Who's statue do you bury under this for sale sign?

Comments

  • Tim Ellis.
  • It's St. Joseph. I buried one of those 4" plastic St. Joes for a listing I had in Issaquah about 9 months ago. The place sold quickly, but when I went back to dig up the statue, I couldn't find it..Maybe the place has been sold several times since then because of my deficient saint finding abilities?
  • As an atheist, I have to say that the idea that burying a religious statue in the yard to help sell a house is about as foreign as you can get on several different levels.
  • ...And you think it was easy for this Jewish agnostic to bury a plastic statue of a Catholic saint?
  • ira s wrote:
    ...And you think it was easy for this Jewish agnostic to bury a plastic statue of a Catholic saint?

    Well, I'm sure you had to pack a shovel all the way out to your car, and then dig a bit of a whole. Assuming the sod was well grown you had to no doubt put some force into the first foot or so of your hole. I like to use my foot and gravity to help get the hole started. After that, it really depends on how deep you dug. I mean it's a small statue right? So it's not like you were digging out an irrigation ditch. Maybe you went down 2 feet?

    It doesn't sound too hard to me. :wink:
  • I didn't even use a shovel. I used a little trowel, the plastic statue is only 4" tall. Nah, it wasn't backbreaking work..But how did that little bugger disappear?
  • ira s wrote:
    But how did that little bugger disappear?

    You have three options, and what you pick determines how much faith you have - ergo how effective the statue was.

    1) The statue was consumed divinely the instant the house sold.

    2) It succumbed slowly as bacteria and nematodes ate it, which is a miracle since it was plastic.

    3) You didn't mark the 'tomb' well enough; it's still down there but you just can't find it.
  • Ubersalad wrote:
    Tim Ellis.
    Now, I don't see why anyone would do that, but you gave me an idea...

    Maybe there would be a market out there for Tim Ellis voodoo dolls. We could market them to sellers' agents that want to take every possible measure to ensure the house sells quickly. :wink:
  • But Tim,
    What if it worked? yeah, you'd be getting rich off of some John L Scott listing agents, but developing premature arthritis.
  • Actually it's a great idea to bury Tim Ellis doll under a desired property for it to go into foreclosure...makes perfect sense.
  • Ubersalad wrote:
    Actually it's a great idea to bury Tim Ellis doll under a desired property for it to go into foreclosure...makes perfect sense.

    Isn't that also trespassing and perhaps vandalism?
  • I would advise you to bury it under public sidewalk.
  • Here's a better plan. Put Tim's statue on a helium balloon and float it over the house you want. That will make it more of a legitimate haunting. Or make the statue a balloon, which is cheaper. If you attach a little fan to it, you could even steer it around for especially effective haunting capabilities.

    This is good. Are you getting all this down Tim?
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