Husband: Oh my god, he knocked her down, didn't he?
Me: No, she threw herself at him and fell.
H: Is that why they [the person or people who lived in the place we had an appointment to see] had swords on the wall?
Me: Sssh, don't talk while I'm cancelling appointments.
We have planned ways to scrimp and allow us to pay more rent, only to open the door to CollegeTown's larger slummy apartments. Frankly, we are at the end of our ropes.
Some of you may not have gone apartment-hunting recently, or at least not in a college town. When you are a dog-owner, you tend to see the world of apartments in three tiers. Tier One is for those of you
Here's the one that throws me though. Tier Two is the world of cats-only apartments. And that I don't get. I just don't. I like cats. Were the husband not opposed, I would own at least one cat, and it would be named after a poet (Auden if it's gray, Yeats if it's ginger, and I could go on but I won't), and I would be a crazy librarian with a variety of pets named after literary figures, and that would be grand. (By the way, Beckett is named after Samuel, the playwright, because you just don't name a dog after a poet.) So I am not against the concept of a cat in an apartment, but cats only? The fact of the matter is that dog waste is no worse than cat spray - one might argue the contrary, in fact. Even if you have a cat who does not spray, cats have an in-born instinct to scratch. It marks their territory and files their nails. It's a damn fact people; Wikipedia says so. At any rate, there are many nice apartments in Tier Two. But not for us.
Then there's Tier Three. If you are a landlord with more than a couple of rental properties, apparently your thinking goes like this: "Complex A is a shitbox. May as well allow dogs." I can see that hardwood floors and a 50-lb dog might be a bad combination. But if you have carpeted the place anyway, why not allow pets? Please, for the love of all that's holy, allow pets. If you're renting to undergrads, there's a good chance there's going to be an irremovable puke stain on the floor, and you'll have to change the carpet anyway. (Or promise to change it, hoping that your unsuspecting future tenant won't make you write it in the contract.) To be fair, Tier Three also includes places rented by landlords who only own a small number of properties. They don't have to turn over 100 units in August, and thus they feel they can take the risk on pets. Our hopes rest on these types of landlords, or on people trying to back out of a lease they signed in April. But those types of places get snapped up fast and are often expensive. Or else you get there, and you see exactly how much a camera can lie and exactly why a moderately priced place near downtown is still available.
So that's where we are. Looking at shitboxes, while trying not to weep openly. There are nice places, but our budget only stretches so far and we are searching from over two hours away. You will notice the complete lack of discussion on the topic of buying. I look at what we wanted a few short months ago, and smile fondly at how cute we were. We have not given up on sheep and chickens, but we are trying to be realistic. We have allowed our dreams for the future to be put on hold and our expectations for the present to shrink. We know we missed the prime time to find rentals. All we want for this year is a clean place, where we can let the dog out at night without investing in pepper spray and, come spring, we can begin to search for our dream home for next year. Please, Tier Three, won't you come through for us?