How Homeownership Changes You

 
 

It’s not just a financial commitment. It can alter people’s relationships to a community, a place, and even time.

​Growing up, Erin Nelson used to make fun of their dad for spending so much time looking out the window at what the neighbors were up to. “Now I’m that person,” Nelson, a 31-year-old who bought their first house a year ago in Portland, Oregon, told me. “I’m always peeking out the window … That’s like my new TV.” Nelson, who uses they/them pronouns, has realized that as a homeowner, their life is bound up with the people next door in a way it never has been before.

Buying a first house is, for those who can afford it, among the largest financial decisions someone makes in their life, and lately, the process has only gotten more stressful: During the pandemic, home prices have shot up, and shopping for a house has become intimidatingly competitive in many places. But even some winners of the competition have buyer’s remorse. In a recent survey from the real-estate site Zillow, roughly one-third of respondents reported regretting how much work or maintenance their home required, and roughly one-fifth concluded that they had paid too much.

Perhaps forgotten amid the bidding wars and the rush to lock in a mortgage as interest rates rise is the fact that this transaction has a way of changing people as well. In addition to buying an assemblage of wood, glass, and other materials and committing to a host of unfamiliar chores, homeowners are also buying a psychological grab bag of new stressors, time sucks, comforts, perks, and trivial fixations—such as the neighbors’ comings and goings. Homeownership can change your mental time horizon, your conception of your community, and your stakes in a physical place.

For starters, homeownership alters people’s relationship to the tangible stuff that makes up their house. “When I [rented] an apartment, I was like, ‘I’m hanging this photo on the wall. Whatever—not my wall!’” Maia Bittner, a 34-year-old in the Seattle area who works at a financial-technology company, told me. “Now I’m like, ‘Good God, I put every dollar I have into the down payment and this drywall is like a shrine.’”

Today’s new homeowners may even feel more of a desire to preserve and perfect their living space than previous generations. Logan Mohtashami, the lead analyst for the real-estate news site HousingWire, told me that buyers tend to hold on to their home for longer than they used to; the typical length of “tenure” was five to seven years from the mid-1980s to the mid-2000s, and is now, according to the real-estate site Redfin, about 13 years. “The psychology is that this is yours and you’re going to make it as good as possible because you’re in for a long time,” Mohtashami said. Bittner does not love the work that this requires, though. The stress of home maintenance—say, coordinating the repair of a leaky window—is less meaningful to her than the stress of her job, which she feels at least has the benefit of moving her career forward.

Committing to owning a house can also tie people more closely to a place. Nelson, who works for a tech start-up, told me that after moving frequently during childhood and hopping from rental to rental in their 20s, they find homeownership “very calming” at age 31. It has also led them to wonder, “Now that I’ve settled and claimed this little piece of land, what am I going to do to invest in my community?” One of Nelson’s answers has been to devote about 10 percent of their disposable income to local nonprofits.

Read more like this on The Atlantic.

Related Links

If there is a home that you would like more information about, if you are considering selling a property, or if you have questions about the housing market in your neighborhood, please reach out. We’re here to help.

Search Homes in Colorado

Search Homes in Oklahoma

Search Homes in Oregon

A Complete Guide to Shopping at Your Neighborhood Farmers’ Market

 
 

Nothing brings about the joys of warmer weather quite like a stroll around your local farmers’ market. With its abundance of fresh produce and new choices every week, it’s easy to get overwhelmed without a tour guide.

However, once you have your bearings, you can save yourself a few trips to the supermarket and swap your grocery store staples for farmer’s market finds. Some don’t even need to be cooked to make delicious, fresh meals.

Here's the bounty of produce options you’ll see at the market this season and unique ways to use them in your everyday meals.

Asparagus

Select: Colors can range from white to green to purple, but no matter what hue you choose, look for tightly closed tips and stalks with no sliminess or dryness. The roots should be green, not brown.

Store: Keep the stalks moist by wrapping them in a damp paper towel or standing upright in a few inches of water. Store in the fridge and wash just before eating.

Cook: Phyllo-Wrapped Asparagus with Prosciutto

Basil

Select: Look for leaves that show no signs of wilting. Colors vary from shades of green to purple.

Store: Store basil in a plastic bag in the refrigerator or in a vase with about 2 inches of water. You can also freeze the leaves to keep them fresh through the summer months.

Cook: Chicken Panang Casserole

Beets

Select: Whether you’re choosing golden, red, or striped, pick out bulbs that feel heavy for their size and have few surface cracks. If the greens are attached, they should be vibrant rather than wilted.

Store: Stored correctly, beets can have a shelf-life of up to 3 months. Remove the stems from the bulbs (but don’t throw out the greens, you can eat those too!) and keep the bulbs in a sealed plastic bag in your crisper drawer. Leave them unwashed until ready to use.

Cook: Hasselback Beets with Tangy Dill Sauce and Caraway

Blackberries

Select: Select plump, well-colored berries with hulls detached. If hulls are still intact, the berries were picked too early.

Store: Fresh blackberries are best stored in the refrigerator for up to a week. Choose a wide, shallow bowl to store berries, and cover with plastic wrap to keep them from drying out. Make sure to use them up before they go bad!

Cook: Blackberry Turnovers

Blueberries

Select: Pick plump, juicy berries with blooms that have no trace of mold or discoloration. Look for firm, uniformly sized berries with a deep color and no hulls or stems.

Store: If eating blueberries within 24 hours of picking, store them at room temperature; otherwise, keep them refrigerated in a sealed container up to 3 days. Wash right before eating to keep the berries fresher longer.

Cook: Blueberry-Sour Cream Muffins

Get the full list on myrecipes.com

Related Links

If there is a home that you would like more information about, if you are considering selling a property, or if you have questions about the housing market in your neighborhood, please reach out. We’re here to help.

Search Homes in Colorado

Search Homes in Oklahoma

Search Homes in Oregon

The housing market just slid into a full-blown correction, says economists

 
 

Moody's Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi is ready to call it. He tells Fortune that we've officially moved from a housing boom into a "housing correction."

The real estate data rolling in for April and May shows that the U.S. housing market is softening. New home sales fell 19% to their lowest level since April 2020. Redfin reports 19% of home listings cut their price over the past month. Inventory is rising fast, while mortgage applications and existing home sales are also falling.

This drop-off isn't a result of seasonality, or a soft month or two. Zandi says it's a trajectory flip: Demand is pulling back—fast—in the face of mortgage rates that have spiked dramatically.

"The housing market has peaked…everything points to a rolling over of the housing market," Zandi says. "In terms of home sales, they're falling sharply. Housing demand is coming down fast. Home price growth [will] go flat here pretty quickly; we will see [home] price declines in a significant number of markets."

Unlike a stock market correction, which means a greater than 10% drop in equities, Zandi says a "housing correction" means the end of the housing boom and the beginning of a period where home prices will fall in some regional markets. Over the coming 12 months, he expects year-over-year home price growth to be 0%. If that comes to fruition, it'd mark the worst 12-month stretch since 2012. It would also be whiplash for real estate agents and brokers who've watched home prices soar 19.8% over the past year.

This is all by design. The Federal Reserve has a dual mandate from Congress: Keep both unemployment and inflation low. Of course, with the jobless rate at 3.6% and the latest CPI reading at 8.3%, it's obvious which mandate the Fed has shifted its attention to: inflation. In the Fed's mind, if it can end the housing boom, it can slow down overall price growth. That's why the Fed hit the housing market with an economic shock of higher mortgage rates.

Keep reading on Fortune.com

Related Links

If there is a home that you would like more information about, if you are considering selling a property, or if you have questions about the housing market in your neighborhood, please reach out. We’re here to help.

Search Homes in Colorado

Search Homes in Oklahoma

Search Homes in Oregon

Brutal late snowstorm that hammered Colorado Springs will aid regional spring runoff

 
 

A late season snowstorm that hammered Colorado Springs trees and power lines could help the area recover a bit from drought and ensure more water flows into creeks, rivers and reservoirs in the Arkansas River basin ahead of a dry summer season. 

Colorado Springs received 1.36 inches of precipitation over the last five days, bringing the total for the month up to 1.63 inches, well above the .01 inches the area received in April, the National Weather Service reported. 

"It will definitely have an influence on the drought," said Paul Wolyn, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. But it does not signal a departure from the overall hot and dry trends.

The 30-day and 90-day outlooks both predict above-average temperatures and below-average precipitation, he said. Summer in Colorado Springs is historically fairly wet, with averages of 2.27 inches of rain June and 3.12 inches in July, Wolyn said.

The city paid for the break in the drought with more downed tree branches than it saw during the dramatic December windstorm, said Dennis Will, city forester. While the wind pushed over more trees completely, this storm likely took down more tree biomass total, he said. The brunt of the damage was done south of Constitution Avenue, west of Academy Boulevard, north of Airport Road and east of Old Colorado City, he said.

While the damage was widespread, the snowstorm damped severe fire danger that could have been much worse. 

"We were so close to having a disastrous fire and I am just glad we had the snow," he said. 

 In terms of overall damage to the city's canopy, Will is more concerned about the drought, now in its third year, than recent storm destruction. 

"The drought stress is the winner in terms of impact on our urban forest," he said. It would take a year or two of average precipitation for the soils and trees to recover. 

The storm also brought some respite for the mountains with towns such as Buena Vista and Leadville receiving more than two feet of snow. In the Arkansas Basin, snowpack was 76% of average on Monday, up from 31% on May 16. 

The storm was a small bump for the season as a whole, but still valuable, said Brian Domonkos, snow survey supervisor with the Natural Resources Conservation Service.

"These little bumps make big differences," he said. 

The additional moisture in the soil and cooler weather will also help more water make it into streams, rivers and reservoirs instead of being soaked up. Colorado Springs Utilities and water from the Fryingpan-Arkansas Project that flows into Lake Pueblo rely heavily on water making it into those rivers so that it can be brought in for residents on the eastern side of the state.  

"Cool, wet weather always drives imports higher," said Garrett Markus, water resource engineer with the Southeastern Colorado Water Conservancy District. The district is the largest importer of water in one project in Southeast Colorado.

The district is expecting about 80% of its regular water supply to arrive, said Chris Woodka, senior policy and issues manager.

Utilities is preparing for about 90% of the water it would normally expect to reach reservoirs, The Gazette reported previously. 

For those still cleaning up storm damage, residents can report downed city trees to coloradosprings.gov/page/citizen-request-gocosprings-app or 719-385-7623. City trees are those between the sidewalk and the street. The city does not help remove privately owned tree debris.

The city is currently working through hundreds of requests for help with down tree debris, Will said. 

Later this year, the city forestry department will transition out of the parks department and into Public Works so that it can receive additional financial support. Those resources should help storm cleanups in the future move faster, said Travis Easton, director of Public Works. 

Keep reading.

Related Links

If there is a home that you would like more information about, if you are considering selling a property, or if you have questions about the housing market in your neighborhood, please reach out. We’re here to help.

Search Homes in Colorado

Film On The Rocks is Back for Summer 2022!

 
 

After two years of drive-in screenings and a limited run of in-amphitheatre events in 2021, the 2022 Film on the Rocks will be a fully in-amphitheatre experience.

“We’re incredibly grateful to our audiences who fully embraced the drive-in concept for Film on the Rocks over these past two seasons. However, there is nothing more special than the in-amphitheatre experience that Red Rocks delivers and we know that this year’s lineup, packed with some of the most popular films of all time, as well as some new film and documentary additions, is going to create a very memorable summer under the stars.” - Kevin Smith, Denver Film CEO

Get the full schedule here

THOR: RAGNAROK

MON JUN 13, 2022 - 7:00 PM

THE SANDLOT

MON JUL 18, 2022 - 7:00 PM

THE GREATEST SHOWMAN

MON JUL 25, 2022 - 7:00 PM

SUMMER OF SOUL

MON AUG 1, 2022 - 7:00 PM

DUNE

MON AUG 15, 2022 - 7:00 PM

TICKETING INFORMATION

🎟 General Admission: $16

🎟 VIP: $32

Group Pricing

🎟 20-49 Guests: $15 per person

🎟 50-100 Guests: $14 per person

🎟 100+ Guests: $13 per person

For more information on Group Sales, please email russel@denverfilm.org.

For full details, visit DenverFilm.org.

Related Links

If there is a home that you would like more information about, if you are considering selling a property, or if you have questions about the housing market in your neighborhood, please reach out. We’re here to help.

Search Homes in Colorado

Search Homes in Oklahoma

Search Homes in Oregon