Brooks
WKR
What do you guys that drive Subaru’s, Prius, VW, Cooper Mini’s as hunting rigs do when the going gets tough ? Call mom ?
What do you guys that drive Subaru’s, Prius, VW, Cooper Mini’s as hunting rigs do when the going gets tough ? Call mom ?
Yikes. I had a Subaru for years and it did just fine overall. But once you get a truck, you realize how much extra space you have. I liken it to the backpacker who has a 40 liter pack and is hanging their bed role, sleeping bag and water bottles off of it as they shuffle down the trail. Then you get an 80 liter pack and put all that stuff inside and retain your sanity. Also, if you plan on having kids in the near future, cramming all their crap into a subaru can be a tough gig. A crew cab truck has so much stinkin space in it.
keep us posted if you buy something!Thank you!! This all makes great financial sense to me right now! However, I did find my 'dream' truck recently!! Lord Save Me from my own foolishness!
I have taken this little RS through some wonky logging roads this past season for late season archery elk, and yes, the turn around ability is wicked nice.
I really do appreciate your comments and thoughts!
I didn’t know Subaru and Prius were so badass.....my bad. MaybeI I should look into getting a couple for the ranch and get rid of these F350’s......lol
Jobs after I I thought about going back to school for a long time as well! But I just switched jobs after 25 years and figure what’s the point now because I’m making a little bit more money and I’m looking at 56 more years I’m go into a soft retirement. Fingers crosses!Never listened to that podcast, but have listened to Dave Ramsey for a bit in the past. Funny thing is I discovered Dave Ramsey AFTER I got myself out of debt, and they way he describes doing it is really close to what I basically did on my own, the main difference being the credit card usage. He doesn't believe in credit cards. I used/use credit cards to actually repair my credit score, with the only caveat being you absolutely CANNOT use them irresponsibly otherwise you're going to get screwed. I think they're a great tool to help fix a bad credit score, establish a good credit history and utilize miles and points.
I left Colorado about 5 years ago and came to California as a travel nurse. Ended up staying here and taking a staff position because RN's here make more than double what they make in Denver, and Denver ain't cheap anymore. Was smart about how I spent my money, rented a tiny little shack (literally was an uninsulated in-law unit in someone's backyard) for a few years, didn't buy a snowboard pass for 3 years, and my vacations only consisted of road trips and camping. Didn't fly anywhere, etc. I also didn't kill myself by working tons of OT, I just didn't spend much and anything extra I had went toward the debt. I Ppid off like $87k in a little under 3 years. Also have like 4 months of an emergency fund saved up now, and the goal is to have 6 months saved u pretty soon. A few years ago my credit score was literally under 600. After doing a bit of research and talking to people who know way more about money than I do (that wasn't easy since people really don't like talking about money/is a very personal subject), my credit score is now over 800. Learned how to play the game and use credit and credit cards to my advantage, never carry a balance, never buy anything I don't have the cash to pay for (and just use the credit cards to keep a good credit history going and to get the points). I pay off my card every other week as soon as I get paid from work. I really was a moron and very irresponsible financially, so if I can turn things around, pretty much anyone can. With that said I also don't have kids and I'm single, so it was a lot easier for me because I don't have the expenses that come along with having kids, could pick up and move somewhere that paid more, and was able to make some pretty crazy temporary financial sacrifices that a spouse may not have been in agreement with.
Recently got approved for a mortgage but cant bring myself to buy a crappy little house out here in a crappy part of town to still be close to work, and don't want to buy in a nicer area that would literally mean a 1.5 hour commute because of the awful Bay Area traffic. Plus I want to move in the next couple years anyway, maybe back to somewhere in Colorado, Montana, Idaho, Oregon, etc.
Decided to go back to school for a graduate degree. I've always wanted to go back to school but haven't because I dont want anymore debt, but after looking at what nurses make in those states I listed above compared to what an Nurse Practitioner makes in the same areas, the cost of the graduate degree is pretty much in line with how much more I'd make in one year as an NP compared to an RN.
I hate having debt. It really had been liberating to pay it all off. I sleep better at night, when an unexpected expense comes my may it isn't that big of a deal beaus I dont have other revolving debt that a lot of my pay is already allocated for, and the emergency fund is just extra insurance. I just wish I would have done this 10 years ago.
Jobs after I I thought about going back to school for a long time as well! But I just switched jobs after 25 years and figure what’s the point now because I’m making a little bit more money and I’m looking at 56 more years I’m go into a soft retirement. Fingers crosses!
I saved my pennies for ~10 years and bought a Chevy Colorado ZR2 Diesel specifically for hunting and daily driving, traded in my VW Rabbit (carried deer in the back just fine).
Beast of a hunting rig, I can go many, many places that small cars and larger trucks can't get thanks to the front and rear locking diffs. I highly recommend it if you don't need to tow anything heavy and do limited hauling (besides all the big bucks and bulls you'll kill, obviously). I will say the extended cab can be tight, but what do you expect from a mid-size truck? The 6' bed for hauling my hunting shit was more important to me than being able to haul people 1% of the time.
Held it's value decently as well, Dealership I ordered it from quoted me $27k to buy it back from me (ordered new at ~$40k) as it's in essentially perfect condition. No issues besides a diesel injector that was busted from the factory and covered under warranty.
I just saw your post above about MPG going down after a topper.I've been impressed with the newer Colorados. Much nicer truck than the newer Tacomas.