Collected the key at 2.30 pm today Ive done 110 miles to and throw in the passat pulling a small trailer today The contract for the property says that all vehicles visiting or staying at the property must have full mot,road fund and valid insurance for use Im going to hide the paravan under a cover and hope for the best
Make some pre-reg plates up and tell em its older than 1960 and it doesnt need an mot. they wont know the difference - will they?
As said DO NOT put PVA on the plaster use the cheap emulsion, I don't bother the water it down ad I feel the cheapest stuff is thin enough.
Back to the plaster, paint it while it's still wet - one coat, job done. Worked for me. Yes, yes I know technically you shouldn't but it'll still dry out.
How can they check any of that easily...I guess they can check the tax online but past that it's not open to the public databases is it?
Probably has noisy neighbours ,when we rented in Cornwall, all around us had bought their houses ,they definitely looked down on us especially driving the old campervan ,I laugh now thinking they are all still stuck there..
It's to stop people like LEF dragging the neighbourhood down. All the neighbours are probably owners and your landlord may well have lived in amongst them before renting it out Take a few can of special brew round and introduce yourself, you'll be alright. A lot of new build houses have restrictive covenants on the deeds...no vans bigger than a standard transit on the drives, no caravans for more than 3 nights etc etc.
you'd use neat PVA on areas prior to patching (as a bonding), then watered down emulsion on top of fresh plaster....watered down 3 or 4 to 1 PVA could also be used before a skim coat on top of old plaster but you need to make sure it doesn't dry streaky, as the new stuff 'skids' as suggested
Brown field site Ex farm yard owned by the church commission. We've jumped through so many hoops to get it, I should be performing a circus act for money:surprise: