As Featured in West + Main Home Magazine: Meet Your Color Expert

 

Q + A with Color Expert Kristen Leu

Q: We’re curious, how did you get into this very specialized niche?

I came out of school with an interior design degree, but as I started working in the industry, I really found my calling in color. Working for Benjamin Moore for several years allowed me to hone my skills in paint & color.

Q: If there was one color, or color family that you wished people would NEVER use...

I don’t have any color “no’s”. But, I may steer my clients away from using a specific color for their walls and instead try it as an accent for a pillow, rug, or other design feature.

Q: What is the biggest challenge that you see when it comes to color selection...

Choosing paint colors is hard! Those tiny little paint swatches are hard to visualize in application. There are so many factors to consider when choosing paint colors: lighting, sur- rounding design elements (f looring, furniture, window covering), and use of space. But lighting is probably the biggest challenge. From natural daylight (or lack of), to what type of light bulbs are being used in the space, lighting can change the look and feel of the paint color.

Q: Do you have a favorite project?

I don’t have a favorite project, but what I love about my work is helping people find colors that will speak to who they are and make them feel great in their space.

Q: What is going to trend over the next year or two?

It’s fun to watch other industries, such as fashion, to see what is going to be hot in paint colors. The trends I’m seeing from Benjamin Moore and Sherwin Williams are earthy, baked colors paired with some nice neutrals. I think green is going to come in strong: from the calming SW Color of the Year 2022 Evergreen Fog to the deep evergreens and olive green.

Q: Are there a few favorite colors...

I definitely have some favorites in my paint bucket! For neutral walls: Benjamin Moore’s Pale Oak and Classic Gray. Favorite trim colors: Chantilly Lace and White Dove. Deeps: Salamander, Hale Navy and Onyx.

 
 
 

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How to recycle your Christmas tree and other holiday things in Colorado

 
 

Denver residents can set trees out for recycling between Jan. 3-14.

Ah, the age-old question, ‘how long should Christmas decorations stay up?’ Once you’ve come to the conclusion that they can’t be forever you might next wonder what to do with that tree, those lights and all the remnants of your gifts. The good news is that you can recycle many things you used to display your holiday cheer.

Across Denver and Colorado, cities and programs will help take those items off your hands.

In Denver, you can recycle your old holiday lights for free from Dec. 6 to Jan. 8. Take the old lights to Cherry Creek Recycling Drop-off or Blue Star Recyclers and follow these instructions.

Those Christmas cards on your fridge or wrapping paper still scampered in the living room? Most often that too can be recycled and in your regular bin. Just make sure there’s no glitter or foil this can not be recycled. While tap is okay, metallic is not. And be sure to dispose of ribbons and batteries that might be on cards or paper before recycling.

As for the trees here’s where you need to go:

In Denver, Treecycle is a program for Denver residents from Denver Recycles. Discarded Christmas trees will be turned into mulch after the holiday season and free Treecycle mulch is made available to Denver residents at the Mulch Giveaway and Compost Sale in May.

All you have to do is be a Denver resident, set your tree out on your collection day between Jan. 3-14. One thing to keep in mind is that trash collection days are changing for many in the new year.

If you’re not in Denver here’s what you do with your tree around the metro area:

Adams County

Remove your decorations and head to Riverdale Regional Park. From Jan. 3 through Jan. 10 the Adams County’s Parks, Open Space & Cultural Arts Department is offering free live Christmas tree recycling from sunrise to sunset. For more details, call 303-637-8000.

Arvada

Head to Lake Arbor Lake Park or Stenger Fields and the City of Arvada will accept Christmas trees for free from 6 a.m. to 5 p.m. seven days a week through Jan. 24, 2022.

Aurora

There are several drop-off sites that offer free recycling until Jan. 10 including Del Mar Park, Saddle Rock Golf Course and Olympic Park. Call 303-739-7177 for more information.

Castle Rock

Residents of Castle Rock can goto Founders Park, Metzler Ranch Community Park or Paintbrush Park until Jan. 31.

Douglas County

Trees can be left at Bayou Gulch, Challenger Regional Park, Fairgrounds Regional Park or Highland Heritage Regional Park. Those sits will be available through Jan. 31 and mulch will be on site. If you need more information call 720-733-6990.

El Paso County

You can recycle trees at visitor center parking lot at Cheyenne Mountain State Park on Jan. 1 from 1-5 p.m., and Jan. 2, 8 and 9 from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. It is suggested you donate $5 per tree, with proceeds going to Friends of Cheyenne Mountain State Park. There’s also a TreeCycle program with seven locations.

Highlands Ranch

Dad Clark Park, Redstone Park and Toepfer Park are offering tree drop off with mulch available to residents through Jan. 17.

Lakewood

Drop off your trees at Lakewood’s Greenhouse from 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. through Jan. 9 if you’re a resident. There’s more info at 720-963-5240.

Littleton

Residents can drop off their tree any day from from sunrise to sunset until Jan. 14 at Cornerstone Park, or at the Willow Spring Service Center.

Longmont

Through Jan. 9 drop-off sites for trees will be at, Roosevelt Park, Garden Acres Park, Kanemoto Park and Centennial Park. There’s more information here.

Northglenn

Residents can leave trees at Northglenn’s Maintenance and Operations Facility, Northwest Open Space or Jaycee Park through Jan. 7.

Summit County

There are several sites you can dispose of your tree. The Summit County Resource Allocation Park (SCRAP,) a collection site in Willowbrook across from Trent Park, Stilson Lot, the Recycling Center across from Town Hall in Dillon, and the Frisco Bay Marina dirt lot.

Visit Denver Post to learn more.

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How to Handle a Burst Pipe and Minimize Damage

Frozen or burst pipes during the cold weather months can be one of the most costly maintenance issues you'll face as a property owner.

A burst pipe suddenly flooding your kitchen can quickly become an out-of-hand emergency that could cost you thousands of dollars in damage. A quick and accurate response is key to resolving the issue and mitigating both damage to your property and your out-of-pocket cost.

Steps to Take Ahead of Time

If you own property in an area that experiences cold weather, you need to be aware of seasonal maintenance tasks that will help you protect your property as the weather changes each year. One of the most important steps is to winterize your pipes to ensure they won't freeze or burst when the temperature drops. This includes action items like insulating any exposed pipes, detaching garden hoses and covering outdoor faucets. If the weather gets cold enough, you may even consider leaving a faucet dripping or opening cabinet doors during the coldest parts of the day.

No matter how prepared you might be, accidents and emergencies still happen. You'd be wise to set up a savings account specifically for your property so you have a "rainy day" fund set aside for unexpected expenses. All homes—regardless of age, location or condition—will inevitably need some form of emergency repair.

Steps to Take for Frozen Pipes

A frozen pipe will not necessarily burst, so if you can catch a frozen pipe early on, you could save yourself a major headache. When your area experiences frigid temperatures, be sure to check your plumbing and keep an eye out for warning signs like faucets only releasing small amounts of water or toilets not refilling when flushed. If you do run into one of these issues, you're likely dealing with a frozen pipe.

If this happens, your first step should be to cut off the water supply to that section of the plumbing. Expanding and freezing water can quickly cause damage. Even if the water supply is shut off, you will likely still deal with some leaking from the water that defrosts after the pipe has thawed. Be prepared with a mop, bucket and/or towels to quickly soak up any excess water.

In order to thaw a frozen pipe, you can use a space heater, infrared or incandescent heat lamp, or even a hairdryer to warm up the frozen area. Heat tape is also an option and should be used according to manufacturer instructions. Do not use any sort of open flame to thaw frozen pipes, as it poses a major fire hazard and can damage your pipes further.

Steps to Take for a Burst Pipe

Water damage claims are the second most common insurance claim in the U.S. When you're dealing with a frozen pipe, the water continues to expand as it freezes, which creates pressure that can cause a pipe to burst. When this happens, the crack or leak in the pipe allows water flow from the pipe to enter your home where it shouldn't. If a pipe does burst, you need to act quickly to mitigate property damage and repair cost.

  • Your very first step should be to shut off your main water supply to minimize flooding—typically the most expensive damage to address.

  • Once you've shut off the water supply, make sure you identify the entire area that has been impacted by the leak. Remove as much water as possible—as quickly as possible—using a mop, sponges, towels or a shop vacuum or wet/dry vacuum.

  • To prevent long-term damage due to moisture build-up, run a dehumidifier or fan in the affected area.

  • Contact a licensed plumber to ensure the pipe is correctly repaired before running any water to that section of the home again.

Burst pipes and the associated water damage are something you absolutely want to avoid as a property owner. If you've had to learn your lesson the hard way, don't let yourself get caught in a similar situation during the next spell of cold weather. The best way to deal with frozen or burst pipes is to prevent them in the first place—proactive winter maintenance will save you time, money and a whole lot of stress. - Housecall


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Permanent Living Transforms Resort Towns, Vacation Homes

They say if you love what you do, you won’t work a day in your life. But what if you live where you vacation, does that make every workday a holiday?

Maybe not quite, but even so, thousands of people across the country have begun looking at their second homes, or at traditionally vacation areas, for more permanent living arrangements—a trend which has long-term implications for the industry at large, as well as revealing a bevy of new, disparate challenges in seasonal cities from coast to coast.

In Palm Springs, California, Jim Franklin is a broker with more than 30 years of experience in the area, including leadership roles for the regional REALTOR® association. In just a couple short years, he says there has been a roughly 10% shift in the proportion of people who live rear-round in the desert community— traditionally a winter getaway for movie stars and Los Angeles elites.

“Palm Springs used to be more absentee…the movie people and all that, but they didn’t come in the summer,” he says.

Now, restaurants are beginning to open year-round, and people who bought seasonal houses that did not have air conditioning or insulation are renovating to prepare for 100-degree summer heat.

“I think you’re going to see more and more people here permanently, because why wouldn’t you want to live here when you have 360 days a year of sunshine?” he asks.

Though so far, traditional infrastructure, like water service and parking, have not been huge issues in Palm Springs as more folks spend more time there, in Big Sky, Montana—another traditional winter getaway—there has been a struggle to provide housing and amenities for the influx of longer-term residents.

Katie Morrison, a sales associate with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Montana Properties, says there are not that many people who are staying permanently, but instead many more people are staying three or four months a year instead of three or four weeks.

“It increases the size, I would say, of what people are looking for. I was seeing a trend for a while of people who are downsizing, and now I’m seeing people upsize,” she says. “There has been absolutely no interest in on my end.”

With restaurants and other businesses now staying open through autumn and spring, Big Sky is also in desperate need of affordable housing to serve workers at these places, according to Morrison—a challenge nationwide, but more acute in an area with relatively little housing diversity. The town has tried to spark more diverse housing opportunities through a community housing trust—an initiative that has “ramped up” in recent years despite pushback from some in the town.

This community trust even has incentivized local property owners to rent their vacation homes locally instead of putting them on Airbnb, Morrison says. But that organization has been limited by the fact Big Sky is unincorporated, meaning there is no local government directly supporting it, leaving the job to non-profits utilizing more informal tools.

A couple thousand miles southeast in Pennsylvania, across the sprawling, river-strewn and mountainous Poconos region, Airbnb and local regulation has become real estate’s most urgent obstacle, as that area also contends with an influx of both short- and longer-term residents. Jeff Rickert, a broker for RE/MAX based on Pocono Lake, says that more than a dozen municipalities have spent months battling over short-term rental regulations, pitting those who want to make money renting their valuable properties against others who are looking for quieter, permanent living and fear the noise and carousing of the Airbnb crowd.

“With the pandemic, people were coming and doing very foolish things—they were staying longer and they were creating chaos,” he says.

Rickert says bigger investors buy up dozens of houses at a clip with the primary purpose of renting them on Airbnb, while at the same time many others are retiring or moving permanently into traditional second homes. With each town codifying separate regulations, real estate professionals are having to navigate a constantly changing arena of fire codes, septic needs, bedroom limitations, time limits and seasonal restrictions on short-term rentals that originate both at the state and local level.

“There’s 20 townships and boroughs and all 20 of them had to create ordinances on rentals,” he says. “There’s still three out of the 20 municipalities that still haven’t approved rentals with an ordinance…it’s mission impossible.”

How the local officials eventually settle all these specific squabbles will determine how the region evolves, likely with different townships offering environments that may be more conducive to different lifestyles, Rickert posits. With many different stakeholders and interest groups, though, the situation remains both fluid and complex, and after three years of debate there is nothing like a consensus on any of these issues, according to Rickert.

Life As We Know It

The big picture is more about demographics and how they fit in the inherent structure or environment of a given place. Morrison says she does not anticipate Big Sky—with its heavy snowfalls and relatively isolated location—ever becoming a fully permanent community. Many of the people she sees dedicating more time there are what she calls “early retirees”—people in high-earning industries in their 40s or 50s who work irregularly in semi-informal or freelance roles, but crave the amenities of the beautiful mountain region.

With a recently opened community center and more town sponsored events (including a Halloween “Yappy Hour,” a combination pet parade and costume party), Morrison says that Big Sky is embracing a new normal that looks less like a resort and more like a traditional living environment for all ages.

“We’ve done really well with all of that, and I’d say our community has always done really well to financially support these efforts,” she says.

Palm Springs, on the other hand, has not needed a whole lot of new infrastructure. The city has welcomed a mix of younger folks working remotely for companies in San Francisco and Oregon, along with people in their 60s or 70s who are there for the pristine weather, according to Franklin. The region also boasts an airport (which has seen a huge increase in available commercial flights this year), and may even see a railway built that could connect it to Los Angeles, which gives residents there much more flexibility—whether they want to fly out to see family or party in Westwood on the weekends.

Franklin guesses in the long term, Palm Springs will continue to shrink its number of seasonal residents, though at a slower rate than these past couple years. Airbnb rentals have remained a point of contention, though he says most residents are unbothered by the 2,000 or so units rented short-term.

“The money they collect, they put back into enforcement,” he says. “The police go out if they have to, they fine people.”

“I have a vacation rental next to my house, and I’ve never had a problem,” he adds.

Much will also depend on what builders do in these resort areas over the next few years as the supply chain issues calm down and labor becomes less of a crunch. Rickert says in the Poconos there is a huge lack of builders following the 2006 market collapse, and more municipal red tape has prevented anyone from quickly pivoting to putting up units designed either as short-term rental ready, or as permanent housing, meaning it might take even longer for these communities to evolve to meet new types of demand.

“I’m watching Florida build 100 houses in a hundred days,” he says. “A community of 3,000 houses , they’ve built 100 houses in maybe 10 or 12 years. And quite frankly, local government likes to keep it as a good old boys club, and so that makes it even harder.”

Overall, people are looking less and less for the traditional vacation home, designed for a few weeks or a month of use a year and left empty the rest of the time. If they are looking to own a home in a vacation or resort area, that home needs to offer something personal as well as the kind of size, lifestyle and amenities of a permanent residence, and they have begun to expect the same services in resort towns as they do in more traditional markets.

Franklin says he thinks this attitude is actually driven by the prevalence of Airbnb. People can spend a week or two in a fully furnished, spacious home or condo in any place in the country on short notice, using Airbnb or another short-term rental service, and don’t need to own a home themselves to do it.

“Once people do a vacation rental, they’re like, ‘Wow this is so much better,’” he says. “You can have your own house and buy your own groceries without commitment.”

Anyone looking for a second home or looking to spend time in a resort area is going to be demanding more, Morrison confirms—from their home and from their community. What that looks like depends on the person as well as the community of course. But now more than ever, good skiing or beautiful views are not enough to get people to buy somewhere, as the unique spirit and character of these vacation areas become a primary reason to live there—something Big Sky has quickly picked up on.

“I think Big Sky is interested in becoming Big Sky, not becoming California, not becoming Vail,” she says. “So, the people who come, they are finding their niche and they’re becoming part of this community.” - RIS Media


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Yes, you need to water your trees

It was another snowless morning when Ben Rickenbacker, Denver's forestry operations manager, examined the cracked soil beneath a blue spruce in Huston Lake Park. 

A worker soon arrived with a hose attached to a water truck. For the next few minutes, he provided a small flood meant to help the tree through a historic winter drought along Colorado's Front Range. 

"It's really bad," Rickenbacker said. "We usually have some sort of snow cover, but we've had little to no snow this holiday season." 

Other Colorado foresters and local arborists have started to worry about the fate of metro Denver's urban trees. Record-dry weather made it even harder for trees to survive in a natural semi-arid prairie. If any die out, the area could lose pieces of a leafy climate buffer that helps suck up carbon, improve local air quality and soften the severity of heatwaves.

Those are all benefits Denver is trying to build on, not lose, as global warming heats up. The city has increased its tree-planting pace over the last few years. Its goal is to expand the urban tree canopy, which now shades about 13 percent of the city, to 20 percent, according to its latest parks and recreation plan.

More frequent and severe droughts could imperil the effort. Beyond killing off younger saplings, a lack of precipitation could make it tougher for older trees to fight off emerald ash borers, an invasive insect already threatening one out of every six trees across the Front Range. 

Rickenbacker said winter watering can guard against the threat, but he worries private homeowners haven't made the practice a habit. With that in mind, here are some tips for how to make sure your trees have plenty to drink this holiday season. 

Focus on the most vulnerable trees

Jim Klett, a horticulturist at Colorado State University, said not all trees face the same threat from drought and dry weather. Any trees planted within the last three years should be first in line for the hose, according to Klett. Evergreen trees should be watered next since their needles continue to demand water over the winter.

"With all the foliage on them, they're going to desiccate and dry out very quickly. So evergreens are even more critical than deciduous trees," he said.

Finally, he recommends watering any trees with shallow root systems like birches, maples, lindens, alders, hornbeams, dogwoods, willows and mountain ashes. And if you don't know what trees you have, smartphone apps can help you figure it out. 

Wait until the weather warms up

Klett advises only watering trees when temperatures rise above 40 degrees Fahrenheit. Mid-day watering will allow the moisture to soak into the roots before freezing temperatures at night. 

Provide the right amount of water

Pay attention to the thickness of the trunk. When trying to figure out how much to water, Klett said to apply 10 gallons of water for every inch of trunk diameter. For example, a 3-inch tree would get about 30 gallons about every three weeks. 

It's a mistake to pour all the water directly against the base of the trunk, Klett said. Instead, he recommends watering along the "drip line," which is the area beneath a tree’s farthest-reaching branches.

"You probably want to water there, because that's where most of the feeder roots are for the tree," he said. 

Water the trees, not the sewers

Denver waters trees on city property through a pipe tucked about an inch into the ground. The technique ensures the water sinks into the soil rather than running off into a storm drain. If you want to apply a similar strategy, most hardware and landscaping shops sell special forks or needles that can attach to the end of a hose. 

Mulch it good

Klett recommends applying mulch around trees to conserve soil moisture. If the ground gets dry enough to crack, the extra layer can also help protect tree roots from cold, dry air.

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