Showing posts with label Vacouver/SWWashington/Clark County Real Estate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vacouver/SWWashington/Clark County Real Estate. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Winter in the Pacific NW



Welcome to the Pacific NW..we are so blessed with this spectacular scenery...Mt. Hood and the Columbia River, on a beautiful Winters Day..

Driving to an Appt. this morning with my Co-Broker this is the view that we saw.  We are so blessed that we have the beautiful backdrop for our day.  William Amorin, Broker, Realty Pro and I were driving out to a clients property today to meet up with inspectors and we were blessed with spectacular views of Mt. Hood and the Columbia River.  What a wonderful way to begin the New Year and Winter Season but with this majestic scene.

If you are looking to make a move in the near future, please feel free to call on us.  We would the opportunity to speak with you regarding your move from First Nest to Empty Nest..



Monday, March 7, 2011

Spring Fever, feel like Walking...

Here is a great site for some really good information from your walking stride to what shoes to buy and how often you should spring for a new pair...Walking Guide...  I am looking forward to getting out there again and becoming involved in the many walks that are available in our area this year...While walking yesterday around the neighborhood with my dog, we were given a treat for they eyes...beautiful daffodils...a breath of Spring after a long Winters nap...

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Something to do NOW if you want to buy in 2011..

There are lots of purchases that are highly prone to impulse buying: shoes on sale, puppies at the pound, we can all find something, especially since we are all out looking to spend..


 
But houses? Not so much. Savvy, regret-free homebuying can take weeks or months of financial and lifestyle research and planning. If you want 2011 to be the year you become a homeowner, here are 5 things you should be doing, as we speak.



1. Minimize your holiday spending and save your cash. Instead of using the holiday sales to acquire a new winter wardrobe of cashmere sweaters, hold the discretionary spending down so you can give yourself the gift of homeownership! If you are serious about buying a home next year, don't run up additional credit card debt on gifts this year. Instead, make homemade cards or write holiday letters this year for everyone except the kiddos. And even for the kids, consider scaling back on the stuff, spending more of your time with them than your money, and getting started now saving toward your home purchase. (I don't think too many folks would argue that a less materialistic holiday season would hurt anyone, at any age.)



Kickstart your 2011 homebuying resolution by starting a "Home" savings account at an high-interest, online bank (the discipline-boosting goal is a bank that isn't super easy to transfer funds out of when you run low on cash), and set up an automatic deposit into it every payday. To get specific about your savings goal, if you're cash-flush, obviously a 20% down payment will get you top notch interest rates and provide you with the maximum ability to manage your monthly payments. If you're going to be more of a bootstrapping buyer, an FHA loan might be right up your alley - they offer a down payment of 3.5% of the purchase price.



All buyers should plan to have at least 3 percent of the purchase price saved up for closing costs, even if you want the seller to chip in. The lower-priced the home you want to buy, the more percentage points you should be willing to chip in for closing costs. It's easy for closing costs on an $150,000 FHA loan to run as high as $4,000 or more, considering transfer taxes, inspections, appraisals and mortgage insurance fees. So, even the scrappiest buyer should have a savings target somewhere around 6.5% of their target home's price. To buy a $200,000 home, for example, that would mean a savings target of $13,000.

Local real estate and mortgage pros can help you clarify realistic "cash to close" expectations and savings targets for your area

Thank you Trulia...

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Cranberry Sauce for the Holidays..

My family has enjoyed this cranberry sauce recipe over the years..


Title: Cranberry Sauce
Cranberry Orange Sauce

Ingredients:

1 Cup Water/with Fresh Orange juice
1 Cup Sugar
1 12 Oz., package Cranberries, rinsed and drained
orange peel-grated from one orange/cut in half and
juice and add to water.
Chopped nuts..I like pecan



Directions:

Grate Orange and extract Juice into measuring cup.
Combine water, orange juice, sugar in a medium
sauce pan. Bring to a boil, add cranberries, return
to boil. Reduce heat and boil gently for 10 minutes
stirring occasionally. Stir in grated orange peel and nuts.

Cover and cool..
you could also use this as a project and place in
jars for gifts..

Number Of Servings:dinner
Preparation Time:10 min...

Cleaning your fireplace with Used Coffee Grounds

Got a fireplace that actually burns things up? If there's a significant amount of ashes to clean out, you can cut down on the mouth-covering and coughing with used coffee grounds, which mix with the ashes into an easy-to-clean whole.




The tip comes from Networx, which claims that the weight and slight dampness of coffee grounds, when sprinkled around a fireplace bottom, makes ashes less likely to fly and easier to clean out. We found the coffee grounds/ash connection in a few other places online, too—along with a number of suggestions on making your own long-burning logs out of coffee grounds, so it seems worth at least a try.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Senior News for Vancouver, Clark County/SW Washington

This is a great resource for Senior news for Clark County/SW Washington...so, come out and play where you love to live.


Seniors, Vancouver, WA

Housing Equity



  • Housing equity rose 17 percent or nearly $1 trillion over the past 5 quarters (15 months).
  • The increase was due to a modest rise in home values and a reduction in outstanding mortgage debt.
  • The debt reduction resulted from ‘cash-in’ refinancings and a greater number of all-cash purchases. The Realtors® Confidence Index reports that 28 percent of August purchases were all-cash.
  • The lower debt is also a result of foreclosures, which remove debt from the national household finance data, though bank balance sheets do take a hit.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Home Buyers Tax Credit still available to Military

The Homebuyers Tax Credit is still available to the Military Families until April, 2011...if you are in the Military and are looking to purchase a home this tax credit is still available to you and your family...the Interest Rates are fantastic, the lowest in decades, and the price of homes are down...what a great time to buy you and/or your family a new home!!  Just go to this link and then call your Lender and Realtor!!

http://www.federalhousingtaxcredit.com/service_mem.php

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Back to School

Our education doesn't end with reading, writing, well maybe arithmetic...when you add 2 + 2 you still get 4, but...when in 2001 you got a loan for $200,000 at 7.5% you paid $1398 a month for this loan...in 2010 on the same loan you will pay $984, because your interest rate is 4.25%...you do the math this is a savings of $414 per month...



Maybe we need to get back to basic math...1 + 1 = 2...



Time to have a Class...get your lenders to work with you ...

A House is still a Home...we need a little Home Schooling...

Friday, August 27, 2010

Why are you Renting????


Funny, how in 2005 we were willing to pay more and have higher Interest Rates...in 2005 - 2006 around 6.5% this coupled with the inflated pricing of housing We couldn't purchase fast enough and it resulted in multiple offers that inflated the price even higher...

Now we have great pricing and terrific rates and we are sitting in rentals, paying the bill for someone else ...what are we doing to get moving??? Maybe we need to bring the "Home" back into the picture and take a little of the "Investment" out of the picture...

A $200,000 purchase, today, with 20% down @ 4.25% brings the monthly payment to $787.00

In 2005 - 2006 the same payment would have been $1,011.

When you factor in the Interest Tax credit can you rent for this??? $200,000 will also purchase you a larger, nicer home than it would in 2005 - 2006...Win/Win!!

Monday, August 23, 2010

Train Quiet Zone!!

Train Quiet Zone....

With some of our most expensive properties being between Hwy, 14, an East/West Expressway, the Rail Road's East/West Line, the Columbia River and views of the Airport and Portland Lights, we now have a quiet zone for the trains, at least at one crossing...

Train Quiet Zone