MarysvilleStanwood November 23, 2014

Things to Love About Marysville #2

 


 

. . . The Lights of Christmas

 


 

What else do I love about Marysville? We're only 25 minutes from Warm Beach! Which means that starting next week, we can all head out to see The Lights of Christmas! If you haven't yet made this a part of your holiday celebration, give it a try this year. What's not to love about one MILLION lights? According to their website,

"There are approximately enough light strands (at least 18,000) to stretch from Stanwood to Qwest Field stadium in Seattle."

Not only are there lights galore (and in some amazingly creative displays), but there's also a dinner theater, pony rides, a petting zoo, bags of warm donuts, espresso, musical entertainment, and a train ride. 

Feel like checking it out this year? Here's a great deal on tickets.

 

Luxury Homes November 22, 2014

The Most Expensive Home in America

Marysville November 12, 2014

Things to Love About Marysville #1

 

 


 

. . . We're a little bit city, a little bit country

 


 

One of the things I love the most about where I live is that it's such an eclectic mix of rural and urban. We have a nice outlet mall on the west side of the freeway (right near the Tulalip Casino) and more Starbucks than any town could ever need, but I also sometimes have to stop at the four-way intersection at the bottom of Lauck Road while a farmer moseys through on his tractor. My absolute favorite store in Marysville is the Farm Co-op, where you can pick up bunny food or a new horse saddle or just a free bag of popcorn. In April, they host "Chick Days," where several long galvanized steel bins hold brand-new baby chicks warming themselves under heat lamps. I don't know another town with such opposing (and charming) identies.

There's nothing urban about my neighborhood, though. Eleven of us live along this potholed gravel road, and my husband and I are the very last. By the time you get all the way back to my house, you've already experienced three minutes of "Did I miss a turn somewhere?" anxiety. But the plus side of that is the utter peace and quiet that surrounds our home. Except for the occasional noises that drift up our pasture from bikers, joggers and horses on the Centennial Trail below, the only other sounds are critter sounds: owls, eagles, squirrels, coyotes and our own two dogs.

And what I especially love about my little neighborhood is this: where else could I live where an escaped goat blocks my departure one day, and a doe and fawn the next?

Uncategorized November 11, 2014

Gifts for Veterans

To all you veterans out there (and especially to my Uncle Doug, Uncle Jim and my sweet father-in-law, Joel) … thank you for everything you left behind and missed out on in the name of serving and protecting our country. Not one of you has been thanked enough; not one of you has received the honor you deserve. But today we want to say once more, "Thank you."

A lot of businesses want to say thank you today, too. Here's a list of freebies for our vets: (Remember to bring your proof of service in case you're asked):

Starbucks: free coffee

IHOP: free breakfast

Denny's (till noon): free grand slam

Red Robin: free Red's Tavern Double Burger and Bottomless Fries

Golden Corrall: free buffet and drink from 5 to 9

Outback: free bloomin' onion and beverage

Great Clips: free haircut

Brown Bear: free carwash 

Enjoy!

 

SellersTips and Reminders November 1, 2014

Staging Your Home For a Fall Sale

I have a dear friend in Nevada who keeps almost two dozen giant bins full of fall decorations in her garage. There’s actually an entire wall of floor-to-ceiling shelves dedicated to all-things-autumn.

We made a trip to see her one fall and I remember how overwhelmed I was by her delightful decorations. She has a real knack for figurine-placement (would that be a knickknack knack?) and I couldn’t deny the finesse with which she had placed all those hundreds of items. I could barely take my eyes off the plethora of carefully posed scarecrows, and the clusters of pumpkins and gourds on every surface in the room, and little hay bales and “I Love Fall” placards and maple leaf garlands and every other red and brown and gold and orange thing you could imagine.

While standing there trying to absorb it all, my friend said, “Hey! You haven’t said a word about my new mantel!”

New mantel? I never noticed.

And therein lies the problem with seasonal decorations, especially when they’re adorning the house you’re hoping to sell. We’ve all heard, “Less is more,” and that’s never truer than when it applies to staging.

If you’re trying to sell your home this fall, here are a few helpful tips:

  1. Remember the goal: you want every buyer who walks through your front door to think warm, cozy, comfortable, restful and spacious. Stand for a long moment in every room of your house and ask, “How can I set that scene in this space?”
  2. Eliminate every single item that doesn’t work toward your goal. That pile of papers you can’t bear to move because you just know you’re going to need something in it eventually? Find a way to get over that. Ideally, you can move the pile to an unseen spot, but if you must keep it out in the open, put it in an attractive basket. Do you really need to keep the bottle of dish soap next to the faucet, or could you put it under the sink? How many decorations did you put up? Will they be the focal point of the house, or do you have just enough that they serve to enhance and not mask your home’s best features? Fill a vase with beautiful fall foliage, or set some pears in a wooden bowl. A hint of autumn beauty is better than a truckload of scarecrows and corn stalks. The number one thing you can do to make your house shine is to get rid of all the clutter.
  3. Wash the windows. With all the beauty outside this time of year, make sure that buyers get a good glimpse. Clean is always better.
  4. Have you set a cozy tone? Your preferred style may be sparse and utilitarian, but your buyers’ likely won’t be. Nothing says “inviting” like plump pillows and soft, nubby blankets or quilts. Stage the couch so that every person who walks in will wish they could put their feet up and sit a spell. If you’ve got a fireplace or a wood stove, keep the home fires burning. That’s a quick way to add warmth (literally and figuratively) to your home.
  5. How does the house smell? Do you have indoor pets? The chances are, you no longer notice their scent, but visitors will. Light a spiced-apple or cinnamon-scented candle and let it work its magic. Bake a batch of cookies and heat some cider in the crock pot. Your visitors will appreciate the gesture, and it will set a welcoming tone.
  6. Now that the inside is the way you want it, go outside. Your buyer’s first impression of your house begins at the curb. Does your house have curb appeal? Does it set a tone that will continue through the front door? Maple leaves are gorgeous this time of year, but if they’re scattered all over your front lawn, the buyer’s very first impression of your home will likely be, “This looks like a lot of work.”

And here’s my final tip: Let’s not hang realistic-looking spiders from all the windows and doorways. Let’s just not.

Tips and Reminders October 31, 2014

Enjoy that extra hour!

Snohomish October 30, 2014

Pieces

A little story set in Snohomish …

My proper but mischievous grandmother had one firm rule about cussing: If you must do it, do it in the barn. I believe now that her unspoken message was "animal behavior belongs with the animals," but we didn't hear that subtext back then. We just thought it a tantalizing and dangerous invitation.

Of us seven girls, I only remember one who regularly took Grandma up on that offer. "Dang it," the girl-whose-name-I'm-not- telling-you would whisper, when she just couldn't take the pressure of being seven anymore. Sometimes I overheard her. Sometimes I didn't have to. She'd come moseying out of the barn with that satisfied look on her face, and I'd know the old building had stripped her of all her troubles.

I spent the majority of my growing-up summers living on my grandparents' farm in Snohomish. And I wasn't alone. Whether my grandparents extended the invitation to bless us or to bless our parents didn't much matter. We seven cousins packed our bags the first day of summer vacation, hit the farm running, and didn't look back until September started making noise.

When the sun broke through our dreams and drove us from our beds, we girls would gulp down breakfast, yank on our cowboy boots, and head for the barn. We ventured out now and then, of course — to chase cows, climb trees, ride ponies, and beg Grandma for a cup of sugar for dipping rhubarb stalks — but our home base was Grandpa's barn. To this day, whenever I walk into a barn (and I do, every chance that presents itself), all I have to do is close my eyes and draw in a big breath, and I'm instantly short again. The perpetual dust inside drifts through a sunbeam like miniature snowflakes, I'm surrounded by the heavenly tang of manure, and I can feel and hear the stomp of cow feet or horse feet or girl feet slapping the concrete floor.

Our favorite thing to do in the barn was to climb up to the hay loft and make mazes with the bales. It took all fourteen of our skinny little no-muscle arms to lift and stack those bales, but unity of purpose kept us grunting and puffing. We'd take a whole morning to create the perfect hay maze, then spend the rest of the day hiding around corners and trying to scare one another.

Grandpa let us sweep the broken bales and loose hay out the window. When enough had accumulated in a heap below that second floor window, we'd jump. The worse part of growing up was saying good bye to that rush. There's little in the adult world that offers the same freedom as leaping from a second floor window. For just a moment there, you and your sixty-five pounds don't belong to earth.

One summer day, while preparing for a jump, my middle sister Megan took off her spanking-new, bright green tennis shoes and set them off to one side of the window. If her plan was to spare her new shoes an afternoon of dirt, she didn't think it through. After repeatedly jumping in the hay, running over the grass and across the dirt path and up the grimy stairs to repeat her performance, the feet she planned to plunge back into those new shoes were beyond filthy. But she never got the chance to dirty her footwear. One shoe went missing.

Though we looked high and low and everywhere in between, though we moved hay bales and checked corners and took a pitch fork to the pile outside, we never found that second green tennis shoe. No one ever found that shoe. I like to think a family of klepto-crazed field mice lined up while we were giggling in the pile of hay below and dragged that green shoe down a secret hole. In my best imaginings, it became a mice family heirloom … and the story, a legend.

A piece of my sister lingered in that barn, long after she outgrew hay jumping and pony rides. And that's just how it goes when you've sojourned in a place. Whether we plan to or not, we leave pieces of ourselves wherever we travel. Those little markers, little breadcrumbs, show we've been this way.

I hope you're conscious of the pieces you're leaving behind today. Someday, someone will hold up that breadcrumb and tell the story of you. Make sure it's a good one.

Marysville October 29, 2014

After the rain

All Around the SoundSamish Island October 29, 2014

Sometimes it DOES rain here

I'm not going to lie to you. If you're thinking about relocating to the Puget Sound area, you're going to encounter a little rain now and again, like I did on a trip up to Samish Island with my friend, Cathy Taylor, early in September.

But doesn't this look like fun? 🙂

 

 

BuyersLake StevensMarysvilleSellers October 28, 2014

Home Staging

 

I met with a client tonight and we drove a loop from Sunnyside to Lake Stevens and back, trying to find that just-perfect house. From our initial list of five homes, we ended up looking at three. This is a client who makes it very easy: she knows exactly what she wants (and what she doesn't). 

When we walked into the house just off Sunnyside, my immediate thought was, "This house is staged." From the perfectly plumped pillows to the ringed napkins on the table, not one item was out of place. Generally that tells me that listing agent has either hired a professional home stager, or decorated the house with his or her own furnishings. But rarely is it done on a scale we saw in this home.

To confirm my suspicions, usually all it takes is a quick peek in the fridge. Staged homes have empty fridges. So I took a peek … and saw food. Lots of food. Condiments, soda, leftovers … I slammed the fridge shut and turned to my client.

"Someone really lives here."

I have no idea how the owners manage to live in that perfectly-arranged house and give absolutely no sign of their existence (beyond the mustard and half-eaten sandwiches). But I was truly impressed.

I know how hard it can be to keep your house clean and ready when you're trying to sell. But just know that when you make that effort, it makes an impression on the buyer.

We may just be back.

_________________

All Around the Sound October 27, 2014

Need another reason to move to the Puget Sound?

All Around the SoundMarysville October 26, 2014

Of Mice and Young Men

I could probably blog for an entire year about the characters in this town. And up till now, the only reason I haven't done so is because I couldn't choose which story, which character to share first. But yesterday I found my beginning place. I'm going to start on one specific street in downtown Marysville, the one that runs byStarbucks. 

I saw the boy as Dave and I were driving out the back entranceof the Starbucks parking lot. I'm amazed I noticed him at all because I was totally consumed with my iced grande soy latte. I'd been trying to get up the courage to try a soy latte for two weeks. But every time I stood at the counter and opened my mouth, some other order came out. Yesterday, however, after managing to gush my worries to the barista and hearing her assurance that I could dump it if I wasn't delighted and she'd replace it for free, I went ahead and jumped off that cliff. And you know what? It wasn't bad at all. Theyuse vanilla soy, which apparently masks the fact that you're drinking bean milk.

I was sipping and savoring and mmm-ing as we turned left out of the parking lot, but in the midst of all that I caught a glimpse of the traveler sitting on the right side of the road. I knew he was a traveler because he was thoughtful enough to announce it, to me and every other driver within passing distance. Traveling — Low on funds, his cardboard sign read. I'm not sure if it was the honesty of that sign or the fact that he had dredlocks which drew me to him, but something did. (On the dredlock topic — I've always been fascinated. I'm quite sure that if I were a twenty-something young man, I'd have them too).

I looked in my wallet and found a five-dollar bill with no immediate plans attached to it. "Mind if I give this to that boy?" I asked Dave. He didn't. I pulled down my window and waited to catch the traveler's eye. He grinned when he saw my outstretched hand and jogged over.

"Where are you headed?" I asked.

"Seattle," he answered. And then, because he's a traveler, don't you know, and travelers have to make friends quickly, he kept talking. "I have a job interview there. I might stay. Or I might go north … or south. I don't know." He grinned, and that cinched it. I liked him. I actually wanted to take him home with us and make him a pot roast, but as we were talking in the middle of the street and the light had just changed and a line of cars behind me didn't share my fascination with the boy, we had to part ways.

"God bless you," I said.

He God blessed me right back.

My heart stayed on that street corner with the boy I would never see again. And all the way home, I hurt that I couldn't bring him to our home and to our church. My reaction startled me. I'm not the first person to hand out money to sign-holders. In fact, I often suspect that when their day's work ends, they hop in their somewhere-hidden Mercedes and jet off to their beach-front homes. I have no proof, mind you, but that's my suspicion. From time to time, God nudges me to help someone, but until I feel that holy prod, I look the other way.


I grieved over my lost friend all evening, and thought about him again this morning. But it wasn't until I sat down to write this post that I made the connection. 

Just a week ago, as I'd been pulling out of Starbucks again on that same back road onto that same street, a small blur on the pavement between me and the front car caught my eye. It was a mouse, and he was running for his life. For right on his heels came a (proportionally) giant black crow. Just as the crow was reaching his feet out to snatch the mouse, the big-eared, long-tailed little guy ran beneath the front car. Seconds later, that car moved. Not wanting to run him over, I scanned the pavement before moving forward, but he was nowhere in sight. It occurred to me that he may have hitched a ride on the undercarriage of the car — and I was right. After that car had turned left and gone twenty feet, the mouse reappeared, and skittered across the left side of the road. I looked up the road, saw an oncoming car, and held my breath. But the mouse made it to the curb unsquished. However, his troubles weren't over, for thecrow had been watching as well, and he flew from behind me and swooped right toward the mouse. I so wanted him to get away. I watched as he bounced against the curb — no doubt fighting panic —and lay dazed for a split second. He ran back, just barely missing the crow's talons, and then ran forward again. But the writing was on the wall for this battle. Before the light changed and I left the scene, the crow had snagged his prey and flown off to enjoy his lunch.

The entire drama had played itself off directly across the street from where the traveler sat waiting. The mouse was long-gone, long-digested by the time that boy sat himself on the grass and penned his cardboard sign. But I must have made a sub-conscious connection. 

It's a great big world, and he was just one young man–a young man who reminded me of my own boy. A young man whose mother might be looking up from her stove somewhere and wondering if her boy is hungry. A young man about to venture into a world chock full of taloned predators. I know there's an adventure involved, and I hope on his search he finds whatever he's looking for. But I'm praying he simply lands somewhere warm and safe, and that at the end of his traveling, he knows he's loved.

We're all on a journey of some sort. May your travels today lead to joy.

Windermere October 24, 2014

Windermere Food Drive

I had no idea, when I chose to affiliate with Windermere Real Estate, that they had such heart. Every fall they kick into high gear with the annual food drive to benefit the Marysville Food Bank. Teams of two and three have been manning a table in front of Haggen's for the past several weeks. I'm overwhelmed at the community's generosity, and so happy that we're going to have such a large donation of food and money to hand over to the Food Bank at the end of the month. We're at over 6000 pounds of food so far, and several thousand dollars in cash! If you're out shopping Friday or Saturday this week, please stop by and say hello.

All Around the Sound October 23, 2014

Autumn in the Pacific Northwest

All Around the SoundArlingtonSnohomish October 22, 2014

Snohomish County Pumpkin Fun

Looking for a pumpkin patch? Check out these Snohomish County options:

Snohomish Pumpkin Hurl & Medieval Faire What could be more fun than hurling pumpkins from a Trebuchet? Afterward you can watch sword fighting and a jousting theatrical troupe. (September 13-14)

Schack-toberfest The urban pumpkin patch at this 4-day event features 600 blown-glass gourds and pumpkins. Enjoy glassblowing demonstrations, face painting and a raffle.(September 26-29)

Build Your Own Scarecrow I think the name says it all. You bring the clothes; they provide the stuffing. Also available: hayrides and a scavenger hunt. (October 4)

The Great Pumpkin Glow. Gather at Craven Farm for storytelling, a 3D Pumpkin Adventure, hay rides, a corn maze and more. (October 26)

Historic Downtown Snohomish Trick or Treat Kids in costume receive treats from the downtown merchants. (October 31)

Foster Farm's "Wizard of Oz" Corn Maze For one of the best corn mazes around, visit Foster Farm in Arlington. (Oct 1-31)