Monday, December 31, 2007
My Resolution
On a business note, I've changed brokers and am very excited about this change of location, style of ownership/management and the potential for me to have an impact on even more people as I help them through the process of buying and selling real estate, as well as the animals which receive my support through donations I make after each transaction closes. I do get a rush out of writing those $500 checks!!
Best wishes to you all as you embark on what will be a happy, successful, fulfilling New Year!
Friday, December 28, 2007
Happy New Year!!
Yes, business has picked up some. One of my Buyers has purchased a house as an investment. Look for me to have the fixed-up version of this house listed in the Spring! Another of my Buyers, who has been looking for just the right place, finally found one with my help. Unfortunately, so did another smart Buyer who beat my Buyer to it! So here's the lesson--despite the downturn in the market and the thousands of properties on the market in the Atlanta area, when a house is priced right, has been "staged" properly, and is in a desirable neighborhood (remember "location, location, location"?) this market is still moving along pretty fast.
I do expect to see the market improve some over the course of 2008. This could be a great time to up-size or to purchase investment property. Let's get together to talk about the possibilities!
Also exciting for 2008 is the upcoming opening of Avenue Realty Inman Park. The office is being built out currently and we hope to be open by March 1. Did you catch that "we"? Yes, I've moved to a new brokerage, and I'm really looking forward to this next chapter in my Real Estate career. We'll keep you posted on the Grand Opening!
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Every Little Bit Helps
Yesterday I read two articles in the AJC online. While I know the purpose of headlines is to snare readers into buying the paper and reading the article, I know some people only read the title of the article and then they go off to spread the "news" they just read. So, the teaser was that the Prius (a hybrid motor vehicle) failed the Georgia emissions testing. "Ha-ha" say the pessimists, "those holier-than-thou environmentalists aren't so good after all!" What the teaser/headline should have said is that the emissions testing failed to work on the Prius. There are two tests they can run on a vehicle. One hooks up to the on-board computer of newer vehicles to study the history of emissions. The other is placed in the tail pipe of older vehicles. Well, the computer doohickey doesn't work with the Prius, and the very design of the Prius does not allow for the full running of the tail pipe test. The gasoline engine does not run for long enough in the idle position so the test can not be completed. Anyway, as more of these cars are nearing the 3 year old point where testing is mandatory it is hoped that the situation will be corrected and the Prius can be tested quickly like every other vehicle. The article didn't say, but I imagine other hybrid vehicles are having or will have the same problem with the test equipment.
The other article had to do with water usage and electricity. I must admit that I was one of those who reacted inappropriately to that headline--until I read it through. The thesis of the article is that the generation of electricity for the average daily use for household in GA uses three times as much water as the household uses as water each day. "Huh?" I wondered. "Water goes over a turbine and generates electricity then goes on its way. No real usage there." Wrong. Maybe up North and at the Hoover Dam this is how it is done, but here in GA and neighboring states we still burn coal to create electricity. The water is used to cool the facility and is subsequently lost to steam and evaporation. I guess sometimes that evaporated water then falls nearby in the form of rain and dew, but what the experts are saying is that we really need to be addressing our needs for electricity and how we can cut down while we are trying to address the more obvious ways in which we are using water here. Wow--it's really coming home to roost again. Our need to have it all and have it now is our Achilles tendon. Hmmm.
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
What I Heard Last Week.....
Wednesday, October 3, 2007
The Animals Win!
In January of this year as I reviewed my business "pipeline" it looked as if I could more than double my goal of $6000 donated to help animals. At this point, with the market as hesitant as it has been I will pushing it to make my goal. I know people can't buy and sell real estate through me just so I can send money to help animals--but when you speak with people who need an outstanding Realtor you can tell them about me! I enjoy helping people through transitions--housing change is usually a part of life transitions--and I REALLY get a charge out of writing those $500 checks to the animal charities I support.
Also, if you have knowledge of an outstanding animal charity that could use some help, please pass on their info to me and maybe some day I'll be able to help them out, too!
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
And Now For The Rest of the Story
Sunday, September 9, 2007
So much to say, so much to say....
Aside from the concert reference above, I do actually find myself with so much to say! Why is it that it seems like life is the "same old, same old" and then all of a sudden there are lots of things to talk about and share? As you know, we've been trying to eat locally this summer, purchasing a lot of our food from the Morningside Market, the new Peachtree Market (at the Cathedral on the big curve,) and filling in with local or green items from Whole Foods. It's been interesting eating what is available. Growing up, that's what we did in large part. My folks were full into the acceptance of world-wide markets and new-fangled products, as most Depression Era babies tend to be. But we always had a huge garden which we children helped tend. On a simple 1/4 acre, in-town lot our family had fruits and vegetables galore every year. I didn't realize how lucky I was until I moved out and started my own household and began to miss those fresh sour cherries for pie, multitudinous blueberries, fresh asparagus, strawberries, and all the basics from the vegetable gardens.
I was able to garden in containers and squeeze things into ornamental gardens where we rented, but it was not the same as growing and putting up the results of our labors as in my childhood. And the world continued to change. Gone were the days when you could tell what was in season by the price of the broccoli, or the corn, or the strawberries. On any given day we could walk into our non-gourmet grocery store and find these "treasures." I admit, Tim and I fell victim to the allure of those near perfect specimens, available whenever the chosen recipe called for their use.
It is so much easier to follow a diet, or "way of eating" as we like to call it these days, when you can get exactly what the plan says to eat. But does the food satisfy? I used to think so. Until we started regularly purchasing fresh fruits and vegetables from the local market. And the meats and cheeses? Some of you aren't old enough to remember when chicken actually had a flavor, and wasn't just some bland white meat that was jazzed up with any number of tantalizing sauces. I have a distant memory of "meat having more flavor" from when I was young, and my mother actually grew up on a farm where her mother raised chickens for eggs, and they harvested chicken when the time was right. Mom has never thought store bought chicken tasted like what she grew up with.
So why the excitement today about eating locally? After weeks of eating summer squashes, cucumbers, melons, okra, tomatoes, and potatoes the first of the GREENS showed up again at the market. I was NEVER so happy to see turnip greens and arugula!!!! The seasonality of eating locally "makes everything new again" as we go through the year. In May we were sick and tired of eating chard (a green,) and yearned for a change. Then it came. Working our way through the summer season produce we started to yearn for another change. Saturday was cause for celebration! I'm cooking our first late summer greens tonight for dinner--Hurray!!!!!
I am the first to admit that eating locally is a luxury--the acquisition of food is claiming a bigger part of our budget than when we shopped at the local chain market. The quality of food we are eating has gone up tremendously; the pleasure we get out of buying our food, preparing it, sharing it and then eating it has gone up tremendously as well. And over time the relationships we are building with the people who are producing our food have started to have a sustaining quality as well. The most cost effective way to eat locally is to support a single farmer through Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) or a "share" in shorthand. Some farmers require a buy-in at the beginning of the season--this is the traditional method. A group of "investors" give the farmer his/her seed money (literally) and then all who purchased a share can partake in the harvest (which like in any investment can been either be really good or really bad.)
We were able to join the CSA at Riverview Farms in the early part of the season, but long after the seeds had been purchased, and benefit from this program. We get a portion of whatever is ready at the farm for the week. That means we get some foods which are new to us, some which we are pretty sure we don't like, and some that we go crazy for. And it means that we get to claim whatever we can use of the over-abundance which nature provides at times. One week it meant a bushel of corn in addition to our other foods. Which brings up another challenge of eating locally--nature sometimes requires us to rearrange our schedule. In our homogeneous world we have also gotten very used to dictating our own schedules. Nature doesn't keep as strict of a timeline--sometimes the conditions are perfect and we get just enough. Sometimes, as in this summer, we get draught and we have to harvest the crop all at once or risk losing it all together. Which means that all of a sudden you've got a bushel or corn to share or "put up" to eat later, when food is more scarce. Did we have "time" to do that? Not strictly speaking, but in the end we appreciated having nature's little reminder that we don't have as much control as we think we do. And I know several people who appreciated sharing in the bounty, and we'll enjoy these reminders of summer in the dead of winter, too.
If you have any questions about getting started eating locally, send me a message or post to this blog and I'll try to get the info for you. Time to go eat my greens--hurray!!!!
Tuesday, August 21, 2007
Who Reads This Anyway?
It's been fun to take classes at Sabra--very casual, no pressure to create masterpieces, but lots of support if you want to be adventurous and creative. Prices are very good, too.
May I suggest that you catch a meal at The Glenwood while you're there in East Atlanta Village. They serve an Eastern North Carolina style BBQ, which is very respectable and hard to find in Atlanta. For breakfast/brunch options anything including the grits will be devine--they are organic and slow cooked. Creamy and delicious!
Since I've got folks who are keeping an eye out for new postings on this blog I will try to do better about regular postings! Who knew?!?!?!?
Monday, July 30, 2007
Is Real Estate Slow?
Atlanta never experienced the run-up in prices which many markets still making the news did. Also, our in-town market continues to see demand as people continue to move to Atlanta, and those in the suburbs see the benefit of re-claiming time and gas money by moving into town. And life continues--people get married, divorced, have kids, send kids to college--all kinds of transitions which mean that their housing no longer meets their needs anymore.
That being said, there are some really attractive prices because we have had fewer buyers confident enough to take the leap into home ownership. Higher supply equals lower prices as we recall from Economics 101. But guess what is happening? People who don't really need to sell are taking their homes off the market and the supply is starting to get back to a more reasonable amount. That should create some upward pressure on prices.
Thinking of making a move this fall? It's not too early to contact me so that I can help you plan your best strategy for making it happen!
Thursday, July 12, 2007
Beautiful and Practical!
Monday, June 25, 2007
Buying Locally, Eating Grandly!
Friday, June 15, 2007
Customer Service Done Right!.
Monday, June 11, 2007
The Trio
Yesterday we celebrated 8 weeks with our newest family member, Talley. I am amazed how it can seem like only yesterday and yet forever since she moved in! Public Servic Announcement: It is very unusual to have a household with three female dogs which get along peacefully most of the time. Getting a mix together like we have is not advisable for the novice dog owner. You really need to have some experience reading dog behaviors, understand the dynamics of a pack, and you've got to be willing to walk away from a potential new "kid" if the signals your current family is giving are not positive regardless of how much you, the human, think it would be a good idea to take that doggie home.
Talley came to us through Aussie Rescue. We had to apply to become her new family which was a more extensive process than going through the Humane Society which is where our other two doggies came from. We were asked all kinds of questions which gave the organization an idea of how we treat our animals, what we are inclined to do when dogs act like dogs, what we would do if our personal situation changed, were we really in a position to adopt a dog. Rescue organizations are justified in asking these tough questions because the animals they help have already lost at least one home and the hope is that these placements are truly forever this time around.
I really encourage people to consider adopting rescue animals--the animals know they've been given a second chance and they respond with extra love. Puppies and kittens come with their own sets of challenges, plus you don't know what you might be dealing with down the road. Don't let the fear of the unknown ("but we don't know what kind of baggage a rescue animal might have") keep you from considering this option. All animals need kind, caring, responsible owners who are willing and able to provide the love and time needed to develop healthy, loving pets. If you want a particular breed, Google that breed and the word rescue together to find numerous groups. The Humane Society and Atlanta Pet Rescue both have a variety of ages and sizes of dogs and cats, some of which are purebred, and the Humane Society will even have rabbits, mice, rats, hamsters available, too!
Wednesday, June 6, 2007
Growing Veggies in Midtown
So, container gardening seemed to be the way to go. So far, so good as you can see from these photos! I bought the smaller containers at Target and the taller ones came from Costco. They are all some type of fiberglass so I don't have to worry about freezing in the winter, and they aren't nearly as heavy as they look. I knew that watering would be an issue both because of the containers and because this is the hot South, so I chose a potting soil with those amazing crystals in them which absorb a LOT of water and then slowly release it to the plants as needed. What this has meant for me is that I can water every other day right now. As we really get into summer, I may need to water every day.
But wait, you say, how are you watering these when there are severe water restrictions in Atlanta? Well, what you are looking at above are a Serano pepper plant, a Habenero pepper, a Roma tomato, rosemary, cilantro and a few flowers to help attract the bees and to help keep the pests away. Personal vegetable gardens are exempt from the watering ban. In addition, we've started keeping buckets in the kitchen and in the bath to collect "grey water" to use whenever possible. In the kitchen this means that when I wash vegetables, I collect that water in my bucket and use it later to water the plants. In the bathroom this means that as we are running the water in the morning for our showers that we collect the few gallons which are cold water before it is hot enough for a shower. Nothing crazy yet, though if things get worse I think I'll be saving the shower water, and the dish water when I wash the dishes even though we technically are allowed to water our plants.
These pots have: a yellow bell pepper, red okra, flat leaf parsley and basil plus some flowering plants. Up on the roof terrace we are growing more herbs, pineapple sage, basil, thyme, lavendar and a different rosemary. The pots upstairs have reservoirs in them in addition to the special potting soil. I got those pots from IKEA, and have been very pleased with them so far. Being as the roof terrace is on the fourth floor, there is always a breeze and so not only do the plants contend with the heat, but they have the breeze to dry them out, too. Herbs don't mind the heat, so do well there with these special pots.
My friend Erin is thinking about doing two large pots for her new yard. Her two year old will begin to learn that food doesn't come from the grocery store, but in fact is grown somewhere in soil, with sun and rain and someone to watch out for pests. They are probably going to plant a cherry tomato plant and some basic herbs for cooking. Container gardening is an easy way to start growing your own vegetables--just be sure you consider how hot it gets here, how to keep the plants well watered, and you may want to check out a book at the library for suggestions on plant combinations and how big of container to use for which plants.
We've been enjoying the herbs already, and I've got a few okra almost ready to harvest! It's not too late to get some plants of your own this year so have fun!
Monday, June 4, 2007
This is what happens when you "Fiddle Around!"
I got in touch with the service department at Photo Fiddle after receiving my first attempt at this piece, and Ira called me to see what the trouble was. In the end, because I've ordered from these folks a fair amount, they had an artist work with the photos I had so that we ended up with a more balanced, detailed canvas. Wow--what a treat to see the finished piece!
You can go to the website, download your own photos and play around with the different options they have for manipulating the image. It's quite fascinating. Ask Eileen to see the piece she did of Olivia. Even poor quality photos can be turned into striking pieces. People, pets, landscapes, abstract compositions can all be "fiddled" and turned into your own art, at very reasonable prices in a variety of sizes, either on canvas or on photographic paper. Go have fun fiddling!!
Friday, June 1, 2007
It's Friday!!
Now, we don't want this Figo location to get so popular that it has the same lines as the one at Huff Rd on Howell Mill Road, but for when you aren't up for the "scene", head over to the intersection of Defoor Ave and Collier Road on the West side of I-75. Full menu, wine and beer, big take-out business, too. You'll probably see me and Tim there most Friday nights, so come on out and join us!