Category Archives: Piedmont-Triad

Lenslinger Hits the Bigs

In the online world "hitting the bigs" happens when you're linked to by one of the mega sites like Fark or Boing Boing and the number of visitors to your site explodes.  Greensboro photog and blogger Lenslinger spun off a new blog based on his regular feature called Schmuck Alert and he won a link from Boing Boing.  Luckily his blog is on Blogger; if it had been hosted on a local shared server I can almost guarantee the thing would have crashed.  Congrats 'Slinger.

Who’s Moving? Apparently Not Many People in the Triad

I stumbled across the blog for realtors Brad and Angela Lawrence and they have a chart on there that's just plain depressing, but before I get into that let me give them a compliment for having the blog in the first place.  I know I've taken some realtors and their association to task in the past, particularly for saying things that make them seem obtuse about current market realities, but that doesn't mean I have it in for all realtors. There are some I really respect and I think they play an important role in the housing market, so it's nice seeing Brad and Angela using blogs and email newsletters to augment their shoe leather sales.

Now, to the numbers.  They have a chart showing the housing market activity for the Piedmont Triad for the week of 11/1/08 – 11/7/08.  What struck me is that the percentage of listed homes that sold seems really low and more houses were newly listed than were sold, which means that the inventory of unsold homes actually grew.  I don't know if the numbers were higher or lower than historical norms, but they just seem really, really low.  Here they are by county:


The following numbers are the Pendings/Solds/New Listings/Actives for Week of 11/1/08 – 11/7/08

Source – Triad MLS

County Pendings SOLDS New Listings All Actives
Guilford 56 17 130 4620
Forsyth 39 22 111 3421
Davidson 8 11 34 1271
Randolph 10 8 34 748
Davie 0 0 14 407
Stokes 4 1 8 300
Surry 3 1 9 421
Yadkin 2 2 7 117
Alamance 7 1 7 378
Rockingham 9 3 13 548

If I'm doing my math right then there were actually 80% more homes newly listed (367) than were sold or pending sale (204). Also only 1.7% of all homes on the market were sold or pending sale.  This really can't be good, especially if those kinds of numbers are consistent for months on end.  Maybe someone out there with access to historic numbers can tell us if this is representative of the market over time.

On another post about where people look for home listings Brad and Angela say the following:

There are so many sources for buyers to use to find homes, with 80% plus buyers searching online, that is the preferred path.

In our area (Piedmont Triad), the preferred online search tool is Listingbook.com,
it is a service that is fed from our MLS every 30 minutes. No doubt it
is best search tool, it is far superior than any other search tool that
we have experienced. It allows buyers to have their own personal
account, save favorites, make property notes, communicate back and
forth with their agent through property notes, very customized search
critera and FREE………here are more benefits of Listingbook.

We do not know of any buyers that look in the newspaper or magazines
anymore, if we get a call, they saw it online or a yard sign.

What I really like about this is that they take the time to provide information that may not lead directly to a sale, but it does show their expertise and understanding of the market.  Good stuff.

Welcome Triad Forum

I meant to write about this earlier in the week but somehow it got buried in my ever growing pile of things to do and I neglected to do it.  Thankfully, Esbee reminded me with this post

Here’s the deal: Neil Tolbert of Clemmons has launched a new discussion board called Triad Forum.  The most active topics appear to be North Carolina and Southern Speakisms, It’s getting dangerous to watch a baseball game and, unsurprisingly, Democrats are responsible, hands down, for this crisis!!!.

I love discussion boards and it’s nice to see one focused on our area.  Good luck to Neil on building it up to critical mass.  Me thinks that the link from Esbee is going to spike his traffic quite a bit.

Foxx Hunt

I’m no fan of my Congresswoman Virginia Foxx, but I’ve pretty much resigned myself to the fact that I live in a Congressional district that would probably throw a parade for Vladimir Putin before it would elect a Democrat.  Well, I might be wrong.  Here’s an interesting post at BlueNC by Frank Eaton in which he points to a poll that shows Foxx leading Democratic opponent Roy Carter by a mere 48-46 in a Public Policy Polling (PPP) poll. He writes the following:

The PPP’s own poll showed a ten point spread (51-41) back in July.
But now, at the start of the true fall campaign, with multiple daily
events across the district, introductory ads on TV and an increasingly
attentive media, people are beginning to understand that there’s
somebody running against Virginia Foxx in the 5th district. His name is
Roy Carter, a fiery mountain populist with a long record of service to
5th district families and their children. This guy could win!

Sometimes it takes the word a while to get to Washington, especially
when it’s coming from a largely rural, inaccurately studied district
like NC-05, which the party structure has habitually forsaken since
redistricting. But listen up: ROY CARTER IS WINNING THIS RACE DOWN
HERE. And he’ll continue to win this race until Virginia Foxx opens up
her war chest and starts running those crappy $150,000 TV ads in steady
rotation on Fox News here in the district.

SHE CAN BE STOPPED FOR VERY LITTLE MONEY. All that’s standing
between North Carolina and an easy Democratic pick-up in the Congress
is this continued reticence on the part of the Democratic
leadership–at both the state and national levels–to look at the true
dynamics of the race:

-Soft support for Virginia Foxx among republican and unaffiliated
voters indicated by low approval ratings for her and the current
administration.

-increased consciousness of the economic realities in the district and a desire for change.

-A compelling Democratic challenger who is overseeing an energized, creative, dynamic campaign.

Even though Eaton is not an objective source I think he makes some pretty good points.  Foxx is closely aligned with Bush and hence vulnerable to negative association.  I’m sure she has a stranglehold on the hard core Republicans in her district, but Carter presents a problem for her with centrists because he’s not perceived as some sort of "intellectual elite" or "tree hugger" Democrat.  He has a lot of qualities that residents of this meat and potatoes district are attracted to, and he won’t be easily dismissed with the usual "liberal elite" smear campaigns.

On the other hand Eaton’s also right that Foxx has a deep war chest and when she starts opening up the media campaigns Carter could be thumped if he doesn’t get similar air time, which means he needs a financial boost from somewhere. 

Hat tip to Ed Cone for the lead.

Realtor Reality Land

Remember the Chamber of Commerce and local realtors insulting our intelligence the week before last when they tried to justify calling for a moratorium on development regulations by, among other things, saying that the decline in zoning board cases was due to the "difficulty in doing business here" and conveniently forgetting that we’re in an epic credit crunch?  Well, today brings us a whole new case of what I’ll call "Realtor Reality."  From today’s Winston-Salem Journal article titled July Home Sales Fall:

In Forsyth County, the housing market is not as bad as some parts of
the country, said Julie Poplin, the president of the Winston-Salem
Regional Association of Realtors.

She said that comparing July 2008 to July 2007 is skewed because last year was an abnormally good year for the local market.

"We are getting back to a more normal marketplace," she said. "We’re
flat, but that’s not a bad thing. The good news is that we are having
sales, and that’s great."

At Allen Tate Realtors where Poplin is a broker, Poplin said that
brokers are active but having a lot of trepidation because of news
reports about overall woes in the housing market. But they are busy and
finding creative ways to market homes.

"They are really working hard for every deal," she said.

Poplin advises sellers to have their houses competitively priced and be ready to move.

"But if you are a buyer, you need to take advantage of these
interest rates before they go up, and they will be going up," she said.

I tell you what, they must be serving some mighty fine happy juice over there at Allen Tate.  I mean what she’s saying is akin to saying, "Well you just totaled your car and had both your legs and one arm amputated, but we’ve seen cases similar to this where people have lost all their extremities and gone blind and deaf too, so in the grand scheme of things you’re not doing too bad."

If you want to be more honest about local real estate you should say this: "Well, in the Triad we’ve suffered through agonizing economic times while the rest of the country experienced unbelievable growth, thus we never had a real estate bubble.  Heck, we didn’t even have a real estate burp so you could say that we didn’t have as far to fall. Yet we’ve fallen anyway.  Yeah for us!"

Her statement that 2007 was an abnormally good year for the local market has me curious as to what her frame of reference is.  Abnormally good compared to the last five years?  Ten years?  Twenty years?  I mean we’ve been bleeding jobs around here for over a decade, and when the rest of the country had houses appreciating at incredible rates each year while ours inched up incrementally.  Don’t believe me?  Here’s a report on real estate from 1997-2007 prepared by Donald Jud, who was also interviewed for the story in the Journal (and I’d guess he wouldn’t necessarily agree with Ms. Poplin’s view of the situation). And I quote:

Since the 1st quarter of 1997, existing home prices in the Triad have risen at an average annual rate of 3.2 percent, outpacing the consumer price index (CPI) which has increased an average of 2.5 percent annually. The appreciation of housing prices in the Triad has lagged substantially the rise in housing prices nationally. For the nation as a whole, existing home prices have risen at a 7.6 percent annual rate from 1997.1 through the 4th quarter of 2006, according to the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO).

In short our houses appreciated at less than half the rate of the average of the rest of the country.  You don’t want to know how far we lagged behind hot markets like Washington, DC, California, etc.  So if you want to say that 2007 was better than we’d had for the last five or ten years, then well I guess you could be right.  Or not.

If 2007 was such an abnormally good year, how much better was it than 2006?  Let’s see what the report says…seasonally adjusted home values increased 4% so that’s good, but on the other hand the number of homes sold decreased by .1%, the time on market increased by 9.8% and the spread between the list and sales price decreased .8%.  Abnormally good?

Now in her defense maybe she was just referring to July existing home sales so if you go to this page on the Winston-Salem Regional Association of Realtors statistics page with links to all the monthly reports and compare all the July reports you can see that indeed July 07 had higher sales than July 06 by about 6%, and that 2006 was significantly higher than the previous few years and that July 08’s numbers are back in the range of 05 and before.  Still, that doesn’t mean that 07 was great, just that it and 06 weren’t as crappy as the last decade or more.  And that’s just looking at the number of houses sold, not things like price, time on market and spread.

The best you could say is that we might have gone from really miserable in the early ’00s to kind of miserable in the last couple of years and are now returning to really miserable status.  Not a real comforting thought unless of course you live in Realtor Reality Land.

Disclaimer: I have a few friends who are realtors and brokers.  They are smart people who see through un-tinted glasses and I hereby officially exclude them from the Kool-Aid bunch who live in Realtor Reality Land.

More on Textbooks

Update: 8/26/08 – I received a follow up email to further clarify what they’d told me and you can see those updates highlighted in the bullet points below. It ends up that this will be discussed at tonight’s Board of Ed meeting.

Last week I wrote about learning that in some of my son’s middle school classes they don’t have textbooks for everyone, rather they have textbooks in the classroom, "classroom sets", and if students need to access them for homework they can do so online.  As I wrote in my post this troubled me, so I emailed the powers that be in the school system and heard back from them late last week.  Before I go on I’d like to say that they replied during what has to be a very busy time for them, it being the week before school starts and all.  They told me they’re going to dig into the details and send them to me, but in the meantime they gave me the rough version:

  • Not enough funding from the state for textbooks for everyone
  • They chipped in local funds but it still wasn’t enough
  • They had to choose between using old textbooks for everyone or buying new textbooks, using classroom sets augmented by online access for some –Update 8/26/08– I received a follow up email that corrected this (I reported correctly, it was a miscommunication on their end): "we apparently still have the option to return to last year’s textbooks and use them one more year."
  • Textbook purchasing is system wide so this isn’t peculiar to Meadowlark
  • Some middle school classes have classroom sets, and then arrangements with the publishers to access the text online — Update 8/26/08 — I received a follow up email that corrected this (I reported correctly, it was a miscommunication on their end): "we have a CD of the book for every book that we purchased, but a sales rep told our folks that the on-line version could be purchased for a fairly small fee."
  • Students are able to check books out overnight if they need to
  • Those students without at-home internet can use any of the over 40 Winston Net stations located in libraries, rec centers and churches throughout Forsyth County

They also said that they will review this policy at the end of the school year and if it caused problems they’ll determine what changes need to be made.

Like I said this is just the rough version and I’ll wait and see what the specifics turn out to be, but I’d say that in general it’s a good explanation. Those who don’t like this particular prioritization might want to speak up at future board of education meetings. I’ll let you know as soon as I get the details.

Call for Help Feeding the Homeless

The organization in Greensboro that is the sole downtown provider of meals for the homeless on certain mornings of the week and Friday evenings will not be able to serve the remainder of August so Cara Michele of ChosenFast is trying to pick up the slack.  She’s looking for donations of food or money and you can read all about it here.  They are concentrating on breakfast for Thursday and Friday, and dinner on Friday.  You can contact her here.

Thanks to Ed for the pointer.

Guaranty This

Now is not the time to be in the guaranty business, especially here in the NC Piedmont.  First, Triad Guaranty said they were throwing in the towel and more recently posted a nasty loss for the second quarter, and now AIG’s underwriter United Guaranty has declared a $564 million underwriting loss for the 2nd quarter of this year.  United also said that 4.9% of policies were over 60 days past due.

Oy.

Plan Now to See the Leaves of Autumn

Ever driven the Blue Ridge Parkway when the leaves are changing color in the autumn?  It’s just awesome.  Ever wanted to spend a quiet weekend up there, absolutely away from it all and relax for a few days as you roam the area and enjoy the scenery?  If so, I have the place for you.

Sadie’s Place is a small country house that Debbie and Steve Erickson have converted into a weekend getaway.  You can literally be on the Parkway in less than a minute from their location, but it also features a small creek running just yards away from the front door and a fantastic porch for sitting and sipping hot cider or your adult beverage of choice.  (Full disclosure: We’re relatives, but I’d write this anyway if we weren’t).

From Sadie’s Place you can also be in Laurel Springs in just minutes and you can be in West Jefferson or Sparta in a little under 1/2 hour.  Laurel Springs is home to Thistle Meadow Winery and West Jefferson is home to all kinds of cool establishments. 

Debbie and Steve will be happy to take care of you, so give yourself a break this fall and spend a few days up in North Carolina’s beautiful Blue Ridge area.  I’m sure Debbie and Steve would love to make you feel right at home.

Sadie’s Place

For rental information contact:

Steve or Debbie Erickson
(919) 545-9204 or (336) 416-6080

Email: mooonbaby AT yahoo.com

   

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Buff Runners in Reidsville

Sarah South linked to an interesting 5-K being held in Reidsville tomorrow (July 26, 2008).  It’s called the Take Pride in Your Hide and as you may guess from the title it’s a clothing-optional race.  If you happen to be a purveyor of sports-ready suntan lotion I think you could make a pretty penny if you set up shop there tomorrow morning.

The race is being held on the Bar-S-Ranch.  Here’s a race description from the website:

Bar -S- Ranch, a nudist resort, rests on 400 acres of
    rolling meadows and woodlands. Guests are able to relax and find refuge from
    the pressures of urban life. Our resort adds a new dimension to the clothing
    optional experience by offering a secure and serene environment. We welcome
    the experienced and the uninitiated nudist to enjoy our hospitality.
   

People are curious about nudism. However, the nudist philosophy is
simple: being nude is natural. Runners have found that nude running gives
them a feeling of freedom and exhilaration that cannot be matched in an
other way. Bar -S- Ranch offers this run to the general running community to
give runners an opportunity to enjoy this interesting and different running
experience, "naturally" or clothed.

Timing will be done with Champion Chip Timing technology, by Queen City
Timing Services of Mooresville, NC. Each runner / walker must pick up
his/ her chip, to be worn on your shoe at the Take Pride 5K on race day
morning. Those who do not turn in their chip will be assessed a $35
fee. Please bring a towel to sit upon ( proper etiquette at a nudist
resort).  "Great" T-shirts (first 150 guaranteed). Unique prizes,
awards, food & refreshments, kegs of Budweiser beer and a drawing
for a one year membership to the Bar-S. Runners/Walkers & their
guest may enjoy the Bar-S for the day until 4:00 PM. A nude/non-nude
photo will be taken to commemorate the event & may be purchased for
$10, included with your entry or paid on race day. The race is ran on
the Bar-S trails in a safe & secure environment , no spectators
allowed. Enjoy running/walking "Naturally" or "clothed" on the exciting
5k XC trail through the cool woods.

Oh, this is cute.  The race management company’s name is Butts A’Runnin Race Management. 

They’re also looking for sponsors.

You know there are some thoughts that are running through my head right now, pardon the pun, and some fairly obvious questions too:

  1. Is there a correlation between nude running and sterility for men?  Gravity ain’t kind folks, and the jostling can’t be too good for you.
  2. How about the effects of gravity on the better half of the male/female equation?  I’m assuming that those who are, um, lighter in their northern hemisphere enjoy a natural advantage?
  3. How does one become a nudist photographer?  Or put another way, is one a nudist photographer or a photographer of nudists…or both?
  4. I’m also assuming that it’s not a good idea to borrow someone’s towel if you forget your own.
  5. I know it’s common to give away t-shirts at races but for this one wouldn’t it be more appropriate to give a temporary tattoo instead?  Just saying.

By the way, I have no problem with nudists doing their thing and in some ways I envy their ability to let it all hang out, so to speak.  On the other hand, I’ve never been in the lead in any race I’ve ever run which means I’m always looking at someone’s back(side) and I can’t imagine that’s the best view in a naked trot such as this.