Welcome To Pocono Mountain Real Estate

Real estate is one of the most exciting investments one can make. I would love to help you with informative articles and information on our local area - the Lake Region of the Pocono Mountains - encompassing Lake Wallenpaupack, The Hideout, Lake Ariel, Wallenpaupack Lake Estates and other communities.

Please contact me today so that together we can begin this exciting journey!

http://www.roseknows.net/ - rose.sawyer@century21.com - 888-332-2121


Friday, November 11, 2011

Getting Your Garden Ready for Winter


 As a homeowner in The Poconos, I know that the beauty and relaxation that your garden can provide you and your family is certainly worth all the work you put in each year.  Putting in a little extra work at the end of the season, however, can make getting your garden ready next spring easier and can help keep your plants healthy through the winter months.  Here are a few great tips that will get your garden ready to handle the cold and snow.

Clean Up: Though not a favorite task of any gardener, it is a very necessary step to getting your garden ready for winter.  Remove your annuals, empty and store any pots and containers, and give your garden one last mow.  Also, raking up all those leaves is one chore all homeowners are familiar with each autumn, but they do make great mulch for your perennials and vegetable garden, and are also a great addition to your compost.

Plant Or Relocate Trees And Shrubs: The fall is the best time to get new trees into the ground, or move those you have earmarked to be relocated.  The best strategy is to choose trees that are hardy for your zone, as it makes their survival more likely and maintenance easier.  Also, choosing evergreens and shrubs that produce berries in the winter months can make your garden more interesting and provide activity for birds and other wildlife.

Protect Your Trees: For new or young trees this is an important step you'll not want to forget in winterizing your garden.  Covering trees and shrubs with burlap is most important in areas that have exposure to northwest winds and high sun.  Be sure, however, not to do this too early in the season, in order to prevent rot.  It is also a good idea to give your evergreens plenty of water to prevent burnout.

Mulch: After the ground freezes be sure to add mulch to your perennial garden.  This will protect both your soil and plants through the long winter months, as well as provide much needed nutrients for spring. 

Plant Spring Bulbs: This is also the time of year to get your spring bulbs into the ground. Be sure that you do this before the first frost, and give them plenty of water when planting them.

Unlike all the work you put into your garden in spring, winter clean-up can seem like a difficult and unrewarding task, but with this effort you will keep your garden in tip-top shape for the growing season ahead!

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Five Biggest Seller Turn-Offs

I came across this great article on Trulia and wanted to share it with you. It contains great advice for both buyers and sellers.


"In today’s' market every savvy seller wants to know what turns buyers off, so they can get their homes sold as quickly as possible, for as much as possible. But buyers, take note - there is a minefield of seller turn-offs you can trigger that hold the potential to keep you from getting the home you want at the best price and terms, or to unnecessarily complicate dealings with your home's seller.

Lest you think all of today's sellers are under the gun and will just put up with whatever behavior buyers dish out, be aware that there are still many multiple offer situations in which buyers have to compete with each other to get a home - buyers who trigger these turnoffs tend to lose in those scenarios. Also, avoiding these seller turn-offs can create a transactional environment of cooperation and avoid things turning adversarial. That, in turn, can empower you to score a better price, get extra items you want thrown into the deal, and even negotiate more flexibility around your escrow and move-in timelines - all perks that can make your life easier and your budget go further.

For sellers, these turn-offs pose the potential of irritating you out of an otherwise good deal - maybe even the only deal you have!

Here's a few of the most common buyer perpetuated seller turnoffs, with tips for sellers on how to keep an emotional (and economic) even keel, even if your home's buyer makes some of these waves:

1. Trash-talking. Trash-talkers are the home buyers who think they're going to negotiate the list price down by slamming the house, telling the sellers how little it is really worth, how the house across the street sold for nothing, why the school on the corner should make them desperate to give the place away, etc. This strategy never works; in fact, when you attack a seller and their home, you only cause them to be defensive, and think up all the reasons that (a) their home is not what you say it is, and (b0 they shouldn't sell their home to you!

Sometimes this happens with buyers who actually love a house and just walk around it fantasizing about all the ways they would customize it to their tasters while a seller is there. Sellers: avoid being at home while your home is being shown. Buyers: Save your commentary for your agent; if you do encounter the seller in person keep your conversation respectful and avoid the critiquing the house or the list price.

2. Being unqualified for mortgage financing. When a seller signs a buyer’s offer, most often the seller agrees to effectively pull the home off the market, forgoing other buyers who might be interested. As such, the only thing worse than getting no offers on your home is getting an offer, getting into contract, then having the whole thing fall apart when the buyer’s loan falls through – especially if that could have been predicted up front.

Sellers: Work with your agent to vet your home’s buyer’s qualifications, including their loan approval, down payment and earnest money deposit – before you sign a contract. It’s not overkill for your agent to call the buyer’s mortgage pro before you sign the contract and get a level of comfort for how robust their qualifications are. Buyers: Get pre-approved. Seriously. And make sure that you don’t buy a car, quit your job, deposit lottery winnings or do any other financial twitchery between the time you get loan approval and the time you close escrow on your home.

3. Making unjustified lowball offers. No one likes to feel like they are being taken advantage of. And sellers generally know the ballpark amount that their home is worth, as well as what they need to sell if for to get their mortgage paid off. Yes – the price you pay for a home should be driven by its fair market value, rather than the seller’s financial needs, and deals are more available in a market like the current one, in which supply so vastly outpaces demand. But just throwing uber-lowball offers out at sellers hoping one will hit the spot is not generally a successful strategy, especially if you really, really want a given property.

Sellers: Don’t get overly emotional about receiving a lowball offer; counter at the price you and your agent decide makes senses based on the total circumstances, including your motivation level, recent comps and the interest/activity level your listing is receiving. Buyers: Work through the similar nearby homes that have recently sold before you make an offer to factor the home’s fair market value into your offer price – also factor in how much you want the place, too. Don’t be amazed if you make an offer below asking, and don’t get a response.

4. Renegotiating mid-stream. Sellers plan their finances, moves and – to some extent – their lives around the purchase price a buyer agrees to pay for their home. If you get into contract to buy a home, find out during inspections that costly repairs need to be made, and then propose a lower sale price, repair credit or even actual repairs to the seller, that’s sensible and fair. But if you were aware that the property needed a lot of work before you made an offer on it, then you come back asking for beaucoup bucks’ worth of credit or price reductions midstream, expect the seller to cry foul. And holding the seller up two weeks into the transaction because you caught a case of buyer’s remorse? Not cool, and not likely to foster the spirit of cooperation you may need to get your deal closed.

Sellers: Avoid mid-stream price renegotiations by having a full set of inspection reports and repair bids at hand when you list your home. Buyers: Try to avoid renegotiating the entire deal unless you get some major surprises at your inspections or inflating small repairs to justify a major price cut.

5. Misleading or setting the seller up. Buyers, remember when you were turned off by being misled by listing photos or very fluffy property descriptions. The same goes for sellers. Offering way over asking with the plan to hammer the seller for a reduction when the house doesn’t appraise at the purchase price? Lame. Making as-is offer planning the whole time to come back and ask for every penny ante repair called out by the inspectors? Lame squared.

Sellers: If you get multiple offers and are tempted to take a sky-high one or one that claims to be all in cash, consider requesting proof that the buyer has sufficient funds to make up the difference between what you think the home will appraise for and the actual sale price, and statements showing the cash truly exists. Buyers: Don’t be lame. I’m not saying you have to tell the seller exactly what your top dollar is, but making offers with terms designed to intentionally mislead is really, really bad form – and can result in losing the home entirely if and when your bluff gets called.”

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Do Buyers Look At Homes When It Is Zero Outside?

I've had a great week! I showed homes on Monday when it was 13 degrees outside, took a break on Tuesday because of road conditions due to freezing rain, snow and sleet, then was out with the same couple on Wednesday when we had a little warm spell - 23 degrees. Today I was out with a different couple; it was 8 degrees outside. We are going out to look at more homes tomorrow when it is supposed to be zero with way below zero windchill factor.
A lesson to be learned here, my friends. Serious buyers are out looking at homes NOW. Both couples missed seeing some great homes because the driveways weren't plowed, or the driveway was plowed but the walkway wasn't shoveled and the buyers did not want to trudge through snow and ice. Other homes had very brief showings because the home was unheated and the buyers were freezing and wanted to get back to the warmth of the car.
If you are serious about selling your home, you must plow your drive, shovel your walkway, clean off the deck and any steps leading into your home and keep some heat on. The thermostat doesn't have to be set high; most of the vacant heated homes we visited had the heat set at 50 - and it felt warm inside. One home we visited this week was done halfway - it was plowed and shoveled, but the deck wasn't cleared off and I couldn't open the storm door because of the snow and ice build up (despite how much I kicked at it - the snow and ice, not the door!) The buyers didn't get to see that house either.

So let's plow through this winter and get your house sold!

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Is Your Home Priced to Sell?

Pricing your home is both an art and a science. Achieving the optimal price is the result both of objective research into comparable properties and a gut feeling about your property and the current market. The right price should attract buyers, allow you to earn the most money possible and help you sell as quickly as possible.


The simple fact is, price is the number one factor that helps homebuyers determine which homes they want to view. And it's important to remember that, although the price is set by you, the value of your home is determined by the buyer. Try to avoid allowing your enthusiasm to impact your better judgement - overpricing is a common mistake that can cost you in the end.

With that in mind, here are some reliable guides to use when pricing your home, all of which come recommended by the Council of Residential Specialists - a select group of REALTORS with significant experience and advanced training in residential sales.

Factors that affect your asking price:

•How quickly you need to sell

•The amount of competition in your price category and area

•The availability, flexibility and affordability of financing

•The sale prices of similar homes sold in your area during the past six months.

Factors that should NOT affect your asking price:

•The original cost of the property; price is determined by today's market

•Any investments you've made in improvements

•The cost to build your home today

•Emotional attachment

•The opinions of friends and neighbors

Problems that can arise from overpricing:

•You might help sell similar homes that are priced lower

•Your home may stay on the market longer

•You could lose market interest and qualified buyers

•You might create a negative impression of the property

•You could lose money by making extra mortgage payments while incurring taxes, insurance and unplanned maintenance costs

•You may have to accept less money

•A ptotential buyer may face appraisal and financing problems as a result of the inflated price

A Certified Residential Specialist like myself can help you price right. With a mix of real world experience and advanced training, a Certified Residential Specialist has the tools necessary to compute the fair market value of your home based on both the marketplace and personal considerations such as your must-sell date. Remember, the right price is the key to a successful sale so price your home accurately the first time.