Just Listed: Like New Home in Southwest Bend

 
 
 

This Turnkey home is ready for its next owner!

3 beds, 2 baths, and 1 level. This nearly brand new home offers an open concept with vaulted ceilings and tons of windows for natural light. Inside you’ll find new window blinds, new interior paint, plus matching stainless steel appliances and a gas fireplace. The primary bedroom is separated from the other rooms, with large dual closets. Outside boasts a covered porch, a large trex deck, plus a fully fenced backyard oasis that is fully landscaped with sprinklers. This home is located in SW Bend in a friendly neighborhood with no HOA, small RV parking, and has easy access to the Old Mill, Hwy 97, Brookswood plaza, and schools. Schedule your tour today, this home won’t last long!

Listed by Shaleana Stout for West + Main Homes. Please contact Shaleana for current pricing + availability.

 
 
 

Have questions?
West + Main Homes
westandmain.co
hello@westandmainoregon.com

Presented by:
Shaleana Stout
(541) 647-3275
shaleana@bendrelo.com


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Just Listed: Newer Home on Wooded Acre Lot in River Pine Estates

 
 
 

Newer home built in 2020 that sits back in a wooded 1 acre lot with many Ponderosa trees.

1 bedroom, 1.5 bath, with 672 sq ft. with storage space above bedroom and bathroom. Vaulted blue and buggy ceilings with recessed lighting, beadboard panels and laminate flooring throughout the home. Stainless steel appliances, with gas range. PTAC heating and a/c unit with a ventless propane wall heater for back up. Covered vaulted ceiling front and back decks with hot tub. Fenced back yard. 10x20 storage building, with a covered stall area. New septic and well.

Listed by Tisha Anderson for West + Main Homes. Please contact Tisha for current pricing + availability.

 
 
 

Have questions?
West + Main Homes
westandmain.co
hello@westandmainoregon.com

Presented by:
Tisha Anderson
(541) 420-1361
tisha@westandmainoregon.com


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Are You Ready for Real Estate Investing?

 
 

Real estate investing is among the oldest and most rewarding asset classes.

It's a great way of building wealth and can be one of the more reliable types of investment. New investors are usually aware of these benefits, but some are not aware of the several different categories of real estate investments available.

For a savvy investor, focusing your efforts on a specific niche can be the first step in succeeding in your pursuit of financial independence and the benefit of a passive income. What do you need to know about the best types of real estate investment opportunities for your needs? Let's find out.

Types of Real Estate Investing

In 2020, the revenue from the property management field reached an unprecedented $88.4 billion in the U.S. If you're a prospective investor determined to develop, acquire, own or flip real estate, you should first understand the industry by dividing property investment into its various categories.

Residential

Based on US Census Bureau records, renter-occupied housing units accounted for about 30.4% of the overall inventory during the fourth quarter of 2020. Renting just makes sense for a large portion of the population, even if they have a choice to rent or own a property. These properties include houses, apartment buildings, vacation houses, and townhouses where individuals or families pay you to reside in the property. Details about their length of stay are stated in the rental or lease agreement.

Pros: short leases (due for renewal every 6-12 months) allowing you to capitalize on any positive adjustments in the market conditions.

Commercial

Office buildings and skyscrapers basically constitute commercial buildings. Property owners lease out these spaces to companies or small business owners, who then pay rent to use the property. Commercial real estate prices have been on an upward trend. This statistics indicates this category has a considerable ROI in the long term.

Pros: Benefit of longer leases, usually multi-year. Typically, this approach helps generate greater stability in cash flow and often cushions you as the property owner from rental rates decline.

Cons: Markets fluctuate, and its possible rental rates may increase rapidly within a short period. Due to the dated agreements, a property owner may not have the flexibility to increase the rent to match the competitive market rates.

Industrial

These properties generate income from customers who frequent properties such as industrial warehouses, storage units, distribution centers, manufacturing facilities, and other purpose-built properties. As a real estate investor, you charge significant fees and earn service revenue as a means to increase your return on investment.

Retail

Retail properties include shopping malls, strip malls, retail storefronts, among others. Depending on the agreement type, property owners can also receive a portion of sales generated by the stores alongside a base rent. This strategy helps create an incentive for them to maintain the property in remarkable condition and attract shoppers.

Mixed-Use

Typically, mixed-use properties blend any of the above classifications into one project. This catch-all category of real estate investments is attractive for those with considerable assets since they offer a level of built-in diversification that helps control risk.

Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)

REITs have risen in popularity in the real estate investment community as an alternative way to invest in real estate. They are popular with investors who don't want the responsibility of overseeing the management of an investment property.

But what's a REIT? This real estate investing strategy involves investment in shares of a corporation dealing or owning real estate properties and allocating a considerable amount of its earnings as dividends.

Cons: tax complexities. Dividends don't enjoy the same favorably low tax rates common stocks attract. But REITs can be an excellent addition to your investment portfolio, preferably when you buy them at the right value—with an adequate margin of safety. Besides, you can also opt for more esoteric areas like tax lien certificates.

As a rule of thumb, lending money for real estate is regarded as real estate investing and can also be accounted for as a fixed-income investment. Akin to investing in bonds, you generate your returns by lending money in favor of interest income.

Investing in a real estate/building and later leasing it back to a tenant, for instance, as a restaurant, is at par with fixed income investing instead of an actual real estate investment. In this case, you're simply financing a property—but this somewhat hedges between investing and financing. Overall, you technically own the building and have a claim to its appreciation and profits.

Getting Started in Real Estate Investing

Every kind of investment has its share of potential benefits and shortcomings, and real estate investing is no different. Smart investors minimize their risks by anticipating the twists in cash flow cycles, economic cycles, potential for natural disasters, and changes in lending traditions. So, it's best to analyze and weigh the opportunities very thoroughly before deciding if real estate investing is the right choice for you.

Real estate investing can carry many rewards with benefits potentially lasting a lifetime. If you apply due diligence, you can capitalize on the available opportunities in what can be a fun and lucrative path.

Read the full article on RETechnology.

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How to Paint a Front Door and Increase Your Home’s Resale Value in the Process

 
 

A small but impactful project like painting your front door a fresh hue won’t just give your exterior an instant facelift.

There’s an even bigger payoff: This simple upgrade could increase your home’s resale value by several thousand dollars. (Psst: You’ll want to embrace the dark side.) What are you waiting for? If you’re all geared up with your new color and brush in hand, we tapped Behr manager Octave Villar to guide us through the process. For his tips on how to paint a front door—and steer clear of the typical pitfalls—read on.

Common Mistakes to Avoid When Painting a Front Door

Not Considering the Environment

Yes, this project is a minor one, but that doesn’t mean diving in without thinking of the impact that temperature, humidity, and airflow will have on the process. Schedule your job for a clear, sunny day (not too breezy) with mild temperatures to help with even application and a quicker drying time.

Painting Without a Plan

Haphazardly applying paint does not a happy homeowner (or door) make. Villar suggests starting with the inside panels and working outward so you can paint smoothly and uninterrupted.

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Skimping on Tools

Villar points out that investing in proper, quality tools will save you time and the hassle of potentially having to redo a messy job due to low-grade rollers that leave nap fibers on the surface or a worn-out brush that creates a rough finish.

Adding Another Layer Before the Previous One Dries

Villar says water-based paints typically take two to four hours to dry, while oil-based ones can take up to 24 hours. If you skip this step, you run the risk of creating streaks and bubbles that can be a headache to repair. 

Searching for front-door paint? Here are our faves:

How to Paint a Front Door

The Supplies

  • Mild detergent

  • Sponge

  • Bucket

  • Warm water

  • Lint-free cloth

  • Paint scraper

  • 400-grit synthetic sandpaper (or ultrafine sanding sponge)

  • Trash bin

  • Stir stick

  • Paint tray

  • Painter’s tape

  • Short nap roller

  • Nylon/polyester paintbrush or paint sprayer

  • Angled paintbrush

  • Exterior paint

  • Water-based primer

Step 1: Remove All Nonpermanent Hardware and Clean the Door

This includes knobs and hinges (if you’re taking the door off the frame). Be sure to label the pieces and set them aside in a safe place until you’re ready to reattach them. Then fill a bucket with warm water, add a bit of detergent, and use a sponge to clean any dirt or grime off the surface. Rinse with fresh water and wait until the surface is completely dry before moving on to the next step. 

Step 2: Get Rid of Any Peeling Paint

Gently clear the surface of flakes from the last paint job with a paint scraper. Sweep the remnants into a trash bin.

Step 3: Sand the Door

Use fine-grit sandpaper to lightly go over the door surface to help extend the life of the new coat and make sure that it sticks. Wipe off any sanding dust with a lint-free cloth.

Step 4: Cover the Remaining Hardware With Painter’s Tape

Tape around the edges of any fasteners or fixtures on the door (think: hinges, doorknobs, the peephole) to shield them from paint splatters.

Step 5: It’s Time to Prime

With the roller, apply the primer, starting with the large, flat areas on the back of the door. Villar recommends an angled nylon or polyester brush for corners and crevices. Let the surface dry (depending on the type of primer you bought, the outside temperature, and the door material, this could take from one to four hours), then repeat the process on the front of the door.

Step 6: Sand and Wipe Down the Door

Once the primer completely dries, use the sandpaper to lightly scuff the primer, carefully clearing the surface of any uneven spots. Wipe the door with the lint-free cloth to clear away any sanding dust.

Step 7: Now Let’s Paint!

Finally, the moment you’ve been waiting for—grab a brush, roller, or paint sprayer to apply a single coat (don’t forget to give it enough time to dry!). Then go over the door with the 400-grit sandpaper again. Add another coat and repeat the sanding process once more.

Step 8: Remove the Painter’s Tape

You don’t need to watch the drying process happen (everyone knows it’s a total snooze), but you do need to give it time. Once that’s done—you’ll know if you gently dab an unnoticeable spot with your finger and it doesn’t feel wet or sticky—carefully remove the tape and discard it.

Villar says water-based paints generally dry in two to four hours, whereas oil-based may take up to 24. To be on the safe side, wait as long as possible before using the door so your handiwork lasts.

Step 9: Reattach the Hardware

Put the doorknobs, hinges, and any other accessories back on. If you took the door off the hinges, hitch it back onto the frame. This first impression is, in fact, everything.

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What you need to do with your houseplants now spring is here

 
 

Rising mercury, longer days and trees adorned with blossom: it’s difficult not to be drawn outside with the onset of spring.

But for people nurturing indoor jungles, the equinox and clocks moving forward signal a key moment in the houseplant calendar: it's time to grow.

My house plants and I limp through autumn and winter, trying to dodge crispy leaves and fungus gnats and - at worst - a feeble death. Spring marks the moment when those months of dormancy are over and the growing season begins. The worst thing you can do right now is ignore your house plants in favour of all the things shooting up in the garden; a few small jobs in spring can tide them over for the next six months.

Pruning

If you’re finding yourself staring at a load of brown, crispy leaves do everyone a favour and cut them back - they will never turn green again, I’m afraid. Carefully cut around the brown bits and discard any dried-up stems into the compost or food waste bins. You’ll be amazed by how much better it looks.

Dark winter days can make plants reach for the light, leading to long, gangly growth. If your plants have more stem and stalk than leaf, a judicious cut can have the same effect as a good trim at the hairdresser’s: encouraging more volume in the form of bushy growth. More structural plants such as Fiddle Leaf Figs (Ficus lyrata) and Rubber Plants (Ficus elastica) will branch out if you cut between two leaf nodes on their stem. Be brave, and chop about a third off. You’ll see new leaf nodes start to form within weeks.

Vines such as golden pothos and philodendrons react especially well to a haircut, encouraging more growth from the crown of the plant (where it reaches the soil) rather than at its extremities. 

Propagating 

Make sure those off-cuts are done with a clean blade - scissors or a knife - and bung them in a cup, vase or bottle of clean water. Place somewhere bright and you’ll see them rooting within a week or so. When the roots are five centimetres long, you can pot them into soil - either a new pot or the existing one - to form a new plant. 

Re-potting

This is possibly the most gratifying bit of spring houseplant care, the equivalent of new school shoes for growing plants. They’ve muddled through the winter in too-small pots and a slightly larger one, filled with lovely new soil, can emphasise the growth they’d be putting on in spring. Examine your plants to see if any roots are growing out of the top or bottom of the pot - this is a sign it’s ready to pot on - and find another pot, with drainage holes, that’s a hand’s-width larger in the circumference than the existing one. Don’t feel the urge to find a massively larger pot: if the roots can’t grow into it, it will just become a soggy mass of soil, which can encourage rot. 

Before moving anything, give your plants a drink to help with transplant shock. Then, fill the with a few centimetres of fresh, peat-free compost and lift the plant’s root ball out of the old pot and onto this new cushion of compost. Fill in around the gaps with compost and press down firmly. Then water again. They’ll be growing in no time.

Feeding and watering regimes

Depending on your plants, you may have slowed down on watering - and definitely on plant food - over winter as dormancy set in. Now that they’re growing again, you may notice that the soil is drying out more quickly. Keep a close eye and always touch the soil to see if it needs watering - a finger in the soil up to the knuckle will tell you how dry the soil is. If it is dry, water the plant thoroughly for several minutes to soak the rootball; I tend to put mine under the kitchen tap, and allow to drain out. Watered properly means watering less often.

While the soil is wet, it’s primed to absorb liquid plant food - crucial to get the most from your plants over the growing season and fend off pests. I’m partial to Maxicrop Organic Seaweed feed, which I use on everything and contains no nasties. Dilute according to the instructions on the bottle and use every fortnight, or whenever you remember to, if you’re anything like me.

Dust

I know, it sounds boring, but it is frustratingly crucial - especially for larger leaved-plants such as monstera and ficus. Dust can block the surface cells leaves use to photosynthesise and respire, so you’ll have a happier plant if there’s less of it about. I use a microfibre cloth, and, if I’m feeling fancy, some natural soap diluted in water to encourage a glossy shine.  

Learn more on House + Garden.

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