Wednesday, September 26, 2018

The colors and changes of autumn


Autumn is in beautiful, colorful full swing here in the PNW, and as a lifelong Fall fan, I'm finally celebrating my favorite season in an area which actually experiences it. It's heaven.



There's a crisp bite to the morning air, warm afternoons which cool off quickly in the evening, and things are hopping down in the vineyard, where harvest is progressing nicely. Apples are literally everywhere -- on volunteer trees by the roadside, in the parks, and around on this property, to a point where it's a bit like summer zucchini -- you can't give them away. There are just too many. And we've had over an inch of rain this month. A full inch -- just in September! So along with fall oranges and golds, there is also a lot of green popping up again in the fields.




There is also a ripe pumpkin field about a mile down the road which stretches as far as the eye can see, so much that these orange orbs should have their own zip code.




Our property search progresses, but we've re-tooled and will now add bare land to our focus, with an eye towards building on a couple of acres. The homes we've seen here have been disappointing, I'll be honest. Oregon's property tax laws are very odd, but one rule we now understand is that any significant remodeling triggers a reassessment, which could significantly raise your taxes from that point on. The point is, it discourages people from improving their property, other than required maintenance. (Which explains all the 1970's kitchens and bathrooms.) We have seen a lot of people remodeling right before they sell, so that the buyer and not them will face the new, steeper tax bill.  (which explains all the bad house flips.) So it might just be easier to build new and face the music, being given a tax amount based on comparable properties with no improvements needed, keeping our tax bill relatively stable.

And we've also figured out that rather than go south to towns like Albany or Corvallis, we really love the area we're in. Independence has all the small-town ambiance of a Hallmark movie, with friendly people, great little shops, and a really positive community vibe. So while we won't rule anything out, we'd like to stay close to where we are now. It turns out God may have known exactly what he was doing in finding us digs 20 miles from our intended destination. And isn't that always the way?





So if we do build, it looks like we may well spend a full year in this vineyard. Being plopped down here was actually key to us realizing we did not want to live in town if at all possible. But those realizations take time. I can't imagine what we'd have done if we would have had to choose a place up here based on just one or two weekends of traveling here from California and looking. 

So my advice to anyone thinking of relocating is to take your time. Your opinions, ideas and visions of what a place holds for you will change over the months you live there. So before making a permanent investment that could be wrong for you, take the time to rent somewhere before deciding. Big changes demand good data, and some revelations only come to you once you're in-country and living in the general area you are desiring to settle down in.

There seem to be a few people reading this who are themselves relocating or thinking about it, and so I will say that despite the time it's taking to find a place, this is still one of the best decisions we've ever made, hands down. It's been an education, an adventure and most of all, a huge improvement in both our lives.

2 comments:

  1. Just returned to SLO Co from WA and OR and agree with everything you say; I can't imagine trying to relocate permanently without living there for a while and sussing the place out. My trip was just enough to get an inkling of where I *might* like to live, nothing definitive. I do know I want to be within striking distance of restaurants, theater (both live and cinema), concerts, etc. But I don't want to live in town. I'm doing that now, and I've been over it for... years.

    Interesting about remodeling and reassessment in OR. Complete opposite of CA: if you knock everything down but one wall, it avoids reassessment. Goodbye, historical buildings! (Looking at you, poor old [er... new] Motel Inn.) So sad. Seems like there must be a happy medium, somewhere.

    Good luck with your search. How exciting! All this and rain, too. WOW.

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    1. So glad your trip went well, Christina! I'm excited for you as you begin thinking about relocation. I never made the connection that all those historic buildings and the lower taxes would correlate, but I think you are correct. And I love that old buildings here are not torn down, even if it does mean residents don't remodel as much. And RIP Motel Inn -- and, I heard, the former Alex BBQ in Pismo. Time to put in some fancy lifestyle destination venues with sky high prices and lots of trendy stuff in both cases, sadly, I am sure.

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