Wednesday, July 25, 2018

If it's been flipped you must (not) acquit

So here we are in the middle of an Oregon summer, on a seemingly endless house hunt. As of this writing, we are still in our rental, which has become very comfortable, homey and livable...especially considering we do not pay any utilities, and have been watering the grass furiously (no shortage of water here) and setting the thermostat at 75 degrees through some warm (90 degree) days.

But we'd like to find a real home; a place we can list as our permanent address, where we expect to be for years to come. But despite looking at quite a few houses, it just hasn't happened yet.

Part of the problem is that we're still learning our way around the region. Every time we go to an Open House or to see a house with our realtor, we discover a new neighborhood. Doing this has allowed us to narrow down our search, which has been great. But it's also been a little like going on 20 first dates. It's enlightening finding the neighborhoods, but sometimes a little depressing when it comes to the homes themselves.

Yes, the homes. Let me tell you.

One place we toured, built in the 1940s, was glorious...original plaster walls, huge garden, but updated with central air conditioning, heating AND solar. The fly in the ointment was the teeny-tiny one car garage, which MIGHT hold a mini-cooper if you had nothing else in there. Big Ag's comment: "Cars were big in the 1940's. I don't get it." While I've read KonMari's Tidying Up book just like everyone else, I still refuse to get rid of my Christmas decorations and patio decor, so garage space is mandatory, especially when you figure most of the patio furniture will get stored once the rains come. (Actually KonMari lost me when she wrote how she'd gotten rid of her tools and now used a frying pan to hammer nails into the wall, instead of just keeping her hammer. We clearly live in different universes.)

Hello, Garage. Might there be a house hiding somewhere behind you?
 Another place we saw was a home on a nice piece of land at the right price point, but was the victim of a terrible remodel, where the garage was extended forward and forward until it completely eclipsed the front of the house. And the new kitchen was placed so that as you walked through the front entry, you basically walked into the enter of it all. Considering the state of my kitchen most days, that's not the way I want to greet guests.

And then there are the many, many bad flips we've seen, all done in the Chip-and-Joanna style of Everything Gray, white subway tile in the kitchen/gray quartz counters, and taking out the shower and soaking tub in the master to put in one GIANT open shower. Oh, and the vinyl wood-look flooring, which is not too bad except when it's gray, like the walls, counters and tile often are. Truly, we've seen about 10 homes like this and want to shake the flippers and take away their HGTV-watching privileges. Don't they realize that buyers know these things are a trend, same as "open concept" once was, and that like most trends, not everyone is interested in them, long-term?

A flipping awful kitchen, with repainted old cabinets, subway tile and gray granite. Because Chip and JoAnna said so.

No tub for you. Gray shower for you.

And so there you have it...our new hobby, house-hunting. If we don't find anything in the next six weeks or so, we may be in this house until spring, when the market picks back up. Of course I can find lots and lots of houses I'd love about 200K above our price point, but isn't that always the way? Maybe I'd better start playing the Mega Millions lotto. 







5 comments:

  1. My husband wants a move-in ready house but I much prefer one in need of cosmetics for these very reasons. What are the odds that the sellers' tastes are ours as well? Better to buy good bones and update as we like.

    Especially sad to see this 'updating' with old houses. The decor in our house hadn't been touched since it was built in 1932; bakelite pulls on cabinets, subway tile (the real deal!) in the bathroom, hex tiles on bathroom floor, redwood floor in kitchen, oak floor in rest of house. I shudder to think what will happen to it when we eventually sell - so I try not to.

    Good luck! I'm planning a trip to OR and WA in a month or so for recon, trying to figure out where we might like to live. South of Eugene and east of the Cascades is out, but that still leaves a lot to consider.

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    1. There are a lot of lovely places for you to choose from within those parameters! Your current home sounds wonderful though, and since it's a sellers' market I hope someone finds you who loves it just as it is when you do sell it. I hate to see those lovely original features taken out and low-priced/wrong style crap put in. It breaks my heart. Everyone raves about Silverton, Oregon (too far north for hubby's work for us, sadly) if you like historic homes and downtowns, so if you get the chance maybe check it out.

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  2. So our plans have changed. We sold our house in Ohio, but my husband wanted to purchase a condo here in case AZ didn't work out. We will store our stuff in the condo while we take an extended vacation out west.

    I feel your pain about the HGTV thing. It hurt us when we were trying to sell our home because it wasn't on trend, and turned us off when we were looking to buy.

    The condo we bought has great bones and needs cosmetic updating only. I am thrilled because I can put my own stamp on it. I'll keep it neutral and classic in case we do decide to sell. I don't like grey and don't like stainless steel. I prefer more warmth. And I definitely need a soaking tub!

    I also discovered that when you buy a home, you buy a neighborhood. We found some great homes in places we wouldn't want to live.

    Of course if money was no object, finding a home would be easy. But we are both retired, on a limited budget and don't want to be "house poor". We want to do a lot of travelling, especially out west before we get too old.

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  3. BTW, are the California wildfires affecting the area where you used to live?

    I just read about wildfires tearing across Europe, even in Sweden, Norway and Siberia! The report says global warming is more pronounced in the arctic than elsewhere.

    This should put to rest any doubt that climate change is real.

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    1. Agree completely, Molly. How anyone could think all these fires are part of a "normal" climate is beyond reason. Congrats on selling your home and buying the condo; you will have a lot of fun putting your stamp on it. And as for your vacation out west, that is going to be a grand adventure! None of the large fires in CA are near where we used to live, but there have been several smaller fires right around there. Really the whole state is like a brush fire time bomb, with drought affecting so many areas. Horrifying to see.

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