>>1028
yeah you really have to go to the property itself and make sure it's worth what they're asking. you could probably offer 10k cash and get a deal. which for a developed land is a great deal, those are usually $30k+ depending on acreage and location. if the trailer's livable for another decade would be easy to save up the cash to build an actual house there. and the location doesn't seem bad looking at google maps.
if it's on city utilities, and they've been built/replaced within the past 10, 15 years that's not a bad deal. of course buyer beware, could go there and find out some trees rooted through all the septic plumbing or whatever and have to dig up/replace all that for another 10k. maybe it's abandoned and the pipes inside the trailer burst and flooded/rotted the inside, who knows. gotta go look at it.
anyway yeah, fixed rates are what you need especially in a volatile market like we've got today. wait for the stock market to crash, then i bet you'll be able to get some realllly good terms on a mortgage, and so long as your job is secured you can stay at a fixed 1-2% rate as your wages increase via inflation, win-win.
good advice on the credit as well, i should probably start using my cc again, there's a several year gap in my borrowing history. fed must hate me.