Archive for the ‘charlotte Observer’ Category
Real Estate: Bottom In Sight?
There is good news for everybody, it appears that the real estate market (which is the catalyst of the current downturn) is nearing a bottom. It has to bottom at some point, economies and markets are cyclical after all. Granted this downturn is worse than most, we still have been through this before and we will get through this one. The fact that this one is relatively worse simply means that the relative opportunity is better. There are amazing deals waiting to happen out there!
A notorious bear Dr. Mark Zandi the chief economist of Moody’s Economy.com said “the bottom of the housing downturn is in sight for the nation.” When bearish economists and media pundits are saying that the bottom is near, the bottom is near. Much of the issue with recessions and downturns is that it is a lot of psychology. When day after day Americans hear record foreclosure rates, and home values plunging then of course it is going to get worse. We stop spending and start saving which is simply a consequence (neither good or bad) of living in a consumer oriented economy.
However, we are not only hearing good news but numbers associated with the real estate market are trending upward too. For example in Utah during the last half of 2008 the average number of days a home had been on the market was about 100. In January of 2009 the average number of days a home had been on the market decreased to about 75. Thus, indicating that buyers are slowly coming back to the market because the inventory of unsold Utah homes is decreasing. After speaking with a friend who is a Utah Real Estate Agent with Keller Williams, I am starting to see the turn around first hand as he is starting to get busy and has some deals under contract.
On a national level home prices are leveling off and some of the hardest hit markets are showing relative positive indicators month to month. The Charlotte Observer wrote a piece titled: “Investors targeting bargain real estate.” Again this is very good news as investors will get back into the real estate market before the average home buyer. Investors are looking to take risk in return for reward, average home buyers are typically looking for security.
In Lieu of these recent trends, now is a very fortuitous time to buy a home and with the consumer psychological outlook improving with each positive bit of news it is becoming safer to buy. On top of this we have the stimulus plan which will improve sentiments among buyers. We are also experiencing historically low mortgage rates which will encourage home purchases.
I encourage anyone in a position to purchase a home but waiting out of fear of the market, to stop waiting. Nobody ever accurately predicts when markets bottom. If you wait too long you will have more buyers or competition going after your dream home and you could miss out on the real estate opportunity of a lifetime! Any buyers or sellers in Utah feel free to contact my friend Ron Thurber with any questions 801-860-2049 or visit his website www.utahagent.org and send him an email.
Charlotte Apartments: a Wait and See Approach for a City on the Move
Before the current economic crisis, Charlotte, NC, generated a tremendous amount of energy. Population in downtown areas boomed. High paying jobs were in abundance. And the quality of life was high.
Much like the rest of the country, Charlotte’s forecast today is not as sunny. The real estate market is stagnant. Jobs cuts have scaled back the workforce. And the quality of life, though still high, is much more reserved.
But if Charlotte can maintain its confidence—a positive public mindset—then Charlotte can recapture its once blooming energy.
Despite the economy, Charlotte continues to grow. Development projects in the Uptown, prestigious universities with solid application rates, and a workforce that, even with layoffs, scale-backs, and limited opportunities, is determined to move forward and pave the way for Charlotte’s future. The Charlotte Observer recently ran an article about the situation.
“Charlotte is just now being born as a metropolitan community. Sure, it’s always been a city. But something bigger is happening now. I get invitations now to places like Lancaster County. The mindsets are just now beginning to change. Lots of Rock Hill folks think they’re living in Charlotte. And our uptown has a lot to do with it. The shift’s driven by lifestyle changes – baby boomers leaving those cul-de-sacs, replaced by Gen Xers. I predict uptown will have 100,000 residents by 2028,” said Charlotte Chamber researcher Tony Crumbley.
There’s no doubt – uptown Charlotte has been soaring skyward with its sea of construction cranes. Even the bad economic news of recent weeks can’t erase that. When the dust of the current crises settles, few doubt the world will still see here a proud, ambitious metropolitan center looking for next opportunities, boasting expansive new culture and street life.
Yet it remains an open question: Does Charlotte’s uptown embody the regional citizenship Tony Crumbley speaks of? Can it, all at once, successfully welcome a diverse group including lifelong Southerners, mobile business moguls, ambitious 20-something graduates of Upstate New York colleges, empty nesters escaping suburban crabgrass and striving immigrants from Latin America and Asia?
Further, can uptown Charlotte work well with the downtowns of the smaller cities in the Charlotte citistate to create a welcoming urbanism, a network of town centers to be prized? The smaller downtowns play a different role from the big center. They are bright lights, but each with a different hue and warmth. Each adds to the region’s character. Examples abound: Salisbury with its historic charm; Kannapolis, the old mill town emerging as a biotech center; Mooresville, the classic old railroad town building a new persona; Rock Hill, a dynamic little city just over the S.C. border.
Of course there are detractors. Some worry that Charlotte grew too quickly, that its glory was fleeting and is now destined to remain on the fringe of big city greatness. Nonetheless, Charlotte has a lot of opportunity. Young professionals, students, or adults looking for a new place to call home have plenty of reasons to invest in Charlotte. In fact, with so much still undecided, it’s a perfect time to rent an apartment in Charlotte. That way you can enjoy the city’s amenities but not invest too heavily. You can wait to see where this exciting city winds up.
Happy Feet.a Goldendoodle Tail
On a recent afternoon, I was sitting in the waiting room at my doctor’s office waiting to be seen. As usual, there were plenty of people sitting around either watching the television or reading magazines that were out of date. I picked up a meaningless magazine and began to thumb through the pages when I heard a woman behind me say to another, “Look at this ad! What is a golden doodle ?” Appearantly the woman had picked up a local newspaper and had come across some goldendoodle advertisements. I couldn’t help but smile as the two women were discussing what a Goldendoodle dog was. These were old women and it was just funny listening to them chat away about a dog they’d appearantly never heard of.
The other woman replied, “I have no idea! I reckon that’s a dog mixed with a poodle or somethin’”. I softly chuckled to myself and I did want to turn around and begin telling them all about the Goldendoodle, but this time, I just kept quiet and to myself. Their southern slang was killing me as they discussed what the heck a Goldendoodle dog was, I reckon! After the women left the room, I turned around and picked up the newspaper they had been looking at. It was a Charlotte observer listing tons of various dogs available for sale. I saw that three breeders in the Charlotte area were advertising their pups. I shook my head as I read their advertisement! “Never shedding, hypoallergenic, Golden doodles for sale”. Oh how the sales tactics never end.
As I waited to be seen by my doctor, I pondered about all the opportunities my Goldendoodles have afforded me since creating my first litter in 1999. I thought about all the funny kids and happy moments I’d witnessed in all these years. I recalled driving my truck around where ever I went. It was, after all, like a roaming billboard! People would literally stop me at redlights just to ask me what a “Goldendoodle” was. The funny thing was, my truck had an actual Goldendoodle photo on it and it was pretty self evident what this type of dog was. I think when people asked, they meant….what was the dog mixed with. There are plenty of companies that don’t grow when it comes to the dog industry….but I’ve watched my own company grow over the years in a very personal way.
Unlike most websites which seem to be operated by spectral forces rather than by human beings, I started my website back in the late 90s with very little computer knowledge. I will be the first person to tell anyone that I am technologically challenged. My website at least offers the information that took me years to learn and come to know. I am literally hands on when it comes to my dogs, the website, the advertising, responding to emails and I work with the customer from beginning to end. Very few people stop to think about the actual process that is involved when it comes to breeding dogs and placing them with their new families. One very seldom even wants to think to closely as to why a person would get so involved with dogs in the first place. After 13 years and with my 14th year coming up very soon, even I now wonder what it would be like to go back to having a normal life with very few, if any, dogs. I have come to realize, in the end, that not just my Goldendoodles…but even my articles..have now become my legacy. Why? Because you either own one of my dogs or you are reading my material.
I thought back to how my dogs have actually afforded me the opportunity to meet so many wonderful people over all these years. I thought about various phone calls I’ve received over the years and it brought me to recall a time I had taken a call that lasted a record 5 hours, twenty five minutes and thirty one seconds in length! The call was from a woman on the west coast who was interested in the Goldendoodle. Somehow we also discussed her sister, her job, her life. How she was a woman afflicted with various issues but someone who was desperately seeking the companion of a loving canine friend. She told me childhood stories and things like that. Now, I am not sure how many breeders get phone calls like that, but these are the phone calls that mean a lot to me. It means that people find it easy to confide in me and trust in me, even though I am merely a perfect stranger on the other end of the phone. It means that we were able to connect in a more meaningful way other than my just being a breeder who had dogs for sale.
In 2008, the dog industry surpassed a billion dollars in gross sales. Out of those billions of dollars taken in, breeders have seen little to none of it. Non commercial breeders, that is. It always amazed me…and still does…that so many people believe that breeders do nothing more than sit back collecting money for dogs that they help bring into this world when that such a fantasy in itself. As I said earlier, so few take into consideration how expensive it is for a breeder and how time consuming the job is. The only thing I will say is that as a breeder, it has afforded me a lot of opportunities to meet so many people around the globe. My dogs have also brought me great joy, sadness and misery all wrapped into one. The happy wags that come from the tails of our Goldendoodles, that oftentimes seem endless, bring lots of laughter to so many people.
My Goldendoodles have afforded me to hear so many different doodle stories as told to me by our dedicated customers. A lot of people would describe our doodles as “happy go lucky”; “Beautiful”; “Intelligent”; “The best dog I’ve ever had”. One of our customers has even taken up writing about her Goldendoodle, Jack. His romps on a long, winding trail; his penchent for chasing lizards. Her stories make me laugh. Jennifer, a local customer who has one of our Goldendoodles named Charlie, calls me off and on and I love hearing her stories about this adorable boy. There are literally so many stories that come from our doodle customers that it is hard to name them all…but each one has made me laugh and lighten my heart when I hear them. I do think of myself as an idealist in a field of cynics; an enthusiast amid the cult of blas’e. It is impossible to hear about our Goldendoodles as told by our growing doodle following without encountering the word, “tomboyish”. I chuckled the other day when “Jennifer” described how her Goldendoodle World doodle, Charlie, loved splashing in the mud puddles! So “boyish” and so full of himself! It has always been my hope as a breeder, that my knowledge and expertise in the field of Goldendoodles would give back and to try and help people of all ages…especially young children…in an indirect way.
Few realize how much of myself goes along with the dogs themselves. With every doodle created, a little piece of me goes with them. Our Goldendoodles seem to offer a certain peace. They are somewhat nurturing and they offer an abundance of love. I think in this dog industry, there is a certain expectation of cold, austere, arrogant breeders. When I was looking for my own dogs for my breeding program back in 1996, I ran into many of them. I always thought there were other ways of doing things. There are different sides to all of our characters. It always makes me happy when I am able to show my warmer, caring, empathic side.
My Goldendoodles have what I like to call, happy feet! Many people who own them will agree that they love to prance and bunny hop all over the place! Their personalities radiate through every twinkle inside of their eyes. They always seem to be smiling. Given the chance, they will outshine the sun through their antics! Few things please our Goldendoodles more than being given the opportunity to kiss a face. Yes….it only took those two older women browsing through a newspaper advertising Goldendoodles and speaking loudly enough for me to overhear them, to fil
l my head with so many doodle memories.
I remember almost rehearsing to myself what I wanted to say as the women pondered about what a Goldendoodle dog was…but I thought better of it and kept my memories of happy feet and Goldendoodle tails to myself.
**About the author: Dee Gerrish became a private, professional hobby breeder in 1996. She began her Goldendoodle breeding program in 1999. Dee has written extensively about the Goldendoodle dog. More can be discovered at http://www.goldendoodleworld.com
**This article is copyright protected Nov. 14, 2009 as all rights reserved. The content and images in this article may not be copied, redistributed without the expressed written permission of its author, Dee Gerrish. **