All posts by jd

Real estate broker, civil engineer and general contractor.

Logan, a Dog Bigger than it’s Owner

Logan The Irish Wolfhound Standing a little taller than Jeff Toff, Owner
Logan The Irish Wolfhound Standing a little taller than Jeff Toff, Owner

I’m excited, this is my first doghouse listing. (This is Angel talking, Angel is my dog)

This is Logan who was born on St. Patrick’s day!  4 years ago.  He was a champion show dog, winning every show he entered except one.  He retired from the ring and became my hiking buddy last June.  He is shy and afraid of small dogs & cats…unless they run.  He very rarely barks, even when he meets barking dogs or strange people.  He thinks he is a lap dog.  He travels back and forth to San Diego, 11 hrs, without so much as a bark, whine or cry…he just wants to go where ever Jeff goes.  He doesn’t seem fast loping around until you see him gallop like a horse.

Logan in the snow
Logan in the snow

The Irish Wolfhound was originally a war dog, used to drag men out of chariots or off horseback, but was also used as a hunting hound and as a guard. There are numerous references in Irish mythology to its prowess in all these fields. It was used to hunt the Irish elk and the wolf and was used singly or in pairs rather than in a pack, hence the need for great size. When the last of the wolves in Ireland was killed (the elk had become extinct long before), the breed dwindled and almost died out. The process was not helped by the demand for this magnificent hound around the world. It was given as a gift to kings and princes, but this was eventually stopped by Oliver Cromwell who brought out a law banning its export.

See also Cruiser Logan’s Son

Logan's home, a big house for a big dog!
Logan's home, a big house for a big dog!

This is Angel, my dog, first doghouse listing and she is excited! Have a dog? A dog house (you can make one up)? Angel would like to list your doghouse, send a picture of your dog and a doghouse, along with the square footage, how many bathrooms the doghouse has and we’ll post it on this site. Tell us what’s special about your dog and what breed it is. Angel would appreciate that. See the About Us page for details.

For all your real estate needs, call or email:

John J. O’Dell
Real Estate Broker
O’Dell Realty
(530) 263-1091
Email John at jodell@nevadacounty.com

Investor Buying Fuels Home Sales

Home for Sale 18026 Jayhawk Drive, Lake Wildwood, not a foreclosure, MLS 103551
Home for Sale 18026 Jayhawk Drive, Lake Wildwood, not a foreclosure, MLS 103551

I was just asked by a client to make an offer yesterday for a home in Hayward that is in foreclosure. When I called the listing agent, she said there were two pending offers already! One of the reasons home sales have risen this year is the spike in investor groups in troubled markets that are buying up clusters of foreclosed houses from banks.

In many cases, investors are prevailing over first-time home buyers and other owner-occupants because they bring cash to the table.

For instance, in Phoenix where 38 percent of April sales of single-family homes were all-cash deals, Mark Allen, a former division president at D.R. Horton, the nation’s largest home builder, is working with Gorilla Capital, which specializes in foreclosures, to buy dozens of properties at courthouse auctions.

Barclays Capital estimates that banks and loan investors owned 765,500 foreclosed homes as of April 1, up from 629,100 last year. By 2010, Barclays expects them to have acquired about 1.3 million homes. When the market improves, these owners will try to sell.

“All this investor buying isn’t depleting supply, it’s only shifting it around,” Allen says.

Maybe, but a lot of investor’s are buying these homes, putting a little money into them and reselling at a profit to home owners, not investors. Others are buying for long term rentals. With prices this low, a lot of first time home buyers are now able to get into the market.

Foreclosed Homes a Buying Feast for Investors

foreclosure-chart

Foreclosed home sales are going up here in Nevada County and elsewhere. The price of many of the foreclosed homes are making it affordable for investors to buy homes, do minor repairs and resell them for a profit. In many cases, mom and pop buyers are in the market to get a few rentals. But the big boys are into the market now, knowing that this is a buying opportunity a lifetime.

According to the Wall Street Journal:

“The pace of housing sales has been rising in many markets this year, but it is only partly because families seeking affordable housing are returning to the market.

It also is because of investors like former Deutsche Bank managing director Matthew Cooleen, whose firm has spent $30 million buying pools of foreclosed houses from banks.

His newly formed Greenwich, Conn.-based firm, HudsonCross Financial, is betting it can make a profit reselling in beaten-down markets in states like Nevada, Arizona and Florida and in Southern California because it is paying so little for the homes.

In Phoenix, Mark Allen, a former division president at D.R. Horton, the nation’s largest home builder, is reselling homes he is buying at courthouse auctions with funding from Gorilla Capital, an Oregon-based firm that targets foreclosures. “It’s the only way to make money in Phoenix residential real estate right now,” Mr. Allen says.
After mostly retreating from the housing market after the bubble burst, investors are returning in droves, hoping to take advantage of the distress. In many cases, Realtors say, investors also are outbidding first-time home buyers and other would-be occupants because they often come to the table with all-cash offerings.

“Foreclosures are low-hanging fruit at the moment,” says Laurence Pelosi, who helped close big land and housing-development deals for Morgan Stanley before he left the bank earlier this year and joined McKinley Partners, a small investment firm that is buying foreclosures in California.

McKinley and a partner are in contract to buy four homes in Pittsburg, a small city east of Oakland. The firm is buying one house, which was valued at $412,000 near the peak in 2005, for $84,000. McKinley plans to rent out the homes for as much as $1,200 a month. After paying to manage the property and other expenses, it expects 5% to 7% returns on its investment from the rental income and, hopefully, a big payoff from a resale when the market improves.”
“Foreclosures are low-hanging fruit at the moment,” says Laurence Pelosi, who helped close big land and housing-development deals for Morgan Stanley before he left the bank earlier this year and joined McKinley Partners, a small investment firm that is buying foreclosures in California.”

By the way, if you are in the market to buy foreclosed homes, please contact me at E-Mail John O’Dell or use the contact page. Thanks

Nevada County’s Median Home Prices, Better Then Southern California’s

Scotts Flat Lake, picture taken from my deck. May 24,2009
Scotts Flat Lake, picture taken from my deck. May 24,2009

 Compared to the six-county region of Southern California, we’re not doing too bad here in Nevada County. Our median price in April was $279,500, compared to Southern California’s $247,000. In addition, their market dropped from $250,000 in March and 35.8 percent from $385,000 a year ago.  

Southern California’s median last month was the lowest since 2002, and was 51.1 percent below the peak of $505,000, which was hit in spring and summer of 2007.

 “The dip in median prices ran counter to recent reported buying frenzies that have had economists, analysts and Realtors saying the market was recovering. What could be skewing the median down is the lack of high-end coastal sales, which means higher sale prices are missing from the data, DataQuick officials said.”

“Last month’s Southland sales were the highest for that month since April 2006, when 27,114 homes sold, but were 18.2 percent below the average April sales total since 1988, when DataQuick’s statistics begin. Foreclosure resales made up a lot of those sales. In April, they accounted for 53.6 percent of all Southland resale’s last month. It was the seventh consecutive month in which post-foreclosure properties made up more than half of all resales.”

“John Walsh, MDA DataQuick president offered a word of caution for the market. Foreclosures could keep coming. The effect of mounting job losses could trigger more defaults, and a new wave of foreclosures on ‘option ARM’ loans and ’stated income’ loans used in mid- to high-end markets could also come, Walsh said.”

“‘If job cuts remain deep and foreclosures spike, then the past few months might later be viewed as nothing more than a brief calm before the next foreclosure storm,’ Walsh said.”

However, I have noticed a large increase in sales in Nevada County in May and I will have a full report on May’s sales in the first week of June. Our median price in Nevada County has risen to $299,000 in May.

Banks Finally Try to Make Short Sales Shorter

short-sale-sign

There is sometimes nothing more frustrating than a short sale. Banks typically take 90 days to six months, accept other offers if they are a dollar higher in the meantime, therefore never knowing if the home your are trying to buy will become a reality. So the news is that Bank of America and Wells Fargo, say they are making it easier for delinquent borrowers to avoid foreclosure by selling their homes for less than they owe on them.

Their efforts dovetail with a strategy unveiled last week by the Obama administration to promote such short sales.

Demand for short sales has burgeoned because falling home prices have made it impossible for many homeowners to get high enough prices to repay their lenders if they run into financial trouble, such as a job loss.

A short sale has an advantage over foreclosure for the homeowner because it is less embarrassing and does less damage to his or her credit. And for the lender, it is less costly than having to repossess, market and maintain a vacant property. Avoiding a foreclosure means keeping a house occupied which helps preserve a neighborhood.

However, because of the complexity of such transactions — including the need for approval of a sales price by lenders, investors and mortgage insurers — the sales often fall apart. Real estate agents complain that by the time they get an answer from the bank on an offer, the potential buyer has lost interest.

At Bank of America, the nation’s largest mortgage servicer, more than 60 percent of approved short sales do not close, which is why the bank wants to streamline the process, said BofA Senior Vice President David Sunlin by telephone Thursday.

Sunlin, who manages short sales for the bank, said the “bank’s first goal still is to negotiate a mortgage modification that will let a borrower keep his home —during those negotiations the bank can simultaneously obtain the documentation needed to qualify the borrower for a short sale if the modification doesn’t work”

Banks typically do not begin the lengthy process of qualifying a borrower for a short sale until it has received a purchase offer.

To expedite short sales, Bank of America has enlarged and updated staff training and set up a phone line dedicated to short sales that borrowers and their agents can use.

 Sunlin said, ” in 60 to 90 days the bank will roll out a Web program it will use to find and track the short sales of houses with mortgages that it services.  The Web portal also will accept qualifying documentation from clients wishing to do short sales.”

It typically takes 45 to 60 days for the bank to tell a client if a short sale offer can be accepted and up to 90 days if an investor must approve , with the goal for the banks is to shorten this time line.

By doing this, we should see more private sales instead of more sales of bank-owned (houses),” 

Sunlin said short sales will also benefit from an amendment to President Barack Obama’s Making Home Affordable program announced last week that will standardize short sale application and acceptance forms. It also provides monetary incentives to servicers and helps cover relocation expense for homeowners.

David Knight, senior vice president at Wells Fargo Home Mortgage, said in an interview that his bank has been working many months to reduce delays in the short sale process. He said the bank is working closely with borrowers’ agents to increase the likelihood that the listing prices on a short sale will be accepted.

The lending and real estate industries have been on a crash course to learn about short sales since the housing market bust, Knight said. “The big challenge is none of us really understood the process,”

By the way, as of May 22, 2009, in Nevada County, there are 103 active short sales on the market and 55 short sales with contingencies, for a total of 158 short sales.

Doghouse Listings and Sleeping Dog

Hi, I'm Angel and this is me inspecting my dog house being built. It's 2100 square feet, 3 bedroom, 2 baths with a great outdoor bathroom
Hi, I'm Angel and this is me inspecting my dog house being built. It's 2100 square feet, 3 bedroom, 2 baths with a great outdoor bathroom

Hi, my name is Angel. I’m called an American Bull Terrier or more commonly known as a Pit Bull. I’ve been around John, the person who feeds me, takes me for walks and so on for all of my life. Going to the office with him every day, I’ve learned a lot about real estate and decided to branch out on my own. Every week, I’m going to have my own space and start listing dog houses.

I am fully licensed by the Nevada County Animal Control, so there are no worries about dealing with an unlicensed agent.

So what I would like for you to do, if you have a dog, is send me a picture of your doghouse and dog. I will list your doghouse on this website. That way, I can get a lot of great listings and start my own doggy real estate company. So starting today, please send me a picture of your doghouse along with how many square feet it is, the number of bedrooms, bathrooms, etc.

For example, you can say doghouse, 1 bedroom, outside bathroom, natural air conditioned, or 2 bedrooms, fifteen bathrooms, one owner.

(So please send us a picture of your dog, doghouse and we will put it on this site just for fun, not for sale, John)

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z2BgjH_CtIA

This is one of my friends having a bad dream.

Brain Interface to Twitter

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zU3ly2gGiTk

There is no sound, just watch the monitor screen, you can see the letters coming up, due to brain activity.

Wilson, a doctoral student in biomedical engineering, was confirming an announcement he had made two weeks earlier — his lab had developed a way to post messages on Twitter using electrical impulses generated by thought.

That’s right, no keyboards, just a red cap fitted with electrodes that monitor brain activity, hooked up to a computer flashing letters on a screen. Wilson sent the messages by concentrating on the letters he wanted to “type,” then focusing on the word “twit” at the bottom of the screen to post the message.

The development could be a lifeline for people with “locked-in syndrome” — whose brains function normally but who cannot speak or move because of injury or disease.

More on these developments at Department of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO, Gets to Knock Down His House

Steve Jobs Woodside Home to be Demolished. Photo by Jonathan Haeber
Steve Jobs Woodside Home to be Demolished. Photo by Jonathan Haeber

After years of legal battles, it looks like the Woodside Town Council agreed to allow Steve to demolish his home on Mountain House Road in Woodside.

The 1926 Spaish Revival estate of the top the hill was built by a copper magnate and now owned by Steve Jobs, is one step closer to demolition. After years of legal battles, the Woodside Town Council last week agreed that the 14 bedroom, 17,000 square foot home could be torn down. A demolition permit could be issued as soon as next month.

For more than a decade empty, the house that once hosted the likes of Shirley Temple, Charles Lindbergh and Richard Nixon is destroying itself.

Bougainvillea that once graced the front facade with bright pink flowers has grown thick and monstrous, wrapping its arms around the terrace. Tendrils creep up the balcony, grasp a vulnerable edge, and pry off chunks of white stucco that crash to the ground and lay still.

Ceilings have collapsed under puddles of rain water. Broken windows have lured in the mold. An owl took roost in the master bedroom. And lizards scamper everywhere.

“We call this demolition by neglect,” said Brian Turner, law fellow at the San Francisco office of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, who has been fighting to save the house.

Jobs bought the property off Mountain Home Road in 1984, the year he introduced the Apple Macintosh to the world. He lived there for nearly a decade before renting it out and moving to Palo Alto. Time magazine once photographed him sitting on the expansive, sloping lawn with the gleaming white fortress behind him.

Even Daniel Jackling, a copper baron, tore down a clapboard cottage to build the Woodside estate for his family. He hired renowned architect George Washington Smith, famous for his Spanish Colonial Revival homes in Santa Barbara and Montecito. Jackling’s wife, a San Francisco socialite, rode horses from the stables across what was then a 100-plus acre property. His niece played the organ — the biggest privately owned pipe organ in the country — in an ornate room built especially for it. Prominent musicians would make pilgrimages to play upon it. Charles Lindbergh was a guest.

Source Mercury News

For additional photos and history of the home go to The Jackling House Showdown by Jonathan Haeber

South Yuba River Independence Trail in Nevada County

independence-trail-bench-tr

One of the many nice trails located in Nevada County is the South Yuba River Independence Trail. I have walked this trail many times and it is truly a unique natural and historic jewel. The trail is fairly level, with wheelchair accessibility on both on the west and the east trail.

The main entrance to the Trail is on Highway 49, 5.5 miles from Nevada City, heading towards Downieville, near the South Yuba River bridge. Parking is available beside the road, with several marked disabled spaces. Highlighting the West Trail is a waterfall one mile from the entrance. People and wheelchairs travel a switchback ramp from Flume 28 (520 feet long) to the swirling waters of Rush Creek. Also featured on the west side is an overlook of the Yuba River, surrounded by canyon flora. The East Trail features cliff-hanging flumes, more views of the river and foothill landscapes, with a total of two and a half miles of maintained trail. There are picnic areas, outhouses, and scenic vistas all around. The Independence Trail is for all people, with its gradual, level walkway – from young mothers with stroller kids, to serious hikers and joggers, to seniors with limited mobility, to those in wheelchairs. Bathrooms are available along the way.

The origin of the Independence Trail was an old, abandoned miner’s ditch, previously known as the Excelsior Canal. It was built to carry water from the South Yuba river to hydraulic mining sites in Smartsville, 25 miles downstream. When California outlawed hydraulic mining in 1884, the ditch was used for irrigation until 1967, when it was abandoned. In 1975, a docent of the Oakland Museum, John Olmsted, re-discovered the whole water system consisting of the ditch, the berm, where the ditch-tender walked, and the wooden flumes which bridged the ravines. He had the vision to recognize that this could be the answer to a friend’s lifelong dream: “Please find me a level wilderness trail where I can reach out and touch the wildflowers from my wheel chair.”

Hiking distance: 2.5 miles downstream (west) or upstream (east) The west trail offers a 4.3 mile loop along a swimming trail to Jones Bar Road and then goes back to Excelsior Canal and back to the start.
To start Go 5.5 miles from Nevada City towards Downieville just short of the South Yuba River. There is parking along Hwy 49 including handicapped spaces.

Caution:
Winter and Spring weather conditions can cause the trail to become muddy and impassable for wheelchairs.

Call the South Yuba River State Park for trail condition information before you go.

More Information South Yuba Indendence Trail


View Larger Map

Nevada County Community Celebration of Trails to be Held June 6, 2009

Independence Trail off Hwy 49, Outside Nevada City, Towards Downieville
Independence Trail off Hwy 49, Outside Nevada City, Towards Downieville

By: YubaNet.com
And Nevada County Land Trust

Grass Valley, CA May 15, 2009 – On Saturday, June 6 community members will enjoy the second annual Nevada County Celebration of Trails. Events will include a series of hosted trail rides, walks, and other activities throughout the day, between 10:00 am and noon. At 12:30 pm, everyone is invited to a community event held in the parking area of Twin Cities Church in Grass Valley to share trails information and hear exciting announcements of new trails to be dedicated.

Nevada County Land Trust, along with our western Nevada County community partners will sponsor this event to observe National Trails Day. Partners include a number of organizations interested in building, promoting, and maintaining local trail systems including: the City of Nevada City, Gold Country Trails Council, Bicyclists of Nevada County, Friends of Deer Creek, County of Nevada Planning Department, Rattlesnake Neighborhood Association and Sierra Outdoors with John Skinner and Greg Archbald.

National Trails Day is a celebration of trails that evolved from the report of President Ronald Reagan’s President’s Commission on Americans Outdoors. In 1987, the report recommended that all Americans be able to go out their front doors and within fifteen minutes, be on trails that wind through their cities or towns and bring them back without retracing steps. The recommendation, dubbed Trails for All Americans, became the impetus behind several public and private parties joining American Hiking Society in launching National Trails Day in 1993.

Trails activities: 10 am to noon

The public can choose events that suit their interests. Most events are free of charge.

– City of Nevada City and Sierra Club
What: A family friendly hike that will include natural, Maidu, mining, logging and modern history
Where: Hirschman’s Pond Trail – Trailhead located at 115 Cement Hill Rd.
When: 11:00am to 11:30am
Bring: Bug repellent and water. Sorry no strollers

– Nevada County Land Trust and Bicyclists of Nevada County
What: Kenny Ranch Trails, walk, run, mountain bike ride.
Where: Twin Cities Church parking area
When: 10 a.m. to Noon
Bring: Good walking shoes, water and/or your bike

– Friends of Deer Creek and American Rivers
What: National Trails Day Work Day. Volunteer to help work on a local trail.
Where: Champion Mine Rd at Old Downieville Hwy split – take Champion Mine Rd for a couple hundred yards and park in the pull-outs on the right – Trailhead is on the left.
When: 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
Bring: Work clothes and water

– Gold Country Trails Council
What: Poker Ride at Skillman Horse Camp
Where: Tahoe National Forest
When: Sign up begins at 8:30 a.m. Ride out at 10 a.m.
For entry forms visit GCTC online at www.goldcountrytrailscouncil.org or contact Mary Johnson at 530.477.8501.

Celebration of Trails Event: 12:30 pm to 1:30 pm
Join us to celebrate and learn more about trails, hiking activities and outdoor recreation in our community.

– Trails Celebration hosted by Nevada County Land Trust
What: Trails celebration, award ceremony and gathering of outdoor organizations and enthusiasts.
Where: Twin Cities Church parking area, 11726 Rough and Ready Highway, Grass Valley
When: 12:30 to 1:30 p.m.

A full detail of events and activities can be found at Nevada County Land Trust-Trails Event