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FireSafe Council of Nevada County Offers Free Defensible Space Training Session

Photo credit: http://www.ed.ac.uk/home
Photo credit: http://www.ed.ac.uk/home

Learn how to comply with defensible space laws in California and ensure properties will be insurable in the wild land Urban Interface (most of Nevada County.)

Friday, November 15 & 16, 2012 10am-3:00pm

What is the law regarding defensible space?

California Public Resources Code 4291 requires every landowner to “maintain around and adjacent to the building or structure a firebreak made by removing and clearing away, for a distance of not less than 100’ on each side of the building or structure or to the property line, whichever is nearer, all flammable vegetation or other combustible growth”.  In addition, this code allows insurance companies to require landowners to maintain the firebreaks.

What may landowners do to protect their homes from wildfire?

  • Building Materials
  • How To Manage The Vegetation On Your Property
  • Plant Species Considered “High Fire Risk”
  • Firewise Landscaping Techniques
  • Proper Clearance From Structures
  • Proper Signage For Your Property

Thursday & Friday, November 15 & 16, 2012 10am-3:00pm

How does Defensible Space affect the ability to obtain Homeowner’s Insurance?

Most of Nevada County is in a wild land urban interface area which has the potential for catastrophic wildfire.  Learn more about:

  • Defensible Space & Your Homeowner’s Insurance Policy
  • Hazard Trees
  • Access
  • Fire Department Response and Hydrants

Valuable Information for Assistance!

  • Local Contractors
  • Fire Safe Chipping Program
  • Assistance for Low Income Seniors/Disabled
  • Firewise Communities USA®

 

Space is limited. Register today!

FIRE  SAFE  COUNCIL  OF  NEVADA  COUNTY

(530) 272-1122

info@areyoufiresafe.com

 

For all your real estate needs
Email or call today:

John J. O’Dell Realtor® GRI
Civil Engineer
General Contractor
(530) 263-1091
Email jodell@nevadacounty.com

DRE#00669941

 

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Nevada County Fairgrounds – Contests, Costumes, and a Cupcake Walk

The Nevada County Fairgrounds Foundation is hosting a costume contest at its Halloween event on Saturday, October 27, from 1 – 4 pm at the Nevada County Fairgrounds. The costume parade and contest will take place at 2 pm at the Main Exhibit Building, with prizes awarded following the contest.

There will also be games and treats for kids, face painting, and even a cupcake walk! Hot dogs and all the fixins’ will be served and DJs Bobby ‘G’ and Tonni ‘T’ will provide family-friendly music for all to enjoy. The Nevada County Narrow Gauge Model Railroad will be open for tours, and, weather permitting, Empire Carriage Company will provide carriage rides around the Fairgrounds.

Additionally, the Rotary Club of Grass Valley will host its annual “Ball Drop,” with a chance to win $1,000, at 3:30 at the Fairgrounds.  Tickets will be available at the event. The local Grass Valley Fire Department ladder truck that will do the golf ball drop will be on the grounds at 1:30 and will provide treats and welcome children to tour the fire truck.

It’s all happening, rain or shine, on Saturday, October 27 from 1 – 4 pm at the Nevada County Fairgrounds. The cost is only $5 per person and includes food, treats, games and entertainment!  Tickets can be purchased on the day of the event at the Fairgrounds.

The Halloween Fun at the Fairgrounds event is sponsored by Cirino’s at Main Street/Cirino’s Bar and Grill.  Click here  for information or call
(530) 273-6217.

 

For all your real estate needs
Email or call today:

John J. O’Dell Realtor® GRI
Civil Engineer
General Contractor
(530) 263-1091
Email jodell@nevadacounty.com

DRE#00669941

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Rodeo & Bull Riding Light up the Arena at the Nevada County Fair

Bull riding Nevada County Fair  Photo credit: Nevada County Fair
Tickets are on sale now for the Donny Martin Memorial Bull Riding event and the Professional Rodeo, both taking place at next week’s Nevada County Fair. Photo credit: Nevada County Fair.

By Wendy Oaks

Action-packed, family-oriented events happening on Thursday and Friday at the Fair

Next week’s Nevada County Fair, August 8 – 12, will feature a rodeo on Thursday evening and the Donny Martin Memorial Bull Riding on Friday evening – both in the arena at the Nevada County Fairgrounds.

On Thursday, August 9, watch as contestants from California, Oregon and Nevada – as well as some of the finest bucking stock around – provide a family-oriented traditional rodeo for Fair-goers of all ages to enjoy. Watch as cowboys and cowgirls complete in traditional bareback riding, saddle bronc riding, steer wrestling, team roping, bull riding, and barrel racing. In between competitions, there will be specialty acts, including Brian Potter, a rodeo clown visiting from Alabama.  Chad Nicholson will serve as Master of Ceremonies. Don’t forget to check out Mutton Bustin’ and Calf Scramble – two crowd favorites – also happening at the Rodeo.

On Friday, August 10, don’t miss the Donny Martin Memorial Bull Riding – where riders attempt to stay on a bull for at least eight seconds while the animal tries to buck off the rider! Thirty bull riders from across the western United States will compete in this fast-paced, action-packed event. This event honors Donny Martin, a local bull fighter who was killed four years ago at the California State High School Finals.

Tickets to the Rodeo and Bull Riding are on sale now. If purchased before August 7, the cost is $10 for adults and $6 for children under 12. If purchased during the Fair, cost is $12 for adults and $8  for kids under 12.  Ticket price does not include admission to the Fair. For both events, gates open at 6 pm and the excitements begins at 7 pm.

These events are presented by The Nevada County Pro Rodeo Association, created this year and comprised of individuals who believe in the Nevada County Fair’s deep agricultural heritage and community roots.

Additional arena events take place on Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday evenings at the Fair. There’s Battle of the Bands on Wednesday, Tough Truck Racing and Monster Trucks on Saturday, and a Demolition Derby on Sunday. Tickets to all arena events are on sale now.

Tickets to all arena events are available at  NevadaCountyFair.com , by calling the Fair Office at (530) 273-6217 (by August 6 at 5 pm), or stopping by the Fair Office.

The Nevada County Fairgrounds is located at 11228 McCourtney Road in Grass Valley, 50 miles northeast of Sacramento, off Highway 49. For a complete schedule of events, visit  NevadaCountyFair.com, or call (530) 273-6217.
Wendy Oaks
Publicist, Nevada County Fairgrounds
(530) 273-6217
wsoaks@gmail.com
Website: www.NevadaCountyFair.com
Facebook: Nevada County Fairgrounds

Nevada County Fair August 8 – 12, 2012
Draft Horse Classic September 20 – 23, 2012
Halloween at the Fairgrounds October 27, 2012
Country Christmas Faire November 23 – 25, 2012
For all your real estate needs
Email or call today:

John J. O’Dell Realtor® GRI
Civil Engineer
General Contractor
(530) 263-1091
Email jodell@nevadacounty.com

DRE#00669941

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Lack of Inventory Causing a Home Buying Frenzy

A big drop in inventories of for-sale homes across the nation has led to a buying frenzy in some sought-after neighborhoods, real estate professionals report. A gradual gain in home prices is also following suit, they say.

Last week, the National Association of REALTORS® reported an increase in pending home sales in every region in the country. The number of contracts signed in May for existing homes jumped 13 percent from a year ago, according to NAR.

NAR projects a 3 percent nationwide rise in existing-home prices this year and a 5.7 percent rise next year.

But more buyers are being met with a shrinking supply of homes on the market. New construction has slowed dramatically—to record lows—the last few years. A backlog of distressed homes have not yet hit the market. And many home owners are waiting to list their homes for sale until prices rise more.

“In the Atlanta area, we are 40 percent below where inventory was this time last year,” Debra Bradley, managing broker for Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage in Buckhead, Ga., told Forbes.com “Generally inventory goes up this time of year, not down.”

Inventories of for-sale homes appear to be lowest for less expensive properties, at which investors and first-time home buyers often buy, real estate professionals report.

“It’s different today for a buyer being in the market,” says Rick Davidson, Century 21 Real Estate chief executive. “They might not find that deal of the century that they may have expected to find.”

Several housing markets are now reporting multiple offers and bidding wars surfacing, due to the lack of inventory in some markets.

“Most houses below $250,000 priced realistically are attracting large numbers of offers in a short time, and many exceed the asking price,” says Mike Orr, director of the Center for Real Estate Theory and Practice at the W. P. Carey School of Business.

Industry insiders appear less concerned about the shadow inventory of distressed homes that have yet to hit the market.

“It’s not being let out to the market in bulk,” Beth Butler, president of ONE Sotheby’s International Realty in Miami, told Forbes.com. “It’s coming slowly and it’s not seriously impacting the market one way or the other. Truth be told we could use the inventory!”

Source: “The Housing Market’s Latest Problem: Lack Of Inventory,” Forbes.com (June 28, 2012

 

For all your real estate needs
Email or call today:

John J. O’Dell Realtor® GRI
Civil Engineer
General Contractor
(530) 263-1091
Email jodell@nevadacounty.com

DRE#00669941

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Kickstarter Campaign: The Art Docent Program Goes Digital

Kickstarter Project: The Art Docent Program Goes Digital!

The Art Docent Program has a great history with Nevada County Schools… Since the program was founded twenty-five years ago, eighteen of our schools have adopted the program. Thousands of Nevada County kids have enjoyed it, and refrigerators of proud parents throughout the county have been decorated with their brilliant art.

Today, The Art Docent Program™ of Gold River, CA is launching a campaign on Kickstarter.com, the revolutionary website for funding art, music, film and tech projects. The project is called “The Art Docent Program Goes Digital!”

View the Project on Kickstarter.com

The Art Docent Program provides a sequential, interactive education in art history and artistic skills for K-6 grade children, which can be taught by volunteers called “docents”, and are led by coordinator; the “head docent”. The program is available for schools, after-school and summer programs, or any occasion where creative kids can make art.

Once the children see great works by famous artists on subjects such as “Mothers & Children”, “Pets”, or “Musicians” in various styles and periods, they can try their own hand, with age-appropriate materials and guidance.

View the Art Docent Program website at ArtDocentProgram.com

Initially developed in 1984 by art educator and author Barbara Herberholz, the Art Docent Program has been periodically updated. It has a proven track record of over 25 years in hundreds of schools using binders of training materials, and posters of famous works of art.

But the art posters were large, came in over 50 portfolio cases, cost a small fortune, and over years they took a beating in the classroom. When Barbara’s daughters, Amy Scherschligt and Heidi Grasty took over managing the program, they began modernizing it. For the last year, a beta-version of the digital program has been enthusiastically adopted by thirteen schools in California, Utah and Washington.

Read more at ArtDocentProgram.com

The digital delivery system allows any classroom with a projector and Internet access to display the artwork, and for Head Docents and Docents to access their own training materials online with any web browser. The program has been tested in 13 schools this year with four lessons per grade level.

The Kickstarter project will pay to complete the project, adding more lessons to create a full school year of lessons for all seven grade levels. In addition, more supporting materials, and improvements to the platform will be implemented so the system can handle more users. Completion of the project is scheduled for August, in time for the new school year.

Kickstarter.com includes a “Rewards” system for project backers. For ”The Art Docent Program Goes Digital!” project, the rewards include credit toward paying for the system in a school of the donor’s choice. Donations can be as little as $1, but the most common donation is $25 and the average donation over all Kickstarter projects is $70. The price for a school to use The Art Docent Program is $699 for the first year. A determined group of parents and teachers could fund The Art Docent Program in a school with only a few donors.

More about Kickstarter.com.

“We’re hoping not only to raise our minimum of $60,000, but to reach more children through the publicity Kickstarter can bring” said Amy Scherschligt, “Each school can mean thousands of children learning about, and creating art. So this may just be the biggest art project ever on Kickstarter. We think the existing fans of Kickstarter will appreciate that. But we think the biggest supporters will be parents who want The Art Docent Program for their own kids!”

“With all the teaching to the test and budget cuts we’ve seen in recent years, it’s great that some schools are tapping volunteers to continue to provide art education.” Adds Heidi Grasty. “Kids really do better in all subjects when their minds are stimulated with fun and engaging creative activities. We talk to adults who had this program as children, and its among the things they remember most about grade school. We really need to reach more children!”

Here’s what some of the people who have brought The Art Docent Program into their schools have said:

“The Art Docent Program has been in the San Juan Unified School District for over 25 years and has educated thousands of students from K-6 in art history” -Heather Taft, Art Docent Program Coordinator for San Juan Unified School District and Art Docent since 1988.

“With the new digital program, we look forward to greater opportunities to utilize the Art Docent Program in a new variety of instructional settings. The power of technology will enhance and further “bring to life” the beauty and treasure of art for students. It is with enthusiasm that I recommend this fine program to schools and districts, and look forward to its implementation throughout the Rocklin Unified School K-6 classes.” – Linda Rooney, Deputy Superintendent for Rocklin Unified School District: Rocklin, California

“The Art Docent Program replaces what has been missing in California Schools: Art. We have brought it back through this program.” – Rebecca Jeffries, Art Docent Program Coordinator The Roseville City School District

For More information:

Email: Learning@ArtDocentProgram.com
Phone: (916) 486-4633

Media inquiries about Kickstarter.com can be directed to Kickstarter staff at this email address: press@kickstarter.com …or by exploring their awesome website at http://kickstarter.com

Landscaping With Firewise Plants in Western Nevada County

Gaillardia 'Goblin' offers multicolored blooms for the fire safe border
Gaillardia 'Goblin' offers multicolored blooms for the fire safe border

Fire is a Fact of Life in the Sierra Nevada Foothills

California is home to some of the most scenic vistas in the world. The natural beauty and mild, Mediterranean climate [Sunset Magazine Zone 7, USDA Zone 8] have attracted millions to settle in the foothills.  Living in Nevada County means learning to live with fire. That’s because our scenic vistas are fire-dependent. Fire cracks seed casings, allowing our native plants to thrive. And it clears out dead brush that can choke living plants and cut off food for wildlife.

Work with nature and choose plants that are climate and soil adapted.  Incorporating fire safe concepts into the residential landscape is one of the most important ways you can help your home survive a wildfire.  Creating an area of defensible space does not mean you need a ring of bare dirt around your home.  Through proper planning, you can have both a beautiful landscape and a fire safe home.

Vegetation Arrangement

The general concept is that trees should be kept furthest from your home, shrubs and trees may be closer and bedding plants and lawns may be nearest to the structure.  From a wildfire fuel perspective, vegetation is often described in terms of its vertical and horizontal arrangement.  The vertical fuel continuity is also referred to as “ladder fuels.”  Laddering arrangements of fuels enables fire to climb neighboring vegetation like a ladder.  Reduce the chance of fire climbing into trees by removing the lower tree limbs from 6-10 feet from the ground (or the lower third of branches on smaller trees.)

Fire spreads on the ground from plant to plant and then onto your home.  To reduce the chance of fire spreading horizontally, space or group plants in clumps for visual screening while providing enough space between plants to reduce the fire spreading.  Individual spacing needs depends on the height and width of the plant, but generally a three times height for vertical separation is a good rule of thumb.

Vegetation Zones

The home defense zone is within 30 feet of the house.  The reduced fuel zone lies beyond the home defense zone and extends out to 100 feet from the house or the property boundary.  Greater defense zone widths are necessary when your home is sited on a steep slope or in a windswept exposure. The most intensive vegetation management lies within the home defense zone.  Objectives for the home defense zone include:

 

  • Remove any combustible materials (such as needles, leaves, dead twigs, firewood, dry grasses, recycling, and building materials) from within 30 feet of the home, garage, outbuildings, and propane tanks.
  • Reduce the ladder effect between plants.
  • Replace any flammable plant species (such as juniper, cypress, or broom varieties) with fire wise plant selections.
  • Maintain high moisture content in the vegetation

Where to Plant

Avoid putting plants in the following locations to minimize the movement of fire from the vegetation to the home: immediately adjacent to the siding; underneath vents or eaves; tree limbs over the roof; and underneath or near the deck.

Mulching

Mulch conserves moisture, but also burns.  Carefully choose the location of plants or garden beds that will need mulch.  Mulches greater than 2 inches deep tend to smolder and are difficult to extinguish.  Do not use wood or bark mulches within 3-5 feet of the house.  Instead consider colored rock, pea gravel or other less flammable materials.  Having a “hardscape” immediately adjacent to your home will help harden the structure from flying ember intrusion.

Maintenance

Maintenance is critical to fire safety.  Over time, plants grow both vertically and horizontally, mulches dry out, leaves and needles accumulate within and around landscape vegetation.  All of these fuels may help feed a fire.  Remember to conduct annual cleanup of your established vegetation to ensure a fire safe condition during wildfire season.

Remember that no plant is completely resistant to fire.  Plants with low fuel content can be the difference between safety and destruction.  You will find that a fire safe landscape can increase your property value, provide wildlife habitat and conserve water while beautifying your home.

Download your Copy of the Firewise Plants for Western Nevada County Plant Guide complied by: Lynn Lorenson, Landscape Consultant & Master Gardner; Karen Callahan, CA Native Plant Society; and the Fire Safe Council of Nevada County.

Visit the Fire Safe Council of Nevada County’s Firewise Landscaping webpage for additional information.

For all your real estate needs:
Call or email today
John J. O’Dell Realtor® GRI
Real Estate Broker
Civil Engineer
General Contractor
(530) 263-1091
Email jodell@nevadacounty.com

DRE #00669941

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Nevada County Weather – Dry Start For 2011 – 2012

Nevada Irrigation District Water Source Map
Nevada Irrigation District Water Source Map


I believe we are all wondering what’s happened to the rain and snow this year.  It’s certainly the driest season I can remember so far.  The Nevada Irrigation District’s newsletter has some interesting facts as to what’s happening to our weather this winter season.

Here’s what they have to say:

Precipitation Season

The 2011/12 rainfall season is off to a very slow start. By Dec. 31, precipitation at NID’s Bowman Reservoir (elev. 5600 ft.) had reached only 12.55 inches, or 50 percent of average for the date (seasonal precipitation is measured July 1-June 30).

From Very Wet to Very Dry

A year ago at this time, rain and snow poured down on the area; by late December 2010, precipitation at Bowman had reached 60.3 inches. By the time the 2010/11 rainfall season ended June 30 it had become the fifth wettest year on record, producing 124.15 inches of precipitation, or 179 percent of average.

This December produced just 0.32 inches of precipitation, the third driest December in 126 years of record-keeping at Bowman. Even with the dry conditions, NID water storage remains strong. As of Dec. 31, district storage was measured at 177,100 acre-feet of water, which is 114 percent of average for this time of year.

Meanwhile, the National Weather Service Climate Prediction Center’s Dec. 15 outlook called for near-normal precipitation and below-normal temperatures in our region through the first quarter of 2012.

Source: Nevada Irrigation District

Thinking of buying or selling?
For all your real estate needs
Email or call:

John J. O’Dell Realtor® GRI
Civil Engineer
General Contractor
(530) 263-1091
Email jodell@nevadacounty.com

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Scotts Flat Lake Levels 2011


Click on image to enlarge

 

I’ve watch Scott’s Flat Lake go to being full to the brim to where it’s at now for the winter. The above chart from Nevada Irrigation District shows the water levels during the summer season

 

scotts-flat-lake-dam

Image 1 of 4

Looking at the dam at Scotts Flat Lake

Click on pictures to enlarge, escape to close.

 

Thinking of buying or selling?
For all your real estate needs
Email or call:

John J. O’Dell Realtor® GRI
(530) 263-1091
Email jodell@nevadacounty.com

Trashed House on Market for $1,142,000, Attracts Lots of Offers

Photo courtesy of The Orange County Register
Photo courtesy of The Orange County Register

A once luxury home in Huntington Beach, Calif., is moldy, cement was poured down the drains, and a Jacuzzi tub was left running water for months. But after being listed on the market for less than two weeks for $1,142,000, it has already received five offers. What’s more, two of the offers were “well over” the list price, the real estate agent Tom Moon told The Orange County Register.

Moon says the 3,321-square-foot house was the worst example of “malicious vandalism” of foreclosed homes he had ever seen. Chemicals and cement had been poured down the drains and a floor in the home actually caved in from the weight of a pile of wet clothes and trash. Appliances, sinks, toilets, cabinets, countertops, and flooring were taken from the home too.

Photo courtesy of the Orange County Register
Photo courtesy of the Orange County Register

“This home needs drywall completion and installation of all interior decor,” Moon says. Mold remediation and new pipes have been completed since the home went on the market.

The home went to a foreclosure auction last August but failed to attract any bids.

This time around the home, which is on a cul-de-sac along a golf course in a guard gated community, has attracted plenty of buyer interest. However, getting to the closing table may still be a challenge. The winning bid of the five bids received on the home was the highest all-cash offer with a 2-week escrow period. Yet, shortly after completing inspections, the buyers initially walked. But the deal may be back on, according to the latest reports from the Orange County Register

Source Orange County Register

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