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Archive for the ‘Ramblings’ Category

Palimpsesticide

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I’m a pretentious college art professor by day.  I enjoy teaching my students big words so they can write dense papers and bore people at cocktail parties.  Of course, of my favorite words is PALIMPSEST, which means that a text has been erased and rewritten over and over again.  During the middle ages, parchment was incredibly expensive to produce, as it had to come from thin layers of calf hide.  It was waaaaay easier during the Middle Ages to just scrape off the ink and gold leaf and start over.

To tell the truth, the most fun I’ve had in our house has been peeling through 100-plus years of wallpaper.  These layers of wallpaper tell the story of the house in ways the fixtures and walls themselves can’t.  In most places in the house, there are only a few layers.  The previous occupants even committed the cardinal sin of painting over wallpaper (making it almost impossible to remove).  Our kitchen, however, was a glorious scrapbook of changing styles and and wallpaper technologies.  Check out the first photo that I posted.  It shows the 80’s floral borders that graced much of the house when we moved in.  Unfortunately, they haven’t stood the test of time.  There are a few other layers visible in the photo as well.

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Claire has written about our kitchen before…it’s the first room in the house she started peeling wallpaper in.  When she started tearing into the 80’s floral nightmare, she found all of the other layers, but then found out that the bottom layer was just redwood planks covered with cheesecloth.  We knew that we’d have to hang drywall, so it’s taken us over three months to get around to it.  The whole time, we’ve been living in a kitchen full of wallpaper scraps and exposed planks.

The very bottom layer of wallpaper is the gorgeous hand printed turn-of the century wallpaper above.  I’ve enlarged a couple of flakes for texture.  The wallpaper printers used delicate colors and metallic inks.  I hate wallpaper, but if we had been able to perfectly peel back the others and preserve the bottom layer, I would have considered it.  It wasn’t an option, however, because with each new wallpaper job, the new owners stapled through all of the previous layers, ruining the wallpaper below.

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The next wallpaper in the stack is also a doozy, beautifully hand printed with random flowers and patterns.  I can’t quite figure out the era…could it have come from the teens or early 1920’s?

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Here’s a spartan wallpaper that must have been put up at some point during the Great Depression.  We found out from the previous owners that the house was stripped of most of its gingerbread trappings during the 30’s and turned into a more severe, minimalist house.  The few remaining vintage lighting fixtures in the house date from this era.

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At some point after the dour wallpaper, one of the residents livened it up with these cute flowers!

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Holy cow!!! At some point, our kitchen was totally Don Draper’s kitchen from Mad Men!  During the 50’s, somebody put up this fabulous masculine plaid!  It’s too bad that tastes changed and the 70’s happened.  I wish we still had the avocado-colored stove that surely complimented the wallpaper.

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Like I said.  After the 70’s, it was all floral wallpaper, all the time.  you can see the floral borders from the 80’s on the first photo I posted.  We tore into a lot of the wallpaper, but ultimately, since we decided we were putting up drywall, we left most of it for future owners to experience when they tear down the drywall.

Our house contains plenty of other palimpsests and riddles.  One of the biggest remaining mysteries is what is under the flooring.  We’ve found nice fir floors under the carpet in our living room and laminate in our kitchen and dining room.  We’ve got bigger fish to fry right now, and the floors don’t bother us too much, so we’ll leave the mystery for another day.  The flooring upstairs is a little more nerve-wracking…it looks like there are layers of creepy, worn-out linoleum underneath the carpets.  We’ll find out soon enough what’s under the linoleum.  Our inspector told us that there wasn’t much chance of asbestos, so that makes us breathe a sigh of relief.

I hope you enjoyed the wallpaper tour of our kitchen…I feel like it’s an appropriate way to honor the interior decorators who came before us.

Merry Fishmas

Holy crap!  Christmas in your own home is awesome.  I’m writing this from our living room on a dreary December evening.  The pellet stove is blazing, a glass of egg nog is on the table, and hipchristmas.com’s audio player is supplying a steady stream of Christmas cheer.  Claire is going to write more about her amazing holiday decorations and our impending cookie swap later in the week, but I thought I’d show off the Christmas tree we put up in our goldfish tank.

The video above is an introduction to Gargle and Grybowski, our spoiled goldfish.  I got them a little over five years ago at a pet shop as 10 cent feeder fish.  They were tiny, and lived in a tiny tank in my kitchen, but they grew and grew, eventually moving with us from Atlanta to Huntington Beach, California, and eventually to our new home in Eureka.

The fish have a prominent place in our living room.  Their 55 gallon tank is located so they can see who comes in the front door, as well as keep tabs on us as we hang out in the living room at night.

Claire found this great ceramic Christmas tree lamp with lite-brite-style plastic pegs in it.  It’s almost identical to one that I grew up (ask my mother about the year toddler Garth ate all of the plastic pegs… they were all eventually “recovered”, washed and put back on the tree).  We removed the lamp from our tree and put it in the fish tank so the fish could join us in our holiday cheer.

Now I’ve got to help Claire get ready for our Christmas party, which will be our first party in the new house.  Stay tuned for more Christmas fun and a full-fledged tour of the 100 years of wallpaper we discovered in our kitchen before we put up the drywall.

On a Roll

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For a while, Claire and I felt like we were spinning our wheels.  We finished our dining room, which gave us a huge sense of accomplishment, but we were in a rut with only big projects on our horizon–nothing small enough to knock off in a day or two.  However, we hired a drywall ninja to come in and skim-coat some of the walls that got torn up in our wallpaper removal frenzy.  We left for a lecture about my book in Mendocino, handed off the keys to our drywall guy, and magically came back to beautiful, finished walls.

Money well spent.  Now, we’re ready to move on to painting our front hall.  We’re rolling again.

Earlier today, I was standing in line at our local hardware store.  We don’t have big-box hardware stores in our neck of the wood, so we’re totally on a first-name basis with the folks who work at our friendly local place.  Sometimes, I think they anticipate what we need because they know the approximate timeline of our efforts.

I was waiting in line to buy an expensive replacement roller to go with our Black and Decker Paint Stick, and I started thinking about my relationship with tools and gadgets.  It’s totally cliche territory, exploited for comedy by TV shows like Home Improvement, and exploited for financial gain by every hardware store and man magazine in existence.  I’m just about the world’s biggest sissy when it comes to tools, but I confess to being a total gadget geek.

My wife knows by now that a great way to get me fired up to do a job around the house is to introduce a “labor saving” device into the equation.  I’ll likely be so fascinated by the process that I’ll forget I’m doing some cruddy chore.  This is a trait that I share with my Father-in-Law, who is obsessed with finding the right tool for the right job.  I defer to him in all tool-related matters.

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It was my Father-in-Law who introduced me to the miracles of the Dremel oscillating multi-tool that made my dishwasher installation much easier.  He also loaned us his Wagner Power Roller, which made painting our living room a pleasure.  If you’ve got a lot of painting ahead of you, a gadget like this can make your life much easier.  It’s a simple pump that attaches to a roller with a long hose.  The roller has a trigger attached to it so you can magically call forth paint whenever you want.  The thing was working great, painting room after room……until it stopped working.

Sorry, Max….we owe you a paint machine.

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At some point, the pump gave out, and I haven’t been able to revive it.  I reverted to using a Black and Decker Paint Stick, which comes in a close second…in fact, I might even prefer it because it comes with a built-in long handle that helps me get at all of the high walls and ceilings in our house.  The Paintstick works like a syringe.  You just put a special lid on your gallon can of paint, then suck a bunch of paint up into the handle.  As you paint, gradually push the plunger in to dispense the paint to the roller.  I can usually paint for about 5-10 minutes before I have to go back for a refill.

They’re surprisingly cheap, they clean up easily, and the paint rollers are interchangeable with Wagner’s.  I never want to paint a room without one again.

I’ve had fun with other gadgets while working on the house like laser levels, sanders, snap lines with chalk, drywall bits, and of course the reciprocating saw I picked up for $5 at a garage sale.  I even crave novelty in lawn mowing.  I bought a nice, modern reel mower (the kind without a motor) for our small lawn.  As long as I keep the blades nice and sharp (with the included sharpening kit), it cuts the grass like a dream.

Does anybody else have any unnatural attraction to a tool or gadget that makes their decorating/renovation life easier?

Cool For Cats!

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One of the great parts of doing this blog for Readymade has been connecting with our fellow home renovators and redecorators.  I was happy to get a comment and follow a link from Reeve and Nick, a young couple who just bought an old 1874 house in Portland, Maine.  Their blog, 2 Cats in the Yard, is a bit like stepping into a parallel universe to show us what it would have been like if we had bought one of the more down-at-heels, unloved houses in our neighborhood.  Their love for their house and pride in being as ecologically sound as their budget can possibly allow is apparent in every post.

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Like Claire and me, they agonize over each original feature of the house.  Their kitchen was dominated by a tiny, creaky staircase that took up a lot of space.  Ultimately, Reeve and Nick decided that the stairs had to go, and their choice freed up a bunch of space and gave them more light in their kitchen.  They also had to do a ton of demolition, tearing out rotten walls, building temporary walls to support the load-bearing walls and tearing out old cat piss-covered linoleum to make way for their Craigslist-purchased locally milled pine flooring.

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Right now, they’re months past their original move-in date, the contractor that’s helping out doubled their estimate, and a broken and clogged sewer pipe is going to literally flush $5,000 down the toilet.  Reeve has been slinking into Best Buy every few weeks to push the delivery dates for their new appliances back.  By the time you read this, though, they’ll be finished moving their stuff into the new house.  The heavy demolition and construction seems to be over, and they can get down to the fun of making their house into a home.

Did I mention that they’re doing all of this with a toddler in tow?  Our admiration goes out to them.  I can’t wait to keep up with their progress.  As always, if you’ve got stories (or better yet, WARNINGS) to share, leave us a comment or drop me an email.

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Great Inspectations

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As anybody who has ever bought a house will tell you, the home inspection is one of the most nerve-wracking parts of the experience.  You, as a buyer, have already fallen in love with the property, made an offer, bargained with the owners, put some money down and imagined how your stuff would look inside.

After having our offer accepted by the owners, we settled on a four-week escrow period.  The escrow period (if you’ve always wondered what that word meant) is the period where pest and house inspections happen, as well as the appraisal and the countless hoops that mortgage companies now make you jump through.

The owners of the house were incredibly warm and forthright with us during this whole period.  They had spent the last twenty-five years raising five children in the house.  Over the 100-plus year life of the house, it had withstood plenty of major earthquakes, and had a few cracks in the plaster to show for it, but no major injuries.  The shape the house was in was a major asset for us.  The owners had just installed a new roof and a high-efficiency furnace within the past year, which sent us over the moon.  Most of the electrical wiring and plumbing had also been updated, which was also a huge plus.

The owners were also in the flooring business, and had outfitted the place with commercial-grade wool carpeting and (pretty convincing) imitation vinyl wood flooring.  None of this was exactly our taste, but it was nice to know that it would be the least of our worries.  For a house that had survived a troop of wild children, the place was looking amazing….but was it?

This was where the inspector came in.  We scheduled our pest inspection (more on that some other time) and our home inspection on the same day.  We polled all of our homeowner friends to ask them about the most important things they had learned (or not) from their inspections.  As newbie homeowners, it was important to us that the inspector be brutally honest in his assessment of the house.

On the day of the inspection, we went over to the house and hung out with the owners while the inspector crawled through the crawlspace, eyeballed the plumbing and electricity and went over the place with a fine-toothed comb.  The owners chatted with us about their experiences with the house while we waited for the inspectors to finish their rounds.

You all know by now that I’m not a very handy person, so I was looking at this meeting with the inspector as a crash course in owning the house.  I didn’t have the first idea about where the water main was, not to mention the particulars of the wiring, roofing and chimney.

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Our inspector, Larry, came highly recommended.  He was an affable, thorough guy with a knack for explaining things so that a person like me would understand them.  I had a ton of basic questions about things like cleaning the gutter and maintaining the pellet stove and furnace.  Larry took the time to break everything down for us, leading us through the house to point things out in every room.

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One of the most interesting tidbits about the house that we hadn’t anticipated was that the entire house wasn’t built like most houses.  Ordinary newer houses are built with a wooden frame and finished off with drywall.  Older houses usually have wooden frames that are filled out by wooden lathes that are covered in plaster.  OUR house was built entirely out of old-growth redwood beams, then every wall was finished with redwood planks….both on the interior and exterior.  I put a photo above of the wall planks that we found in our living room when we tore down the 100 year accumulation of wallpaper.  We’ll never have to worry about a nail or screw that we put in our wall staying put.  In fact, we were told that the value of the wood in our house alone was greater than what we would be paying.

Larry put all of my fears to rest by telling us that we were lucky to be buying an old house that was in such great condition.  There were a few things that needed to be taken care of, to be sure, but it was clear that the house wasn’t going to turn into some crazy money-sucking machine (just a constantly money-nibbling machine).  The hot water heater had outlived its life expectancy by eight years, and would need to be replaced.

There was some dry rot (and a bit of termite damage) in the foundation beams, but Larry didn’t seem too alarmed by it.  He found a little water damage from a long-fixed leak, and warned us that the crawlspace needed to be sealed because the neighborhood cats had been using it as a litterbox.  All in all, there were around $2000 worth of pressing repairs that needed to be made, and the homeowners agreed to give us a credit that would offset the expense.  Overall, though, the house was warm, dry, and (importantly for our allergies) mold-free.

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My advice for home buyers is to ask around and find a detail-oriented inspector that will find your house’s flaws and educate you about them.  Be diligent about the details of the house you are buying, because they can come back to bite you.  After you sign those closing papers, those problems are all yours to deal with.  A good home inspector understands how your house was built and what kind of maintenance it will need.  If there’s something you don’t understand about the house, the inspector is your best bet.

The inspector is one of your most important allies in the buying process….but the process of waiting for the inspection is nail-biting.  Even if your house passes the inspection, there are still 1001 things that can go wrong before you sign the papers and get the keys.

The Heart is a Lonely (house) Hunter

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Okay, Okay– I am sure you are all waiting for me to get to the end of this endless tale.  The truth is this: we looked and looked and held onto a hopeless dream that a bank who gave out unreasonable loans in the first place would consider two people with good credit as a viable option for getting a short sale property off of their hands.

At this point in the summer, the clock is ticking.  I am feeling the pressure and Garth is working hard in China.  Our lease runs out at the end of July, the agent for the short sale house has heard nothing back from the bank, and I am looking at progressively scarier and scarier places.  Michael, our buyer’s agent, was extremely patient and helpful.  I would send him seven or eight properties at a time and he would feverishly set up appointments, trying to cram as many viewings in an afternoon as possible.  We looked at well maintained properties in bad neighborhoods, thrashed homes in better places, amazing places way too far away from anything to be reasonable, and completely destroyed places with meth zombies wandering the street.

Not many new properties in our price range were being listed, but it was comforting to see that most of the places I had looked at were not disappearing.  I was losing faith in our short sale property, as was our agent.

And then, suddenly, we were outbid.

We had been waiting so patiently.  Every time we got any information it was “The bank is planning to foreclose tomorrow!”  I  emailed Garth in China and gave up on the house we fell in love with nearly three months earlier.  We had only been inside one time.

As I write this post our rambling pink house is still on the market listed as a short sale.  If anyone is interested in it I have already  the entire place redecorated in my mind.

Almost as suddenly as we were outbid, houses starting being snapped up.  I sent Michael my usual handful of possible places and by the time we met the following afternoon FIVE of the homes we were going to look at had gone pending (if you parlez-vous real estate, that means someone was in the process of purchasing them).  Our landlady emailed me that day and told me we could not rent month to month while we were house hunting, we would have to sign another 1-year lease.  From China, Garth suggested we bid higher on our pink short sale.  I wondered if I needed to start looking for another apartment as well as a house– there was no way we would get the keys to a place by the end of July at this point.

And then something else happened.

Things started to look up.

Garth was coming home in one week and Michael and I visited three decent places in one day.  The first I have to tell you about because of the absurdity of the place.

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This lovely old Victorian was two stories and painted lavender with purple trim.  The well-maintained beds of flowers in the yard were bursting with deep purple and blue-purple flowers.  This seemed over coordinated but not too strange from the outside.  As we entered the home I realized the owner had a serious purple problem.  Purple flowers crawled up lavender wallpaper, a stand of purple hats rested in the hall.  Purple carpet in the living room, purple stencils on the dining room walls above the purple doily on the dining table.  Faux lilacs adorned the bathroom where purple towels were tied in rolls with purple rafiia ribbon.  In the upstairs the wood floor of one room was painted a pale pinkish purple.  I was gawking.  Michael said, “I can’t wait to show this one to Garth!”

We visited an amazing Victorian that had been converted into a tri-plex.   I could just see us living there– the upstairs would be perfect for our living space and the entire downstairs could be a studio.  It was listed at the same price as our short sale property and would actually have more space and more reasonable renovations.  We added it to our “Show Garth” list.

Garth arrived home from his six weeks in China and I immediately pulled him into our wild real estate hunt.  After giving him one day to recover we were scheduled to look at six places.  At the last minute Michael emailed us a house that had just been listed.  It was just above our high price point, but we added it to our list anyway.

As we zipped around town that day, almost all of the seven homes were delightful.  I was feeling more optimistic, Garth, in his jet-lagged stupor, was looking more and more like he might fall asleep on his feet.  We pressed on– we both liked the tri-plex, saw potential in a spacious foreclosure, delighted in the hardwood floors and upstairs work space in the third place, and then we ended our day at a two story, bright yellow Victorian.  We walked in and were immediately amazed.  It is so quiet!  It feels warm and dry (no mold!).  The place was spotless and spacious– obviously well cared for.  There was wall paper EVERYWHERE, but that seemed like an easy enough problem to solve– pull it down and paint.  This house had no designated work area, but with only two of us and four bedrooms that problem could easily be solved.

Our interest was piqued.  I was determined to solve our housing crisis and told Michael that we would be bidding on something the next day.

Over lunch Garth and I made a list.  We would first bid on the yellow house– it was so solid and well cared for, we would only have to do cosmetic repairs at first.  If our bid was not accepted, we would bid on the foreclosure property we visited that day, but it would need wild amounts of work.  Last but not least, we would go after the tri-plex.  We would enjoy living in any of these places, but we were cautious and unwilling to believe that we could have any of them.  Our hearts had been broken before.

When our bid was accepted with only one counter offer, I couldn’t believe it.  How was this happening so easily?  We suffered through a few humps on the way to our closing date (which we can talk about later) but compared to the waiting and dickering and nonsense that we experienced with the first place this was really nothing.  We signed a lot of papers, had a lot of inspections, and finally got the keys!

So here we sit almost a month and a half later.  Some things are painted, some things are not, much of the wallpaper is down, but some of the more irritating paper is still up, an extension ladder is leaned against our house leading to the half-cleared wooden gutters, half finished furniture is clogging the area behind our kitchen, a dishwasher has been installed but there is still a gaping hole to the left of it.  There is drywall dust on the dishes that are not in the dishwasher.

And do you know what?  I love it.

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Uncarved Block

The Grand Staircase

We’re sorry that we’re jumping around on our house timeline like Billy Pilgrim without his Ritalin prescription, but that’s a pretty accurate reflection of our life.  It’s been a little over a month since we moved into the house, and we want everything done NOW!  We’ve got half a dozen major projects going, and plenty that are lined up to take their place the moment we cross something off the list.

This week, I thought it was finally time to reveal the house’s interior, just as we first saw it.  God bless the family that lived in the house before us.  We looked at dozens of houses that were either in terrible shape, or were suffering from grave cases of “flip this house-itis”, that is, filled with marble countertops, jetted tubs, glass tile and other “improvements” that we would doubtless have torn out the moment we moved in (okay…maybe I would have kept a jetted tub).  THIS house had been owned by the same family for the past twenty-five years.  They had raised FIVE kids in the house, and had put their improvement money into things that we actually appreciated…like a brand new roof and a brand new high-efficiency furnace.

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Here’s a video walkthrough of the downstairs

The house was lovingly cared for.  It was clean and solid…..but nearly every inch of the house was covered in wallpaper or paint that would have to be changed right away.  Claire has a particularly good imagination for home improvements, and I think we both sensed the potential in this house right away, despite the floral wallpaper borders that dominated throughout.

The front and rear parlor (this is a Victorian, after all) were both sponge painted in a soul-sucking shade of beige that seemed to take the color out of anything in the room.  The kitchen was done up in a floral wallpaper that gave me flashbacks to the kitchen my mother stenciled in the 80’s with ducks and other bits of country craft (sorry, mom).  The bathroom was painstakingly masked and spongepainted with aqua stripes, but that certainly wasn’t the weirdest (I’m talking charmingly weird, here) thing about it…that award would go to the half-sized bathtub that we’ve lovingly dubbed “Toulouse LaTub”.  The back room and utility room are awesome…but the linoleum will have to go at some point.

Finally, the dining room had loads of potential, with charming molding and wainscoting, but it was painted beige and accented with rose-colored floral wallpaper.

Now to the upstairs…..

The stairs and entrance hall were wallpapered in a very active, intense forest green floral wallpaper that was complimented by a whole wall on the staircase that was papered in a faux bookcase pattern.  Our friend Hilary is still lobbying for us to adapt the wallpaper by changing the book titles, but I’m afraid it’s going to have to go.

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The upstairs had less drastic decorating touches, but it had some things that were going to be problematic.  There was quite a bit of wallpaper upstairs…and a fair bit of sponge painting.  The master bedroom has a view of the ocean (not a super-scenic one, but we can see the ocean over the romantic vista of our CalTrans building), and that rarest of things for a Victorian house…a huge closet.  There’s some slightly chilling brown shag carpeting in one of the rooms, but for the most part, we weren’t ready to declare the flooring a design emergency.

The upstairs bathroom is dominated by a great claw-footed tub, and it actually had a functional, tasteful sink (which we couldn’t say about many of the other houses we looked at).  The back bedroom is a little dark and sad, but visions of a SolarTube skylight are dancing in my head to bring some light in.

All in all, the house towered head and shoulders above the other houses we looked at.  It was priced a little bit out of our range, and had just been listed on the market when we looked at it.  I’ll leave it to Claire to fill you in on the drama involved in actually bidding for the house.  We were ready for big time heartbreak, though, so neither of us were holding our breath.

Saving Ourselves

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Welcome to the third installment of the harrowing tale of How We Found Our House:

Nearly two weeks after falling head over heels and rushing to place a bid on the the first house we looked at, we got a call from our buyer’s agent.  Though the owners had accepted our bid, the bank had a counter offer.

Usually you don’t have to sit around and wait for a response for two weeks, usually the seller wants to get on with the process as much as you do. Usually, a counter offer would be a reasonable response to the bid you placed.  Nothing, however, was usual about dealing with a short sale property.  We bid slightly under the listing price for our big pink house, the bank countered with $50,000 above the asking price.  Confused?  So were we.  So was our buyer’s agent.  We all shrugged our shoulders and decided that perhaps they would understand our seriousness if we simply countered with our exact same offer.  We did just that and returned to our waiting game.

In the meantime, two weeks had passed, and we were practically into our summer.  Garth had plans to spend a portion of the summer in China and I had plans to hide deep in my studio while he was gone.  Suddenly, it seemed unlikely that we were going to settle this house issue before he left.  How could the bank be this ridiculous?

We began to try and look at other houses more seriously.  We tried to be more practical– did we really need all that space?  Was a hot tub really necessary?  Could we do without THAT much yard?  Instead, any errand we ran took us past the house.  We drove by at night, in the afternoon, in the early morning.  “There is our house,” we would say.  “We can walk to the grocery store!”   “Biking to that neighborhood will be great!”

As we waited for the response to our counter-counter offer our house-hunting took us to a wide variety of properties.  If you did not already know this, Humboldt County is known for a very specific crop.  The growing of this crop often takes place indoors and if you are a “farmer” as well as a homeowner you probably have an extra building on your property to house your plants.  This is of interest to Garth and I because we were looking for a house with extra space for our studios.  Having “grow space” on the property was a bonus area ready to be transformed into work space (although those spaces generally didn’t stand up to fire codes well).  We looked at several homes with average size out buildings– some had more elaborate set-ups than others.  We also looked at a few memorable homes where the interior of the house was used for growing.  Two of these homes really piqued our DIY interests.

The first grow house that we encountered was a lovely pink house with beautifully maintained landscaping.  The exterior was immaculate.  It boasted nearly as much interior space as our short sale home, was in a more lovely neighborhood, and when we pulled up in front of this house I sighed with relief– what a beautiful home!  When our agent unlocked the door I reversed my original opinion.  I felt like I was standing in the Port Authority bathroom for hobo cats (and likely humans).

We left the front door wide open to air things out while we ventured in to explore.  In the kitchen, there were holes drilled in the ceiling to drain excess water that had gathered between the floors upstairs.  Wiring had been yanked out of walls.  On the back porch, an area had been cut away to expose electrical wiring that hung, oddly spliced together and exposed to the elements.  All of the appliances were missing and appeared to have been violently removed.  I can’t imagined what was staining the carpets.

Despite all of this (as we literally held our noses) we were charmed by the open space in the living room/parlor.  The kitchen was a large, bare (and filthy) blank slate, there was studio potential in the garage and the upstairs was a maze of interestingly shaped rooms.  For a low, low price we might be able to keep our apartment for a few extra months while we ripped out every scrap of carpet and did some major work before we even considered moving in.  The idea was scary and exciting.  We vowed to keep this home on our radar.

In that same day of searching, we encountered another cheap home with wild amounts of space.  Like the first place, some exterior upkeep had been done to lure people inside.  The interior was a mess of water damaged and uneven floors.  Mold was growing along the windows and in the parlor, a slash of blood that had been squirted out of a syringe ran across one of the walls.  It was carpeted with a crazy sort of 1970s take on Victorian with red and acid green crawling across the floor.

Once again, the space had potential.

The doorways had a lovely curve to them and the entire downstairs had a nice open flow to it.  This house especially excited Garth.  I was put off by the fact that the only bathroom was downstairs off the kitchen (and by the blood on the wall).  “No problem,” Garth argued– we can put in another bathroom upstairs in one of those strange closet attic areas.

Hmmm.

While I do believe that Garth and I are capable of a great many things, replumbing a house was not something I had envisioned us doing.  Our buyer’s agent said he got bad vibes upstairs.  I felt like the house could be harboring any number of ghosts.  We moved on.

As we continued to look, it became obvious that the amount of house we could get for our money was nowhere close to the amount of house that our short sale offered.  We viewed all of the old victorians around town that were in our price range.  Most of them had strange additions creating a maze of a house Frankensteined together in precarious ways.  In one house, we actually lost our agent when we stumbled into a back room that had an almost hidden staircase which then opened onto a large bedroom and bathroom.

We began looking in areas where we did not want to live.  During one of these pursuits we were almost sold on a fantastic 1950s space age bachelor pad-style modern home in the middle of nowhere.  It looked like the original people who built this swinging pad were finally moving out– the stereo was still built into the wall, the living room was recessed, the kitchen had a hibachi grill, and all of the furniture seemed made just for the space!  We had to talk ourselves down– it was a terrible location, no one would ever want to come all the way to that house for a party and we would be no where near any services.  We kept up our late night internet searches and visited five properties at a time with our agent.  Nothing seemed as magical as our short sale home.

Just before Garth packed off to China for six weeks, the bank came back with the third counter.  They dropped their price by $10,000.  This was still $40,000 above the listed price, and not a price we were willing to pay– though at this point we were feeling more desperate.  We bumped up our offer to the actual listed price and held our breath.  We investigated options for closing on a house with Garth in another country.  Finally, I put Garth on an airplane to China and resolved to solve our housing crisis in his absence, though I still felt fairly certain that the bank had to realize that selling us the house was in their best interest.

Now it was just me and Michael (our buyer’s agent) looking at houses.  I decided we would look at everything, even properties that seemed like a terrible idea from the onset.

And so began my summer of searching.

Patience is a Virtue

Claire

I’m sure you’ve all been waiting with bated breath to hear the next chapter in our homeownership tales.  When last I left you Garth and I were on the verge of placing a bid on our first house.

Having looked at only two properties, it might seem a like we were making a snap decision.  As any note-passing (or frantically text messaging) teenager will tell you, sometimes you just know.  For many good reasons, this house just felt like The One.  There also seemed to be the added pressure that the very next day this house could go into foreclosure and be whisked away from our loving, outstretched arms.  We were ready to go and sign some papers.  As we stood on the street expectantly looking at our buyer’s agent he asked us some very logical questions.

Do you already have a letter from your lender?  Which type of loan are you using?  How much money have you been pre-approved to spend?

Uhhhh. . .

Don’t get me wrong, we weren’t going into this completely blind.  Garth had done plenty of necessary research.  He had taken a workshop on California homeowner loans and investigated options that were available to full-time community college teachers.  We had submitted some preliminary papers to a mortgage broker that likes to work with California state employees, but we didn’t realize that a local lender could look better to a seller.  Because I think Garth can more eloquently discuss the finer points of our loan process, I am going to let him eventually fill you in on how this all worked itself out.  We did immediately make an appointment to talk to a lending agent and Michael, our buyer’s agent, said he would make some calls to see if the foreclosure could be pushed back a smidge.

Two days later, on April 21, we were sitting in an office signing a small stack of papers.  I had a sinking, crazy feeling that we were signing our lives away.

Don’t be fooled.  Things didn’t go down quite so easily.  Micheal explained to us that the house we were bidding on was a short sale.  This meant that all the rules that apply to placing a bid on a house that was not on the verge of foreclosure were out the window.  He told us to be prepared for disappointment and possibly a long wait– in spite of the name, a short sale is not a short process to involve yourself in.  No worries, we said, we can wait– this is The One.

For those of you that do not know (we certainly didn’t know such things at the time) a house that is listed as a short sale is when the proceeds from the sale of a property will fall short of the balance owed on a loan.

In a short sale, the bank or mortgage lender agrees to discount a loan balance because of an economic or financial hardship on the part of the seller. This negotiation is all done through communication with a bank’s loss mitigation or workout department. The home owner/debtor sells the mortgaged property for less than the outstanding balance of the loan, and turns over the proceeds of the sale to the lender. In such instances, the lender would have the right to approve or disapprove of a proposed sale. Extenuating circumstances influence whether or not banks will discount a loan balance. These circumstances are usually related to the current real estate market and the borrower’s financial situation.  (Thanks Wikipedia!)

To us this meant that the home owners would first approve our offer and then we would have to wait for approval from the owner’s lender.  The home owners approved our offer right away.  Now we needed the thumbs up from their lender.  Michael told us that this could mean waiting as long as two weeks to hear back from the lender with approval or a counter offer.  In the meantime, we should probably continue to look at other properties and not assume that the transaction would go through as we were hoping.  As you may have heard, there has been a mortgage crisis going on and while short sales were once few and far between they are now much more common and therefore the lenders have piles of properties in short sale right now.

Okay, no big deal, we could wait.  We were in love.  It was April and we didn’t have to worry about being out of our apartment until August.  Besides, why wouldn’t the bank want to approve our offer?  We would really be helping them out by taking a property off their hands and saving them the expense of going into the foreclosure process that would be more costly than the loss they would suffer from a short sale.  Logic, however, was not what got the lender into this problem in the first place and it would not be on our side in the end.

We did take Micheal’s advice to heart and continued our online property searching.  We made appointments and began to look at a variety of other homes.  After every new property we would climb back into our car and agree whole-heartedly that even though what we had just seen had this or that great quality, it couldn’t hold a candle to our rambling pink house.

And so we looked, but mostly we waited.

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  • Who Are These Johnsons?

    Garth Johnson and Claire Joyce are a pair of artists who live in Eureka, California. They just bought a beautiful old Victorian house that was originally built in 1905. In Keeping Up With the Johnsons, they'll be sharing the whole process that took them from dreams of home ownership to the sobering reality of remodeling and renovating. They'll cover house hunting, loan options, bidding on "distressed properties" and the 1001 projects that will keep them busy for the foreseeable future.

    Keeping Up With the Johnsons is an exercise in 21st-century home renovation. Claire and Garth would like to hear from you and learn from your triumphs and tragedies. They would also like to share their joys and frustrations in order to help you learn from their mistakes.

    If you'd like to learn more about Garth and Claire's lives when they're not working on their house, you can see Claire's amazing glitter paintings here. Garth's musings about art and craft can be found on his website, Extreme Craft.

    To answer your most burning question..... yes, they've seen that old Tom Hanks/Shelley Long movie "The Money Pit".

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