THOUGHTS ON REAL ESTATE Monday, November 7, 2011 To pre or not to pre . . . inspect that is.
A little while back I posted a question on a professional blogging site. The site caters to realtors, mortgage brokers, home inspectors, home stagers etc. My question was this - "What are your thoughts on a prelisting home inspection?"
The range of responses was astounding and some of them unexpected. My thought today is to put the question out there in a more public domain to see what people think before I post the other responses in the next few days.
So, if you are a seller do you see a benefit to having a prelisting home inspection? If you are a buyer do you see a benefit to the seller having a prelisting home inspection? These are both if yes - why / if no - why questions and actually require a bit of thought.
I have another question to this as well - if you are the buyer and the seller has already had a home inspection, would that be satisfactory or should you have your own done as well?
THOUGHTS ON REAL ESTATE Saturday, April 30, 2011 Say Yes to the House?Categories:buying,decisions,ladner,mortgage,property,real estate,realtor,richmond,selling,tsawwassen I didn't watch the royal wedding but I did watch 2 hours of highlights last night. By no means am I royal watcher, but the Reader's Digest version of events called my attention. Right after the program I was still suffering from wedding hangover and watched a show called, "Say Yes to the Dress" - a show about a highend bridal shop in New York. Not exactly a ripping Friday night but it was there and I was tired and couldn't bother to change the channel.
The premise is that a bride and her entourage have an appointment to meet with a consultant to discuss wants and desires of the perfect wedding gown. After a brief introduction the sales consultant asks the bride if she has an idea in mind of what she is looking for style wise and price range. In this episode, they all did and all had photos of their dream dresses. The consultant searches and finds them options that match or come close to their idealized vision of the perfect wedding dress that meets their criteria within their budget. However, when they tried them on they were unhappy to see that the styles or designs were not for them (didn't flatter them) but resisted suggestions of other types of dresses. They had their idea of want they wanted!
It made me think of home buyers. Most buyers have an idea of exactly what they want in the style/design of a home, features (bling, feathers, ruffles) where they want to live etc and often like brides to be can't or don't want to consider other options even though the consultant can see what's not working; not fitting.
Just like on the program where the brides were encouraged to look at and try on other types of dresses, buyers sometimes need to be encouraged to look at and "try on" other types of properties and are often quite surprised at what is available to them that is a much better fit. Part of the role of real estate consultant is to listen to the buyer for needs and wants. Sometimes, these things are either a little unrealistic, unattainable at this time, or just not a good choice that will serve the buyer well.
Buying a wedding dress or a home may not be the same thing, but the process is similar. Your real estate consultant can show you options and ideas that you may not have thought of that will work well for you and fit your needs better. It's about being open minded to what's available on the market and looking beyond your original ideas if they don't work. You just might say "Yes" to the house you never thought you would.
THOUGHTS ON REAL ESTATE Friday, April 1, 2011 So, you want to look at property - a primer.Categories:agents,buyers,Ladner,properties,real estate,realtor,Richmond,sellers,showings,Tsawwassen,viewings. open house
I have had the pleasure of showing homes to all kinds of buyers (singles, couples, first timers, downsizers, families) in many different communities such as across the Greater Vancouver area and the Fraser Valley including Ladner/Richmond/Tsawwassen to Chilliwack and all points in between.
For the most part, sellers want to sell their home and are happy to have you come through and see if their home will become your next home. That said, there a few tips that I think will help to make your "house viewing" experience as fun and enjoyable as possible!
1. Everyone in your group, including children should wear shoes that are easy to slip on and off. With few exceptions, you will need to remove your footwear before going through a home. It can be a challenge juggling purses, bags, cameras, umbrellas, children etc.
2. Do not bring food, drinks, candy, gum, chips whatever into someone's home. And we can deal with any garbage you may have somewhere else. If, for some reason I am doing a "marathon" showing tour with clients, especially those with children, I schedule a break into the day for bathroom, coffee and food.
3. Sometimes it helps to sit on the couch or chair to get some perspective on a room and to see how the space "feels". I understand this. However, it think it's best not to lie down on the bed.
4. Speaking of children (I have a blended family of 4 boys) please keep them within your view and under control. The contents of the fridge are not for the taking, the toys are not to be played with, drawers are not to be sifted through. Beds are not for jumping on etc.
5. Whether you love the house or have not much good to say about it - tell me outside of the house, preferably at my office. Some sellers have nanny cams and some sellers may actually be at home. No one wants to feel insulted by their taste in decor, design or housekeeping skills. Not every home is for everyone. On the other hand, we don't want to tip our hand if you really, really love it!
6. I encourage my buyers to bring along a notepad & pen, as well as a camera (a picture's worth a thousand words). I do have a note about photos - not all sellers are comfortable with having photos taken other than the ones taken by the listing agent. I once had a home listed of a prominent individual who had certain rooms off limits to photos. As your agent/buyers representative, I do my best to confirm photo taking in advance.
7. Sometimes circumstances come up, but try to be on time. A lot goes into scheduling showings and having people leave their homes sometimes with kids and pets in tow.
8.There are occassions where extra sensitivity is required on our part and as a realtor I will likely know in advance what the issue is - estates, foreclosures and tenancy where the tenant may not want to move.
9. In all of this, if you are not really ready to commit yet to purchasing and are "just looking for fun" I would like to suggest that you visit open houses or display suites until you are ready. Booking showings with private homes requires a lot on the part of the seller to have the home ready to show and to make arrangements to be out of the house.
As always, it will be a pleasure to help you find the house of your dreams that fits your lifestyle and financial goals. House hunting should be a fun and exciting time!
THOUGHTS ON REAL ESTATE Tuesday, March 29, 2011 The Village of Finn SloughCategories:community,dog park,fishing,history,Ladner,real estate,realtor,Richmond,Steveston,village,walking When I first moved to Richmond, a long time ago (nevermind how long!) I went for a bike ride with some friends along the dyke path along the south arm of the Fraser River in Richmond. At the time, there was the old Steveston fishing village (not the trendy shops and eateries that are there now), stretches of farmland and vistas of unadulterated coastal edges of river where young lovers parked at night and small spontaneous car parties erupted on Fridays and Saturdays. Garry Point was a basically an unreclaimed sandspit for riding dune buggies. Directly across the way is the shoreline of Ladner and Westham Island.
Tucked in about the middle down the between Garry Point and the Deas Island Tunnel (my landmarks) is Finn Slough. For years it reminded me of a land that time forgot given the untouched charm of history, old homesa fishing life and outbuildings that still, to this day remain there. I spent a few years in the early 1980's fishing commerically out of Steveston and Gibsons. Finn Slough has always made me think of how life may have been for the old fishing communities along the Fraser. A few times, every year, I still like to take a walk there and talk to some of the residents.
Nowadays, there's a dog park right beside the little village and a few resident swans. The drive is no longer gravel but paved from No. 5 Road to the end of the village. I still find it fascinating! Below is an article I found the gives a brief history of this little hidden area. For more photos, visit my Facebook Page at Jan Rankin, Thinking About a New Nest. A SMALL HISTORY OF FINN SLOUGH
By David Dorrington
In the early 1890s a group of Finnish people arrived in south Richmond and bought land at the junction of #4 road and Finn road where these two roads meet Green Slough (now called Woodward Slough) At that time south Richmond had not been cleared, it was still dense forest containing the kind of conifers that like to get their roots wet. These Finnish men had worked as coal miners and loggers to save the money needed to buy the land and they wanted land that had access to the Fraser River so that they could work as fishermen. The dykes in Richmond were hand built and extended up both sides of Woodward Slough and past #4 road. There was no dam at the south end of this slough so it was easy for the Finns to take their boats up to their houses on what was called "Finnland Road". One of these pioneers Mike Jacobson floated two scow houses up to the acreage to house his growing family. All of them, the Eldstroms, the Ingstroms, the Haasanens, the Manninens, and the Robinsons, started clearing the land, putting in crops, and building fishing boats so that they could harvest a share of the incredibly rich salmon runs going up the Fraser River. One of the first and most important buildings put there on Finnland road was a sauna. As Jack Jacobson said for the Finns having a sauna was a kind of religion. After a day of fishing you could get clean by taking a really hot sauna and if you felt tired before then you felt revived afterwards. The dykes did not really keep the river off the land and often the chickens had to find roosts on top of the chicken houses to escape the flood tides. The first houses the Finns built were on pilings to protect them from these high tides. Some of the big farmers of the area wanted a better dyke system to protect their fields and so Thomas Kidd led a move to block off both ends of Woodward Slough and use it as a drain for south Richmond. Not everyone thought this was a good idea, at least one farmer, John Donnelly, tried to stop Mr. Kidd and had to be compensated for loss of a transport route. Most of the Finns would not have been able to read the notices in the Royal Columbian of these intended changes; even Ottawa did not think Mr. Kidd had done a proper job of consulting the landowners. In 1900 he had a dam built at the #5 road end of the slough and a floodgate built at what is now the pump house at the south end of Woodward Slough. As a result the Finns were forced to find another place to moor their boats and to set up their bluestone tanks that they used to clean their linen nets. They needed net rack floats to dry the nets and net sheds to store those nets as well. Number 4 Road did not go all the way to the south dyke in those days; there was only a foot trail up to Finnland Road. What roads that did exist then were plank roads laid on the surface of the bog but #5 road was the road that went down to the South Arm and the Ladner Ferry. It was a logical choice to start using Tiffin Slough (now Finn Slough) as a safe harbour. It was as close to their land as possible in the circumstances and there was enough room to create a real community of Finnish fishermen. Word got around and cousins, uncles, half brothers, even a grandfather came out from Finland to work in the new country. This was at the same time as the first Finnish settlers were arriving to set up the community of Sointula on Malcolm Island; it was all part of a move to get away from the poverty and repression of the Russian empire in Finland. By 1910 there was a solid group of fishermen here at Finn Slough mostly related by marriage and all Scandinavians of one sort or another. These newer people had not come with the same savings as the original settlers and most land in this area was traded in very large parcels so they built float houses or if they were bachelors they often slept in their net sheds or lived on their boats. Finn Slough was a remote place in those days it would take a whole day to go one way from Finn Slough to Vancouver. Downtown Richmond did not exist and Steveston was well known as the fisherman’s version of the Wild West. All fishing was done by muscle work alone. They had to row their boats out to the fishing ground, set their nets, and pull them back in by hand. One old Finn talked of how long it could take to straighten out your fingers after a day of pulling on net lines. Even so the harvest was so rich that the canneries in Steveston could not always keep up with amounts of fish the Fraser River fishermen were bringing in and in those days Steveston was nothing but canneries, dozens of them. By the late teens and early 1920s fishermen were adapting gas motors to drive their boats and the Easthope and Vivian companies were building those motors that had a distinctive put-put sound that could be heard up and down the river. The community on Finnland road would dress up in its best once a week and take several boats either to Steveston or to Ladner or even to New Westminster to buy the weeks supplies and sometimes have a picnic on one of the river islands if the weather was good. In 1931 a Malcolm Islander, Laurie Jarvelainen invented the first powered gillnet drum and built it out of yellow cedar. Now fishing could be done more quickly and this revolutionized the fishing industry on the coast. The Huovinen brothers arrived at Finn Slough after having spent time living totally broke in the abandoned car dump at False Creek. The outside world was going through the worst depression ever but here they could make do. They bought boats and put old Ford engines in them. Kaarlo had several engines. He could buy them for two dollars a piece and said there was always a way to keep them going. However life as a fisherman was never easy. George died at the age of 39, John died at age 50, only Kaarlo made it to old age. In the 30s Finn Slough became one of the strongest locals of the fisherman’s union, the PCFU that later became the UFAWU. Sometimes there were over 40 boats moored at the slough and this was the beginning of the busiest decade for this fishing village. It was also home to more ‘outsiders’ who didn’t speak Finn, but who worked alongside the 2nd and 3rd generation of the original settlers. Some of the young boys would learn fishing on their parents’ boats first and by 15 would have their own boats and be fishing alone. The slough was not so isolated anymore though you still could not drive a car down the dyke you could park your old model T at the foot of #4 road. So much has changed since then. The 1913 slide in the Fraser canyon was a marker for the impact that men were having on this eco system. Logging took over from fishing as the main industry here and in doing so hastened the decline of salmon stocks. Organizations like the North Fraser Harbour Commission encouraged the mill industry in the Fraser River and they received a tariff from every log that went through their jurisdiction. By the late 40s the mills were often going non stop and the tugs would be hard pressed to find a place to tie up their log booms. Even that industry is on its last legs now. What we are left with is a memory of how things were and Finn Slough is an important three dimensional, living, part of that memory. The village developed without the organization of property boundaries, city ordinances, provincial regulations or any governing body. Even so it has been an example of how a community can be carefully built and self regulated to work in harmony with the environment and having as little impact on it as possible. The village is not only a historical artifact it is also an example of a possible way forward to find more creative solutions to the present destruction of the Fraser basin by non stop urbanization. THOUGHTS ON REAL ESTATE Tuesday, March 22, 2011 Quick bathroom fixesCategories:buying,design,home decor,ladner,listing,properties,real estate,realtor,richmond,selling,tsawwassen I would say "cheap" as well, but that word is interpreted differently by everybody. I generally tend to think that most people notice the same things I do (this is mostly from experience of going through so many homes with so many people). That said, there are a couple of things that can be done easily or moderately easy by anyone within what I consider reasonable cost.
1. If the caulking around your tub/shower/toilet/sink is showing signs of mold or mildew either clean it to pristine white (not as easy as you think) or remove it and replace it. There are so many "DIY" videos on the web or 1 hour courses available at places like Home Depot (I have seen them offered on the bulletin board at the Richmond, BC location) that I won't go into the details here. I'm sure Rona offers similar seminars. I've done the replacing in my 3 bathrooms in my Ladner home and have done it before in my Steveston condo) and it's not that hard to do.
2. A fresh coat of a neutral coloured bathroom paint (yes there are different types of paint - bathroom paint is made specifically to handle the moisture content) always refreshes and brightens a room and can cover up minor flaws. And don't forget to paint the trim around the floor, window frame and door.
3. If you have a bathroom fan and it full of lint, dust, rust or just looks gross try and have it replaced - ditto for a very outdated light fixture. (you may need to hire an electrician if you don't know one or can do this yourself).
4. Towel bars, toilet roll holders and shower rods can be very inexpensive and are generally very simple to install. So, if you are painting, remove these items first; make any repairs and then replace. Light switch plate covers are super cheap and dead easy. Knobs and draw pulls are easy and cheap as well. Ditto a toothbrush holder, garbage receptacle and soap dish (personally I prefer a liquid soap at the sink - much neater).
5. Linens and shower curtains - if your home is going on to market, pick up a few fluffy white towels and a nice white/neutral coloured shower liner (you don't need a full curtain set). Put the towels out only for showings. It's amazing how pristine clean packs a punch with a prospective buyer.
6. I like to keep bric a brac in the bathroom to a minimum - of course, space usually dictates how much is out. A single large candle, a small flower arrangement, no toiletries except a great bottle of cologne. Be careful with scent, it bothers a lot of people. If your home is being shown put the hair products (shampoo and stuff included) away.
7. Probably one of the most important thing is a super deep cleaning. Got guys in your house? Ever looked at the wall behind the toilet????? I'm just saying.
8. So, if you have extra cash and feel the need to do a little bit more decide on what YOU notice that you don't like. Is it the flooring? the sink? the mirror or wall cabinet? The tub? The shower or surround? These are things that may take you in the realm of needing a little more expertise and assistance which costs money on top of materials. And some of these materials are not cheap either.
If you have any ideas you would like to add or things you have had success with, please feel free to post! Would love to hear from you.
Categories: | agent | agents | babies | birdlife | blanket drive | Breast Cancer | Brighouse South | buyer | Buyers | buying | buying and selling | caring | cats and dogs | cleaning | community | condo | condos | contracts | court ordered sales | covenants | curb appeal | deas island park | deas island tunnel | decisions | Delta | design | developers | dining out | disappointment | dog park | Eagles | eating | eating out | family | financing | fish and chips | fishing | food | foreclosures | fraser river | getting your home ready to sell | Granville | Green | gutters | halibut | head lease | headlease | Health | hiking | history | home | home buying | home decor | home inspection | home maintenance | homes | house | Jan Rankin | Ladner | Ladner Real Estate | landholders | landlords | leasehold | listing | lynn valley | marinas | market trends | marketing | McNair | mortgage | mortgages | multiple offers | neighbourhood | neighbourhoods | neighbours | nesting | new build | north shore | offers | opinions | pests | planning | possession | preapprovals | presentation | properties | property | Public Service | Real Estate | realtor | realtors | repairs | restaurants | Richmond | Richmond Real Estate | rodents | roofing | seller | sellers | selling | Selling your home | sharing | Showing your home | showings | single family homes | sponsorship | sports | staging | Steveston | Steveston Villlage | strata | subjects | sunset | tenants | Terra Nova | the boot and sombrero | townhomes | trails | Tsawwassen | vancouver | viewings. open house | village | walking | warranty | water | weather | west vancouver | Wildlife | yards |








