tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-78617056245335795242024-03-08T14:28:39.089-08:00buzonrelocation to BaltimoreA blog by a native Baltimorean, a retired police officer, and security consultant, who is also a relocation consultant. Buz probably knows the city better than 95% of the people that live here. He's been called an expert on the rental market in the area, having visited many apartment complexes in the area and helped a fair number of people in his one-day rental finding tours.buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.comBlogger16125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-58407146265177977562010-10-05T07:56:00.000-07:002010-10-05T08:00:44.044-07:00renting in BaltimoreWell, we have gotten great tenants: a Ph.D. student in Electrical and Computer Engineering at Hopkins-with an emphasis on biomedical engineering; a recent Hopkins grad, who's going to Yoga School, and an Opera Singer, who's going to be working on her Master's at Peabody. <div><br /></div><div>And our house in Hampden is centrally located for each of them.</div><div><br /></div><div>Again, the smart Hopkins students choose Hampden, and find good roommates/housemates to live together in a house for a fraction of the rent they'd pay in an apartment.</div>buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-71737668602366421432010-07-18T12:12:00.000-07:002010-07-18T12:35:59.876-07:00The kids Teaching for America are coming!Buz and his darling wife are losing our tenant of 2 years at our lovely house on w. 34th Street in Hampden, hon. She and her daughters have been great and we'll miss having them there, alas, especially the garden and the piano.<div><br /></div><div>So, we put our house on Craigslist and got two wonderful young ladies to look at it. We learned that they are in the Teach for America program, and are moving to Baltimore to teach for two years in inner city schools. However, they chose another Hampden house over ours. We also learned that 200 of them are coming to Baltimore once they finish their student teaching/training this summer at Philadelphia, Houston and other places.</div><div><br /></div><div>Wow! 200!</div><div><br /></div><div>We sincerely wish these highly educated, highly motivated young people well.</div><div><br /></div><div>And since they'll be needing a nice and reasonable, centrally located place to live, we thought we'd put in a shameless plug for <a href="http://baltimore.craigslist.org/apa/1832215583.html">our house on 34th Street in Hampden-</a>-just down the street from Rocket to Venus (not that any of these teachers ever drink, but...), and the "Miracle on 34th Street" (some, even atheists, can enjoy the lights and good cheer of the season). It is also just a couple of blocks from the main drag, the Avenue, the neighborhood's funky, charming, and quirky business district.</div><div><br /></div><div>Hampden and Medfield are centrally located so a TFA person can be assured the drive to more than 95% of the city's public schools is not an arduous ordeal. And it is close to TFAs Baltimore headquarters at Miller's Court in Charles Village. Besides, being centrally located, Hampden is relatively low in street crime, walkable, has all services nearby, and is close to the Hopkins Homewood campus for those interested in grad school options. It has now a bit of the feel of Brooklyn, New York--a mix of hipsters, working folks, retirees, young professionals, students, and yes, even a few yuppies and college profs. Come give us a look!</div>buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-64833215392138523752010-01-13T08:53:00.001-08:002010-01-13T08:57:10.306-08:00places near Hopkins HomewoodBuz just the other day ran into a young man who is moving to Baltimore, taking a research scientist position at Hopkins on the Homewood campus--and will be working at the Space Telescope Science Institute. We gave him some free relocation consulting advice as he searches for a place for himself, wife and one-year-old: look north and west of the campus, not south and east. Sorry, folks who live elsewhere: I wish it was different, but that's how it is.buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-53119421741610030382009-12-18T07:48:00.000-08:002009-12-18T08:03:29.471-08:00Buz just got a report on Hopkins House!Just spoke to one of my long-time readers of my other blog, buzoncrime.blogspot.com. He told me that after several years of living in crime-ridden, always-look-over-your-shoulder Charles Village, he decided to leave his greedy, inept, and deferred-maintenance landlord (like many are there), and rent in Hopkins House. (I know, that's a run-on sentence). It's right across the street from the Broadview next to Wyman Park and basically across the street from Hopkins Homewood campus.<div>Though I've been in there several times with clients, none have actually rented there, and I thought it was perhaps 95% students.</div><div>My informant tells me that it's only maybe 60% students, and many of those are graduate students, who have their noses in their demanding school work. He says that he got a good deal in the 2+ years he lived there with his wife and their newborn baby. He had no problems with the place, and they spent a lot of time sitting out on their balcony. Though the walls are thin, his neighbors on the 9th floor were very quiet and respectful. When he had some maintenance problems, the staff often were there in less than an hour. He said the desk and the staff can be kinda gruff, but some of these young people think they were living in a 4-star hotel, with all the entitlements due their soon-to-be rich station in life. He said he didn't really have a problem: he spoke politely, simply stated the problem, and did not demand now.</div><div>Anyway, that's good to hear. The place is certainly situated in a good location and has many stunning views from its apartments. The rent is reasonable, but parking your car in the garage is pricey: Buz would park nearby along University in Roland Park or in Wyman Park and walk, but then I'm a cheapskate. Thanks, Jaimetab, for the info on your experience, and welcome to Hampden!</div>buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-43405010495278400612009-10-06T18:53:00.001-07:002009-10-06T19:05:29.670-07:00The Broadview is kinda nice!Buz has taken a couple of clients relocating to Baltimore around, who were interested in North Baltimore, and had occasion to look at apartments in the Broadview, one of several high-rise buildings near the Hopkins Homewood campus on the border of Roland Park and Tuscany-Canterbury. And though I had been by the place many times, I'd never actually been in it before.<div>I was really surprised how nice and neat and well-laid out the apartments were, and how quiet the hallways were, even on a Saturday afternoon--two Saturdays in a row. But the two apartments we were shown, both under a $1000 a month, really had good views, one with a 3rd floor right angle window so you have a view on your side out a window as well as straight ahead.</div><div>And they had a nice little fitness room, and a really nice resident lounge, along with a easy connection to a restaurant/bar. In the lounge an Asian gal was playing the piano, a guy was watching a football game, and another guy was shooting some pool. There were books for free borrowing, board games, and lots of nice easy chairs and reading lamps. Truly, one would never get to be lonely in the Broadview. And they have someone on the door 24/7 also--a rarity in these days of cutting costs. We stopped an older guy, and, as I am often in the habit on my rental finding tours, asked him an open-ended question: how do you like living here? He said: "I love it! I've lived here for 20 years, left town for 3 years, came back, and have been here the last couple years. Love it!" Well, sir, nuff said.</div>buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-1170514515671300242009-10-01T14:48:00.000-07:002009-10-01T15:28:09.918-07:00relocation tidbitsBuz has had a pretty busy August and September with relocation jobs, and has found a lot of interesting places along with his clients who are moving to Baltimore---<div><ul><li>We've been really impressed by the newly renovated Falls Road Apartments, in a little court just off the 4200 block of Falls Road in the neighborhood of Medfield, just north of 41st street border with Hampden. (A lot of people think this is Hampden). Wow! What a deal. Now, nothing special, but you can get a nice, clean, never-lived-in-since-renovated apartment, all new appliances and systems, bright, freshly-painted, and airy; in a relatively low crime area of the city, centrally located; for one bedroom at $795/month. People moving to Baltimore are voting with their feet: you see cars from many states in the parking lot. No amenities: no gym, no pool, no biz center/concierge BS. But you get free parking on their lot, and access to their small laundry room ( 3 sets of washer/driers). You want all the exercise stuff you can pay for it yourself: Meadowbrook is up the street a bit, along with Whole Foods. And a city police officer lives here too. To top it all off, the leasing agent is moving here next week.</li><li>I am really depressed, on the other hand, at how poorly privately-owned properties show, when compared to professionally-managed. Like, can't you, if you're a landlord make the place look nice and presentable and livable before you put an ad on Craigslist? Most can't. The places in Charles Village show especially poorly; but I guess the landlords there are so used to sucking from the Johns Hopkins trough, and charging high rents for their deferred maintenance, they have little incentive to worry about making the place they're renting look nice.</li><li>The smart Hopkins kids moving off campus look for a decent place in Hampden.</li><li>A recent Goucher grad just moved into a whole house, shared with several girl friends in Hampden; she told me that she doesn't worry about the Charles Village crime anymore.</li><li>Many apartments are now adding fees on to the rent, so watch your bottom line, if it's important to you: they're charging for water, sewer, trash removal, amenities, public areas, and making you share the gas and electric bill with others. Makes me uneasy.</li></ul></div>buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-4631811649345039062009-07-23T09:51:00.000-07:002009-07-23T10:00:42.960-07:00Can a black gal move to Hampden without singing the blues?Buz recently had as a client for relocation a pretty African-American professional woman who was moving to Baltimore in order to be a program person for Teach for America. We spent seven-and-a-half hours looking at apartments in her price range, that were in the city. She would be working in city schools, and though there were some nice apartments in Owings Mills, she really wanted to live in the city.<div><br /></div><div>But Buz was left with a conundrum: several areas/price range, and availability were in Hampden, with the kind of housing she was looking for. But I didn't really want to show her apartments where, if living there, she would feel uncomfortable, or worse case: where she may feel unsafe.</div><div><br /></div><div>We know Hampden is changing, and for most young professionals, race is irrelevant. But Hampden has had a long history, shall we say, of being unwelcome for black people.</div><div><br /></div><div>So, we ended up looking a one place there, a kinda neat, funky, "loft". And then we looked at a rowhouse apartment, but it wasn't ready. But I ventured into the area with her with a certain amount of trepidation.</div>buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-38856453620604698952009-05-17T12:02:00.000-07:002009-05-17T12:24:25.472-07:00BRAC is coming!Buz just last Monday night stumbled onto a talk by a representative of LiveBaltimore a nonprofit group funded partly by the city and partly by the "real estate industry" loosely. He was their representative for BRAC, and was talking up the possibilities of BRAC folks moving to Baltimore and buying in the various city neighborhoods.<div><br /></div><div>Now, BRAC stands for Base Realignment And Closing Commission, a process under which military bases are eliminated, downsized, up sized, right-sized, and closed. In other words, made more efficient. So, apparently there are several closings which will affect the Baltimore areas. One is the closing of programs at Ft. Monmouth, New Jersey (not too far from New York City), and relocation of them to Aberdeen Proving Ground in Harford County. Other programs will be relocating to Ft. Meade in Anne Arundel county. So Baltimore will be bracketed on two sides by an influx of more than 30,000 military, their dependents, defense contractors, and their dependents.</div><div><br /></div><div>So, I asked the guy: do you think any of the BRAC folks are gonna wanta live in Baltimore, my beloved home town? He said: absolutely! He even pointed out to the various folks from northeast Baltimore, the group he was addressing, that the first house purchased by a BRAC person was in a Northeast Baltimore neighborhood. Wow! And here Buz thought that almost all of them would stay in Harford County.</div><div><br /></div><div>No, the guy said, a lot of them want the amenities of a big city; many of them are highly educated, like sports, culture, museums, and such, and like to walk around in neighborhoods on sidewalks. So, it would be a big plus to get them to Bmore, for them and for us.</div><div><br /></div><div>HMMMMMM. So, I thought, you know, that many of these folks might benefit from the assistance of a nice relocation consultant like myself, since it would be a wiser move to rent in a strange city first, instead of looking to buy a house. Betcha: 30-1, I can help you find a rental property meeting your needs quicker than you can on your own.</div>buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-53869088879962268042009-04-30T14:54:00.000-07:002009-04-30T15:43:29.096-07:00The rental season starts again! Finding rentals in Baltimore for school or workNow is the time of year when students (and others) are leaving their apartments and moving to other chapters in life and other people are moving in. So a lot of incoming students, post-docs, and hospital employees will soon start looking for places to rent in Baltimore.<div><br /></div><div>I am hoping to help some of them, as my international relocation company, Dwellworks (formerly RAI-Relocation Assistance Incorporated) has not been having much work in Baltimore lately. So, perhaps I will help people moving to Baltimore find a rental, using my full day or half-day rental finding tours--as an independent consultant.</div><div><br /></div><div>I've only been averaging about 1 rental-finding tour each month since the economy collapsed in October-maybe even earlier.<br /><div><br /></div><div>I found it interesting that 5 out of the last 6 rental tour clients I've had did not rent in the city, which was really interesting, since previously, almost all of my young professionals wanted to live in either Canton, Federal Hill or Fell's Point. It's really troubling for a lifelong city resident like myself, since I find most of the rentals in the surrounding counties, with some exceptions, to be sterile, cookie-cutter, almost you've seen one-you've seen-em-all kind of thing. "There's no there, there!", as one of my young gals put it.</div><div><br /></div><div>I'm a bit concerned that crime and rowdiness and general icky-ness of traffic and parking will drive people to live in the evil counties.</div><div><br /></div><div>I've noticed that the signs of spring are here: for rent signs have sprung up all along places where Buz travels in North Baltimore.</div><div><br /></div><div>One newly-renovated property of interest is the big apartment building at University Parkway and Roland Avenue; it's now being called the Ardmore, and Mr. Preller, of Preller Properties has been spending a great deal of money on it and appears to have done a great job. They're-offering two months free rent as part of their grand opening, and do allow pets; they have both one bedrooms and 2 bedrooms. Buz has not been in there yet, but hopes to see the inside soon.</div></div>buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-60708419836920793892008-08-06T07:12:00.000-07:002008-08-13T10:02:25.628-07:00Ah, the big three: Canton, Federal Hill, and Fells PointBuz is sorry for not posting enough in this blog, but I've really been busy with stuff. I did however, have another relocation tour--a young gal and her boyfriend, who basically wanted to look, pretty much, in only one of the three neighborhoods all young professionals (almost all) want when they come to Baltimore: Canton, Federal Hill, and Fell's Point.<div><br /></div><div>So we took a tour of the three areas and looked at Upper Fells Point, too (though, of course, the Craigslist poster said the rental property was in "Fell's Point"--well, close, but............)</div><div><br /></div><div>We didn't find much in Fells Point to interest her, but found out that a $2400/month place in Upper Fells Point was really much and really small and really too close to where a lot of day laborers were hanging out looking for work. The house was all brand new, never lived in and down a small alley street. And the "investor" landlord was coming from DC to show it. We/she cancelled him after taking one look at the outside and the immediate neighborhood.</div><div><br /></div><div>Places in Canton were really small and pricey, and several were already taken by the time we called.</div><div><br /></div><div>Federal Hill places were really dear, but if you wanted to be near.............the tailgating/barhopping action, this was it.</div>buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-41473553473064962442008-07-06T13:06:00.000-07:002008-07-19T10:24:31.541-07:00Coming to Hopkins and looking for a place!?Buz has learned that this is the season, and many people are coming to work and train at Johns Hopkins. Since he has dealt with a few poignant cases of people unknowingly renting in real bad areas, for them, I have some observations which might be helpful for the neophyte Baltimoron (that's what some of us modest residents call ourselves, hon.):<div><br /></div><div>Johns Hopkins actually has three main campuses in Baltimore, not counting its subsidiary, the Peabody Conservatory of Music.</div><div>```there's the main undergraduate campus in North Baltimore at "Homewood", adjacent to Charles Village, Hampden, and Guilford.</div><div>```several miles away to the east, are the famous Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, including the hospital, medical school, school of nursing, school of Public Health, and the Kennedy Krieger Institute.</div><div>```several miles east of that is the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, near the southeast city line and Greektown, Brewer's Hill and not too far from Canton and Eastpoint.</div><div><br /></div><div>Your renting or relocation options differ significantly depending on which campus you are working or learning at. And your position and working hours are big factors, too. If you are being hired as a doctor or nurse or faculty member/researcher, you might want or need different living arrangements than if you were a student, post-doc, doing an internship, or a patient.</div><div><br /></div><div>The area around the main hospital (JHMI) is complicated for living arrangements. Basically, living due east, north, or west of the hospital complex is not recommended for professional people who are from out of town who don't know their way around. </div><div><br /></div><div>Some good rental choices can be found in Fells Point, Upper Fells Point, Canton, and Butcher's Hill around Patterson Park. Canton is generally too far to walk, though. If you don't feel like living in a cramped rowhouse apartment in Fells Point (and most of them are, as well as pricey for what you get), you may want to try the Thames Point Apartments, right in Fells Point, but off the beaten path by the Eastern end of Thames Street. You're close to everything, but away from the noise and bars, though they're just a short walk away, along with a good coffee house and great views of the harbor all around. This building has a straight shot up Wolfe Street to the Medical complex.</div><div><br /></div>buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-586584115603512512008-07-01T08:53:00.000-07:002008-07-01T09:14:48.898-07:00Some things to check if you're new to BaltimoreIf you're coming here "cold" and are looking around for a place to rent, here's some tips to get you started in looking for a comfortable area.(this is not an all-inclusive list by any means).<div><br /></div><div><ul><li>Look for the guys and gals hanging on the corner. Never a good sign. They know who comes and goes and when. </li><li>Ask your prospective landlord if they accept Section 8. If they do, be sure you're comfortable with that.</li><li>Look for trash in the stairwells and on the property.</li><li>Does your landlord or property manager live on site. Always a good sign if they do.</li><li>Does the property look rundown, with a lot of deferred maintenance. Not a good sign (but it probably makes it cheap).</li><li>In general, the more rent you pay for a property, the better quality of life and amenities and apartment you can get.</li><li>Take your time, pick three different areas of interest, and visit at least 2, no more than 4 properties in each. (If you pick too many in a day, they all start to run together after a while).</li></ul><div><br /></div></div>buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-37576741815560785482008-06-28T16:49:00.000-07:002008-06-28T17:17:36.679-07:00moving to Baltimore!? Consider Mt. WashingtonAh, a reader suggested to me that I not forget about wonderful, beautiful Mt. Washington as a place for someone relocating to the Baltimore area. Actually, it has a fair amount of positive attributes:<div><ul><li>It's nice old Baltimore neighborhood with a strong community association, which is pretty to look at.</li><li>If one works downtown close to the light rail route, it's a walk or short drive, depending on where exactly you live, to the light rail station in Mt. Washington village.</li><li>A lot of people from out of town haven't heard of it because it isn't much on the young professional circuit.</li><li>It has a fair number of nice apartment complexes, including at least one which is gated, and at a very reasonable price--much less than you'd pay in most of , say, Federal Hill, Canton, or Fells Point. Or you can rent apartments in privately owned big old houses.</li><li>There's only one bar in the village, the Mt. Washington Tavern, but it's pretty good.</li><li>You are very close to Whole Foods, Meadowbrook Aquatic and Fitness center, and the post office. Short drive to I83 or I695, and downtown.</li><li>A community consisting of pretty much upper middle class people, including African Americans of that socio-economic class.</li><li>Very close to Orthodox Jewish neighborhoods which are to the north and very safe.</li><li>Very close to Sinai Hospital for fellows, post-docs, or interns working there.</li><li>Relatively low crime in immediate area.</li></ul><div>A couple negatives: </div><ul><li>Very close to high crime areas of Park Heights, with heavy drug trafficking.</li><li>Not close to someone working at Hopkins Hospital.</li><li>Traffic can be heavy during morning rush hour.</li><li>Buz likes Belvedere Towers apartment building--a high-rise with good highway access, large apartments for the money, hardwood floors, 24-hour doormen/desk persons, a small pool, small fitness center.</li></ul><div>(Maryland Management took over the place last year. Huh. Wonder if they got rid of Peggy or Nikki, the two great, nice Property Managers.)</div><div><br /></div><div>Thanks, Anonymous for the tips!</div></div>buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-47374447171134712142008-06-15T10:52:00.000-07:002008-06-15T11:26:37.849-07:00A tale of two citiesBuz is a regular reader of 2 websites: the Baltimore Crime blog (baltimorecrime.blogspot.com) and city-data.com's talk forum on Baltimore. I am often confounded that the people on the site actually are talking about the same city! Your consultant thinks that the crime blog gives a more grounded, more realistic view of Bmore, it's bad, but in realistic context. Almost all the writers/commenters obviously live in the city and kinda have learned to deal with it (with some exceptions). <br /><br />Then there are some posters on city-data.com who are what I call urban spearheads/homesteaders. Every place in the city is wonderful, it's great, there are festivals, blah, blah, blah. Some poor person will post that they are moving to Baltimore for a job, and will ask for a nice, safe, secure place: they're told, oh, you should live around Patterson Park, you'll love Pigtown, or especially Charles Village. Huh? If their number one concern is safety?<br /><br />Well, they're both right, after a fashion. Baltimore certainly has a lot of nice places to live, but one has to calibrate living suggestions with the tenor and demeanor of the seeker, as well as the price they're willing to pay, and their commute situation. Usually, when they talk about a "safe" place to live, they mean no open drug-dealing or gang activity and murders on their street. But often it mean an absence of "disorder"--such as one might find in Pigtown, and parts of Charles Village, and "Patterson Park" ( a very loosely-applied generic name for anywhere near the park).<br /><br />So, people, take the postings with a grain of salt, hook up with a trustworthy native, come early, and check out several actually available rental properties-as well as their adjacent neighborhoods.<br /><br />If all else fails, get Buzbuzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-61151252364998696932008-06-08T14:54:00.000-07:002008-06-08T14:59:18.783-07:00SafetyEverybodty who posts to talk forums and who are relocating to Baltimore want to live in a "safe' neighborhood. Who doesn't? Different people mean different things by that. Buz thinks that generally they mean that the risks of street crime in the area are relatively tolerable, and they feel confident in coming home at night, at least in their block. \<br /><br />But he thinks that the posters really want is to live with upper middle class people and not thugs and disorder.<br /><br />Buz wonders what you think and how to define a safe area.buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7861705624533579524.post-79118033439417657682008-06-04T12:01:00.000-07:002008-06-08T13:56:09.932-07:00Relocating to BaltimoreBuz has had some success as an Independent Contractor helping folks relocate to Baltimore. He sometimes sees bad advice on other websites, so decided to blog about it.<div> </div><div>Most young people relocating to Baltimore are only told that 3 neighborhoods exist: </div><div>Canton</div><div>Fells Point</div><div>Federal Hill</div><div> </div><div>There are others!</div><div><br class="webkit-block-placeholder"></div><div>Well, this is just not their fault. Many people move to Baltimore with only very cursory knowledge of the city or area. It is sad to see them relying on websites and talk forums in which the city boosters or haters are predominant.</div><div><br class="webkit-block-placeholder"></div><div>Like most cities, Baltimore has a mix of good neighborhoods, bad neighborhoods, and in-betweens.</div><div><br class="webkit-block-placeholder"></div><div>If you're moving to Baltimore, you kinda have to hook up with a native who knows their way around (someone like me!). Otherwise, you'll be spending a lot of time wandering abaout and being fooled</div>buzoncrimehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00222344932427990980noreply@blogger.com4