Does YOUR realtor have a side hustle???😲😲😲
You better hope not.
These days it seems like EVERYONE out there has a real estate license. And there is a HUGE difference between an amateur that dabbles in the profession hoping to make an extra buck, and someone who does this as a career.
Do yourself a favor and hire a pro. You’ll thank me in the end.
3 Reasons to Sell Your House Now!
Have you ever heard about seasonal real estate patterns? You know, sellers hold off selling during the holidays and buyers put off buying. Then Spring time comes around and everyone jumps back in. Well sellers, here are a few reasons you need to list your house right now and don’t wait after tax season.
1. There’s a shortage of houses for Sale – Buyers are looking for houses right now, and with today’s record low inventory, the chances of your house getting noticed is REALLY high.
2. There’s less competition with other sellers. – Other homeowners may be waiting until later in the year to list, which gives you a headstart, and a leg up on the competition.
3. Mortgage Rates are Low but Rising – Buyers want to purchase before rates move higher, which means they’ll want to act quickly
Don’t wait 6 more weeks. Let’s connect today – so you have the competitive edge by selling your house while the selling is great.
How to Get You Offer Accepted
Buyers have been struggling for months to get their offers accepted, but my buyers have continually gotten into escrow. Want to know how? Here are some tips. Message me for more details.
The Shake that Brought Me back from Cancer
OK, so this isn’t really real estate related, but because so many people have asked me about the recipe, I thought I would share it here. I got the recipe from Doctor Rhonda Patrick, who I learned of from listening to the Tim Ferriss Show. I drank this shake exclusively for about a year while recovering from cancer. It was the only thing I could tolerate, but more importantly, it’s loaded with vitamins, micro nutrients, antioxidants, fiber, and has a good caloric load. It’s all natural, real food, and and top of everything else, it tastes pretty good. I encourage everyone to try it out and let me know what you think.
1st Time Home Buyers: Top Questions
1st time home buyers typically have a lot of questions. This video covers some of the top questions I get from 1st time home buyers hoping to purchase real estate. It’s a little silly, but hopefully informative. I fully believe that anyone who can own a home should own a home. Further, a lot of people have the ability to buy something RIGHT NOW, but don’t believe it’s actually possible to do so. Did you know that if you are a veteran it’s still possible to buy a home with Nothing Down? Conventional loans sometimes allow 1st time home buyers to purchase with as little as 3% down, and FHA Loans allow you to purchase with only 3.5% down. Did you know that it’s possible to repair your credit in a relatively short amount of time to prepare you to buy a home? This tongue in cheek video is just under 4 minutes and it covers these topics along with a few others having to do with the time frames involved in a typical escrow, and what the process of buying a home looks like. If you have questions holding you back from buying your first home, please watch and maybe this will answer a few. And if you still have still have questions…well call me!
Corona Virus and Real Estate…Here’s what we DO know.
Even in these unusual times, some people must still sell, or purchase a home. We in the real estate industry are making changes on an hour by hour basis to ensure that those who still need to do business will be safe while doing so. Virtual meetings, 3D open houses, video tours, and digital signatures are only some of things that we are now using. Here’s a little info to help, in case you need it.
Our Newest Flip in Altadena…Coming Soon!
I’m really excited about my newest project coming up in Altadena. This cool mid-century has a lot of character, and an Oak Tree that must be at least 200 years old. It shades the ENTIRE property, providing a cool, and comfortable space, even on the hottest summer days.
What Does it Cost to Remove a Rent Control Tenant When Owner Wants to Occupy?
Want to know what it can cost to remove a tenant in the city of Los Angeles, subscriber to some tough laws? Check out the forms from the city that list the costs associated even if you want to move in yourself! To read, just Click Here
Leigh Adams: Altadena’s Own
Written By – Steve Aranda
On a wooded corner in the residential foothills of Altadena, there stands a fortress of greenery. The top of a two story home peeks out over a hedge of junipers, elms, and deodar. Bird song is rampant, and as you step up off the street to pass through the wooden gate out front, you feel as though you have just been transported to a different biome.
Beneath a canopy of trees, the temperature noticeably drops. The abundance of growth provides shade, medicinal herbs, aromatic flowers, and food. There are over 40 fruit trees on the property. Wildflowers interspersed with vegetables run alongside winding paths that lead nowhere.
In addition to its Eden-like qualities, there is something that makes this garden even more unique. Namely, here in Southern CA, the land of perpetual drought, this lush landscape gets watered at most only once a week, and frequently not at all.
The owner and creator of this amazing green-space is Leigh Adams, Altadena’s own “Water Harvesting Guru.” As a consultant for LA County Parks and Rec, and Public Works, she has been responsible for not only her own green wonder, but many others like it. These include installations at the LA County Arboretum, the main branch of the Altadena Library, and the new park being built at the corner of Lake Ave, and Altadena Drive.
Her gardens are the result of a lifetime of work and study in the fields of permaculture and water harvesting. They are in harmony with the native landscape, and intentionally decorative. Most interestingly, they are the climax of an ongoing story, one that began over 40 years ago in the least likely place for a master gardener to make her start – in the Mojave Desert…
In 1975 Leigh owned a large tract of land about 20 miles North West of Joshua Tree, when a fire tore through the area. The landscape was devastated. Pinyon pines, and manzanita, were burnt away, and what wasn’t destroyed was bulldozed in order to create a firebreak.
Adams recalls that after the fire, the landscape was transformed into a dead zone reminiscent of a Tim Burton nightmare. In an effort to convert the skeletons of trees, and shrubs into an homage to their former life, she chopped down the burnt remnants, and arranged them on the earth in patterns, along with rocks.
Time passed. Children came. She and her husband built a cabin and planted trees on a small portion of the land. The rest – over 10 acres – was largely left alone.
And then one day, almost 15 years later, a friend asked Leigh if she would like to go up in his plane and see her property from the air. She jumped at the chance. As they flew over the location however, she became dismayed. “I’m sorry,” she apologized, “I must have given you the wrong directions.” Looking down from the plane, she stared at a lush huge rectangle of green where there should have been only desert.
As unbelievable as it seemed, the directions she had given to the pilot were completely accurate. The oasis they were viewing from above was indeed her land. A mysterious transformation had occurred. When Adams laid those first dead tree trunks and branches on the earth and surrounded them with stones, she had unknowingly taken her first steps into the word of permaculture.
It turned out that logs, and stones had a different heat capacity than the air around them. During the cold nights and hot days in the desert, condensation formed due to the temperature difference, and dripped slowly back to the soil. Also, moisture was trapped beneath rotting wood, and alongside boulders, which provided shade from the sun.
Since then, Leigh spent her life exploring that mystery. She later added to it the crucial component of reclaiming storm runoff by taking the concept of parkway drains and turning it on its head; Instead of using the drains to push water off of her property, she used it to pull water onto it.
Today Leigh Adams’s work is a joy for all to experience. Her eco-friendly installations are some of the most progressive, responsible, and beautiful in the San Gabriel Valley. Her efforts to educate youth, and the public about water reclamation and conservation here in Southern California are tireless.
As Artist-in-Residence, and an Interpretive Horticulturist at the LA county Arboretum, Adams, until recently was in charge of the Crescent Farm, a man-made ecosystem that relies primarily on harvesting for its water. It also offers an artistic, native and sustainable alternative to traditional Socal sod.
Over an acre of lawn was removed to install the Crescent Farm. With Adams’s direction “new and ancient water conservation practices” were used to make this a living example of her work, and a great way to spend an afternoon. Recently John Latsko has taken the reigns, and the Farm continues to thrive and represent the values, they both worked to achieve.
I recommend a visit. The farm is a wonder to behold, and classes on permaculture are offered. But the real treasure is a visit with Leigh Adams herself, a fountain (pun intended) of knowledge, a true citizen of the earth, and someone Altadena can be honored to claim as a resource, and a resident.