay $250K for it! And It looks like a plantation style MANSION. Makes ya wanna scream and reach thru the TV and pimp slap'em! Ugh!
RE: Making use of some debt in order to pursue hunting. - Some of that is very dependent on your stage in life that you're at currently. If you're a little further along in your working years before you started this passion, (and a little further along in your years before you started a family) and live in a higher cost-of-living area... you may also need to look at the expenditure from the stand point of how many more viable years do I have left in you to pursue this? This may warrant allowing yourself to splurge a little since you won't have a bunch of years to slowly collect gear paying for it in cash. And especially if you don't come from a family that hunted and thus didn't have ANY equipment to start with.
Don't get me wrong. My GrandPa always preached about "Live BELOW your means!". But there are just some certain inescapable realities that can make waiting until you've got the cash in hand not a very realistic scenario for some due to time constraints and cashflow constraints, especially since in my situation I *have* to hurry up and get this house paid for before I hit retirement years, otherwise I'm screwed. And.. the tentative plan is to convince the boy, when he becomes an adult, to go in on a remodel, we add a story onto the house, possibly engineer them to be separated so he has his privacy and can pursue finding a mate without us cramping his style. Then he inherits it. That way my boy and future grandkids can have a HUGE leg-up out here by actually having living space taken care of. (That's HUGE) All along as I've had to address repair issues.. I make it a point to explain to him what happened... what was needed to fix it... the costs... you know.. just trying to get his head right so he grows up having realworld understanding of the kinds of dollar amounts these things are when it comes to addressing a home repair issue. Gotta use EVERYTHING that occurs as a "learning opportunity" with them. With that eye to the future of realizing they are gonna have to deal with this themselves very soon.