Archive for the 'General' Category

Help promote literacy this holiday season

 

Editors’ Note: We’re happy to post the following announcement on behalf of guest contributor Joanne Rocheford.

This Holiday season Evergreen Moneysource is hosting a book drive for a wonderful organization called Page Ahead. Please read on to learn more about them and how you can participate!

Page Ahead is a Seattle-based organization that promotes literacy among at-risk students across Washington state. To achieve this, they provide new books to children who are reading below grade level, engage parents in reading to their children, host motivational reading events, and assist schools in providing successful literacy programs. You can read more about their work at www.pageahead.org.

Evergreen Moneysource will assist Page Ahead this Holiday season by hosting a book drive. Beginning the week after Thanksgiving, you will see boxes in each of our offices where you can contribute a new book. You can also participate by purchasing a book through their online partner, Powell’s Books, or making a monetary contribution on their website. Click here to purchase a book or make a donation. If you’d like to have a drop box located in your office, let me know and I’ll bring one by. I’ll pick up the box of books at the end of the drive on or around January 9th.

Education has always been at the core of our business, and this year we are excited to promote our passion for education and children in such a meaningful way. Join us as we promote literacy across Washington this Holiday season!

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Weather in a backyard near you

I love Google-enabled web serendipity (or, what I would like to call webendipity).

I was searching today for a quick weather update when Google, remembering my zip code from some previous transaction, popped up a link to Weather in a 98116 West Seattle Backyard. The site displays a variety of graphical weather indicators, linked to weather sensors in… some guy’s backyard. There’s also, apparently, a cat named Oscar who’s involved in the process.

West Seattle Weather

Mighty convenient! Now I don’t even have to crack a window to see how cold it is, which way the wind is blowing, or even whether the sun’s out. A link from the site to Weather Underground will display a page of charts and data from the North Admiral weather station.

Seeing this site reminded me that Weather Underground has links to hundreds of these local weather sites all around the country. I used to check this page when I lived in North Bend a few years ago. For a weather station near you, see this list of Washington-based personal weather stations.

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How you can help the victims of Hurricane Katrina

If you’re looking for ways to help the victims of Hurricane Katrina, the Seattle Times has a special section with ideas and local fundraising events that are happening this week in Seattle.

Also, MoveOn.org has established HurricaneHousing.org, to coordinate offers of housing or temporary shelter.

For further real estate-related hurricane reading, see how agents are reaching out to each other and to those in need.

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Hurricane Katrina destroys more than houses

Our homes are much more than mere shelters. Our homes are the repositories of our history. They are our personal archives. They are extensions of our personality, filled with acquisitions both meaningful and meaningless. Our homes are our castles, our shrines, our very selves. We think of our houses as sturdy, solid, permanent. Even those of us who use a house only as a place to store food and to rest our heads when sleep calls depend on our house to — at the very least — just be there at the end of our day.

My friends Ferne and Terry Kistner were able to evacuate New Orleans to Baton Rouge in advance of the hurricane, but their son Mark wrote me today that they don’t have much hope that their home remains, as it was not far south of Lake Pontchartrain, near one of the breaks in the levees. The Kistners are safe for now, but many of their fellow citizens haven’t been so lucky. In New Orleans alone, thousands are feared dead, and more than a million people will be displaced for three months or more. They may eventually come home, but many will not have homes to come home to.

I look around our own house at the acquisitions of a combined 82 years of life. I think I could do without much of it, but to be displaced from my neighborhood, my city, my routine, to have my future altered so dramatically… what would I do?

Tobias Wolff wrote, “We are made to persist. That’s how we find out who we are.” The residents of New Orleans, Biloxi, and the other affected communities will persevere and rebuild, because that is what humans do. At the moment, though, some of their most basic expectations of our modern life — fresh water, food, shelter, and communications — have been swept away. We are reminded how fragile our lives are, and we are reminded how much we depend on one another.

There are many fine organizations that are already on the scene offering what help they can. Money is what is needed most at the moment. The American Red Cross is probably best positioned to mount a massive response, and they do prefer you use the website for any donations. Other reputable organizations can be found at this list of websites of charitable organizations at the Daily Kos.

There are also several bloggers and other online sources of information. Nola.com has been an excellent resource. Also check out Metroblogging New Orleans, Kaye’s Hurricane Katrina Blog, the Hurricane Katrina page at Wikipedia, Eye of the Storm, Storm Digest, and the links here and here.

Finally, if you are at all technically inclined, there may be another way you can help. Geek blog BoingBoing let us know about efforts to use Google Maps to analyze flood damage. Read more here.

I have a cup full of Mardi Gras beads that I keep on my shelf, beads given me by Ferne Kistner as I made my way by road to Seattle. I crossed the bridge over Lake Pontchartrain, painted the town in the French Quarter, rounded the Super Dome by surface streets and Interstates where many now sit and wait for rescue. I’m holding those beads now as collateral against another visit. New Orleans, Biloxi, Mobile, and all the places in between: you are in our thoughts and prayers.

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Oh, it’s clever…

Image of Mr. Housing BubbleNow, we at Seattle Real Estate Talk don’t necessarily endorse the company selling this shirt, nor do we really buy into the whole housing bubble paranoia, but having grown up with Mr. Bubble Bubble Bath, this design just makes us laugh.

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Mmmm… These links are delicious!

First, Louise and I would like to thank you all for stopping by and checking out Seattle Real Estate Talk. We’re working hard to post more frequently and to implement some other features that we hope will make this site a more useful resource. It’ll take us a little while to get up to full speed, but we really appreciate your keeping us on your browsing schedule in the meantime.

Second, I thought I would take a moment to explain the links that appear at the bottom left of our sidebar, under the heading “Del.icio.us Links.”

Del.icio.us is a free social bookmark manager, a place to store interesting web pages in a way that lets the rest of the world share in the benefit of your browsing serendipity. By using tags, or keywords, to categorize each bookmark, Del.icio.us users are creating a vast database of links. And by letting each other see the links, that database can help uncover useful information in a way that is quite complementary to traditional search methods. For example, check out the websites that Del.icio.us users have tagged with the words mortgage, home, and Seattle.

We’ve added a link at the end of each post to give you a shortcut for tagging any items on this site that may be of interest to you. In addition, we’ll be sharing the sites we come across by posting our latest Del.icio.us links at the bottom left of the sidebar. Note that we don’t necessarily endorse the views in those links, but think that they may at least hold some interest for our readers.

Finally, we want to know how to make this site more useful to you, so if you’ve got a suggestion, question, or complaint, please let us know. Just leave a comment here or click the “contact” link at the top of the page to send us an email.

Again, thanks for checking us out, and keep watching for more great tips, tricks, and links to the best real estate knowledge on the web!

Happy July 4th!

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Seattle’s French Sister

Here’s a little-known fact (or maybe I’m the last to find out) provided by my mother-in-law who lives in France: Seattle’s sister city is Nantes, France. As sisters are wont to be, Nantes is similar to Seattle in that she, too, is a major seaport and a center for high-tech and aeronautics industries. Both cities are in regions known for producing fine wines, for their mild, wet climates, and for their thriving horticulture and arts scenes. Check out the Seattle-Nantes Sister City Association website for information about their various exchange programs and other opportunities to connect with our charming French sister.

A Jewish Proverb

Ask about your neighbors, then buy the house.

Welcome to Seattle Real Estate Talk

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