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It’s all going……..ready for a new life.

(65 Posts)
Sago Wed 22-Jan-25 08:33:23

We have hopefully sold our home (sstc) a large 3 story Edwardian town house.
With it we have sold a lot of our furniture.

We hired a van and took various things to an auction house last week.

It’s out with the old and in with the new!

We will hopefully be living in a two year old home and having a very different home and way of life.

It’s not all signed and sealed yet🤞 but getting close.

I am so looking forward to the next chapter in our lives.

Has anyone else here done this?

NannyKnit Thu 23-Jan-25 17:10:10

You’ll feel great once those contracts have been exchanged. The waiting is nerve-wracking. We downsized 6months ago from a 5 bed detached with 4 baths & half an acre. No gas, no mains drainage. Our brand new place still has 4 beds, 2 baths but the square footage is half that of the old house. We have a small, manageable garden which we’ve had professionally designed & landscaped. It’s so warm & we’re in another beautiful area (Surrey Hills) with lovely walks on our doorstep, which we had before. We have a shop & pub & bus stop within walking distance & a small town 2 miles away. We don’t mind having other houses around, it feels safer & everyone is friendly.
We love it here - after 28 yrs thought it’d be more of a wrench, but it’s a relief!
And we’re closer to our granddaughters, which is why the location change.

HousePlantQueen Thu 23-Jan-25 18:19:05

Good luck Whiff, fingers crossed 🤞 for you! It is lovely to read that the majority have made successful and happy moves. We downsized 13 years ago in our very early 60s when a bungalow came on the market in the village where we have lived for 35 years.

M0nica Thu 23-Jan-25 18:26:40

We have been trying to do so for the past year, but we cannot sell our house. It is not a question of price, there are just nobuyers out there.

When we do get a buyer, we are hoping to trade down from a large 550 year old timber frame house in a large village, to a smaller 300 year old house right in the centre of a small town not far from our children.

Louella12 Thu 23-Jan-25 18:31:14

Ooh how exciting! Wishing you well.

We have vaguely discussed doing this but don't have the energy for it yet. I'm not great at getting rid of things! Maybe one day !

Cabbie21 Thu 23-Jan-25 18:42:15

We moved twelve years ago, from a 5 bed to a 3 bed house, but this one has a downstairs loo and shower room, is on a good bus route and has many amenities close by. Best of all, not far from my family.
DH did get rid of a lot but soon acquired more and filled every inch of our new home. After he died there was a lot to disperse and it is not finished yet, but the downstairs has now all been sorted and redecorated, and more items got rid of. It has been hard but my house is now my home, not just a repository for his hobbies and junk. I am hoping when I tackle the rest that it will be easier.
I had a target of Easter but it has moved, as someone will take the bookcases but not till summer. That should work out well.
I may or may not move again and if I do it will be to a flat, so more decluttering will be needed.
Best wishes for your move, Sago.

granjan66 Thu 23-Jan-25 20:19:17

We downsized 2 years ago from my husband's 18th century family home in a rural area to a more modern house in a small town. We can walk everywhere. Our rates are lower as is our heating bill. We are very happy.

Primrose53 Thu 23-Jan-25 22:07:23

You never know what’s round the corner so my advice would be don’t keep too much clutter and if you start thinking about moving strike while the iron is hot!

The physio said to me the other day that we might even decide to move to a bungalow following my husband’s major stroke.
There is no way we could do that now. It’s a 4 bed detached house with nice sunny garden and we love it. Been here over 30 years. The loft is full to the brim. We have a large L shaped garage and you could not fit a piece of paper in there. It is packed floor to ceiling with DIY stuff, car stuff, a large motorbike, sacks of horse feed, 2 freezers, 2 washing machines and a tumble dryer. The big stuff can be got rid of but its all the tools, boxes of screws, nails etc, enough paint cans to stock a shop, car cleaning gear, horse riding tack, saddles, wellingtons, coats for dog walking, horse riding, gardening etc etc. all of that would fill a lorry alone. It is depressing me.

rosieod1 Thu 23-Jan-25 22:57:45

We keep talking about moving. I've always wanted to go to Cornwall and we were set to do it 10 years ago and then along came our grandson who was only about 10 minutes away from us. First grandchild was born and lived/s in Mexico so didn't want to be so far away from the next one. I was grandma daycare for 2 and a half years until covid came along and then everything changed. In the meantime we now have another grandson,a sibling to the other local one,so it makes it even harder to decide where to move to. It's ok where we live but we're quite lonely really,not many friends. And my heart tells me to move to the sea still. Hub doesn't really care where he lives as he's travelled for most of his life until he met me ...sigh

Allira Thu 23-Jan-25 23:04:37

Given in, can't find anywhere we like in this area.

So we shall update and deal with what we have.

Allira Thu 23-Jan-25 23:09:32

Sago

Great to hear so many positive stories, thank you all.

It’s really a sideways move as the house is not much smaller in square footage, it is only two years old and one of just 4 new properties tucked away in a nice quiet village with a few amenities and a good size Co-Op.

I am looking forward to being warm!

We are getting rid of all our antique furniture and paintings and starting again.

We bought a holiday let 3/4 years ago and went ultra modern and love it so we have taken the plunge and decided to have a major change.

Hope it all goes well, Sago.

Our house isn't old, it needs a bit of updating but it is warm and that's essential when you get older I think and can't move as fast.

Keep what you love but try to avoid keeping things thst need too much dusting 🙂

grannyro Fri 24-Jan-25 14:28:50

I sold my old Victoria 3 bedroomed house 3 years ago and am now renting a 2 bedroom modern flat with wrap round balcony. I had so much stuff to get rid of and it meant lots of trips to charity shops and the local dump. It was hard work! I have not once regretted it though as I have no maintenance problems now, everything is nice and clean and fresh looking. I just love it. It wasn't until I moved that I realised my house (where I had lived or 40+ years) was such a source of worry. I am sure you will love your new uncluttered life!

Koalama Fri 24-Jan-25 14:30:39

Yes Lived in our old house 40 yrs and moved to a newer more modern build 3yrs ago

BluebellGran Fri 24-Jan-25 22:07:24

Strange that I should read this post today. We completed on our sale of a 4/5 bed detached house in West Wales this morning and are currently in a Travelodge en route to our next home - a 2 bed semi detached bungalow in Hertfordshire just a mile and a half from family. We had discussed what we would do when one of us died and I said I’d move to Herts, my DH said he’d find a bungalow near where we lived near the sea. So we decided we’d wait 5 years and talk about it again. But dear d in law said ‘no decide now and move closer to us.’ By this time DH had decided he liked my plan - so here we are! We are in our late 70s and getting rid of ‘stuff’ has been hard, as has the packing, but we are so glad we’ve done it! Our advice would be don’t leave it too late. We are cream crackered tonight but happily looking forward to the next chapter in our lives!

madeleine45 Fri 24-Jan-25 23:33:02

i have moved 19 times as an adult, both here and abroad and nothing to do with the forces. The hardest move was this last one as my husband had died but i still lived in the house we shared for over 5 years. This was a sensible move to a ground floor flat as have back problems etc , but this was in the time of covid, so could have no help from family or friends and was downsizing from a 3 bedroom house with a large garden. The garden was the most painful to leave, i had over 100 different snowdrops hellebores etc etc. Also it had been a happy home for us both and while I lived there it felt as though he was still with me.
Anyway what I wanted to pass on were a few tips that might be of help to any of you moving.
So firstly I get a sturdy little notebook and give each room in the new house a few pages.Then once you are sure that this is your new home , this is fiddly but very worth while. Get some graph paper and do a very clear plan of your new place to scale. Check it carefully as you are using it to plan and it needs to be accurate. Then the really fiddly bit. Measure all the furniture tables chairs etc and to scale cut out a little bit of paper and put a number on it. Make a list of the numbers and show what the item is beside the number.

Then you begin the game. Start by putting the furniture into the rooms you think you want them to go to. Also, draw a line to indicate which way doors open on cupboards etc and the cooker. So you go through putting it all in the various rooms. Then you can see how this room will be too cluttered, or there is no way you can put item 3 in the same room as 5. I had an upright very good piano and have had it for a long time and spent quite a few days trying every possible combination of furniture before I had to admit defeat and acknowledge that I would have to sell it and get something else later.

So it is much easier to move bits of paper around, you can each start by just putting things the way you would like and then looking at the variations and coming to a decision about what is possible and what is not. It is much less stressful to do it this way, because you are confronted by the obvious and clear indication that this thing will not move. Once you have done this you can work together to decide if there is one piece of furniture that you must have and rearrange rooms to fit that, or it makes you realize that it has to go.

That is the hard bit but when you are then convinced that things have to go you sell them and give them away from your old property, thus saving money and time for the loading up for the new place. Also if you have measured up well you will also now be reasonably clear which room you want things to go in so you stick clear simple squares of different colours and then for the removal men it is simple. All green goes in the bedroom , all red in the lounge. This way although it is always stressful and hard moving but you feel in charge doing it like this.

Then other tips that i have found very useful. Sometimes it can take more time than you expect to exchange contracts. If the sale is amicable ask permission from the people you are buying from to take photos of the garden from the various angles. print the photos, dont keep them on the phone. on the back write the date taken and the time of day. You will not have time to do much to the garden when you first arrive but when you are ready you have photos that show you what is growing where and where the sun is etc and it stops you digging up something precious by mistake. Also in years to come when you have turned it into a lovely garden and open it for the NGS you have these old photos to show how it was when you first arrived .

Then back to the book. for each room as you arrive when the room is bare, make notes on things like the loose floorboard where you can look at the pipes or cables, where the plugs are (and if the wiring is poor consider having the plugs moved further up the wall so that you dont have to bend to the floor later when it may be difficult.) Dont immediately throw out carpets and decorate. If you leave the old carpet down it will do you for the beginning and allow you to actually live in the place before you commit to large amounts of money changing things and then not really liking what you have done. Let the house and garden tell you first. Note which is the sunny room, which gets the shadow etc. Then when you do decide to decorate write in the appropriate room page how much wallpaper you needed, the size of the windows, do you want to put in any extra plugs or lights before you wallpaper/ but if you do this then you have the record for future changes. I am a woman of champagne tastes and beer money. So when we first arrive somewhere you are looking round to find out lots of things, so with your handy little book of measurments you can wander about and find sales, and sometimes super curtains that will be fine in a charity shop. One of the best buys I made was many years ago when we bought a lovely old terraced house with high ceilings and very big. The hall , landing and stairs needed 33 rolls of wallpaper!! Added to that it was a very old house so corners where not straight etc. So after looking for about a week I found a wallpaper shop that was selling a discontinued line and it was basically little sprigs on a cream background. I bought the whole box of 36 rolls for £1 a roll, so that was £36 for the lot. It went on very well with 3 rolls to spare and gave me space to put my watercolours up like a gallery.

A couple more things. when you are looking in an area for properties get the local paper sent to you each week. You will see what is happening in the new town and if you keep seeing fights in bloggs road several times you will disregard the details for the house there! My first day always includes going to the library and registering. Partly as I am a book a holic, but the library keeps the addresses and information up to date on all sorts of things so if you want to play chess or sew quilts they will have the latest contacts.

Then this sounds like a luxury but I can assure you that I find it is worth every penny and avoids the divorce when the move has got you both to a frazzle. On your visits to your new place look round for a simple b'/b and preferably with an evening meal possible. So then if you book the night of the day you arrive with the furniture, then you can work methodically to do things however you want, room by room or whatever, because when you are weary you know that when you have had enough, you can go to somewhere and have a good shower and a sit down and a meal and recupterate. Then the next morning after a decent nights sleep and a good breakfast you are ready to carry on in your home. If you cannot do this then I always have a big bag for each person, In it there is at least 3 changes of underwhere and a spare set of jumpers t shirts and wash bag and your pillow. Most people sleep better with their own pillow. Gget the removal men to take you bedroom stuff in first and make that the priority to make up the bed and have your washbags and towels in the bathroom. When they have gone look around and put a chair each facing out into the garden, with a table or something you can use for a table and a light. So everytime you feel shattered you can sit down but not look at the mess. Take photos of each room before you put things into it when you first arrive and then just make sure you have your beds done, and definitely I suggest you go out for a meal ot a local pub or restaurant rahter than have a take away as it gives you a little time away from the shambles.