Posts Tagged ‘Wildwood’

Free as a Bird

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

Remember as a kid when an adult would tell you to enjoy life now because plenty of responsibility would be on your shoulders in the future? 

In those days, few of us youngsters could fathom the upcoming burden of a job, mortgages, taxes, maintaining a vehicle, marriage, relationships, health care, or raising kids.  Jeez, I thought the adults were talking about high school or maybe college being tough, not life itself.

Now as baby boomers in our 50s and 60s, we look back to those innocent days of the 1950′s almost with envy.  Back then, life almost was like Leave it to Beaver or Ozzie & Harriet.  We had one black and white television, five channels, one car, and Mom was always home to greet you with cookies and milk when returning from school.  The call to the dinner table was a chorus of “Dad’s home” from us kids.

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At times, I’m sure we all long for those carefree days.  Catching lightning bugs, playing tag or hide and seek, walking barefoot through a meadow, climbing a tree, playing kick ball or dodgeball, laying in the grass looking at the clouds or night time stars.

As you progressed to being a teenager, new priorities emerged.  Your first date, your first kiss.  Your worries about hair, clothes, even pimples.  At the time, it was so important.  Tomorrow was always the biggest day of your life.

Now we look back and smile.  “That was nothing”, we think.  But, as full grown adults we still do get caught in the same frame of mind where we “sweat the little things”.

Maybe we should take a clue from the birds.  They take care of getting food, shelter, and security.  And they cheerily sing all day long as they accomplish those tasks.

- Mountain Man

Second Homes

Thursday, January 17th, 2008

At one time or another, just about everyone in our country dreams about owning a second home.  For many it is just that – a dream – but for others it becomes a reality through hard work and frugality.

We realized our dream of a second home in the autumn of 2006.  We fell in love with Pocahontas County, West Virginia during a late summer vacation.  On the fifth and final day of our stay, we decided to visit a realtor to look at vacant properties.  Two days later, back in New Jersey, we bid on and had an accepted offer for 19 acres.

We went to closing on October 4, and our custom built, 2300 square foot log cabin was completed on April 4, 2007.  It was done in a remarkable 6 months.

We make the 404 mile trip together once a month.  Many months, I go alone another time to cut trees, clear brush, gravel our roads, etc.

There are many parallels between our second home in WV and the second homes that we sell here in the Wildwood area of the southern New Jersey shore.  But the biggest similarity is “getting out of your daily routine”.

At our cabin, we never turn on the television unless it’s been raining for a while.  We have a library of a hundred books and 575 National Geographic magazines, including every issue since 1956.  I read a half dozen NG’s every time I’m there, so it should take me at least eight years to finish.  I relish that thought.

We take walks down the many old logging roads on our property.  We built a corn feeder that holds 50 pounds of corn at a time.  Our dinner guests include 6 whitetail deer, 4 grey squirrels, 1 red squirrel, 2 chipmunks, a half dozen bluejays and a dozen crows.  We spend hours everyday sitting at our kitchen table watching them chow down just 25 feet away.

We also built a bird feeder that holds 20 pounds of feed and hangs 14 feet in the air (so it’s bear-proof).  Our friends there include nuthatches, black-capped chickadees, bluejays, tufted titmice, hairy woodpeckers, juncos, white-throat sparrows, and more.  This bird feeder is in close proximity to the corn feeder, so sitting at our kitchen table often offers a view of so much wildlife that we feel like we’re in a Disney movie.

My point?  Breaking out of your daily routine re-invigorates you.  It clears your mind of clutter, gives you a renewed perspective on life.  It washes away your worries, puts the bounce back into your step.

The Wildwoods offer wide sandy beaches, a world class boardwalk that is 38 blocks long, and countless opportunities to go boating or fishing.  There’s restaurants, shopping, a great free county zoo, and a dozen golf courses.  You can bike, hike, comb the beach for seashells, or go bird watching. 

West Virginia is our sanctuary, our private corner of the world.  Don’t you deserve one, too?

- Mountain Man

Our Cabin

To find out more about property in Cape May County, NJ, visit our website at http://www.JewellRealEstateAgency.com

Doom and Gloom

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

Let’s face it, some people just love to bring bad news.  We all had our first experience with this type of individual when we were still kids.  They were the brats that let you know that your fly was down, your cat was up a tree, your bicycle had a flat tire, etc, and they seemed to thoroughly enjoy conveying that bad news.

As adults, those grown up brats are called “Doom and Gloom” people.  Same modus operandi; your car is being recalled, your hair’s thinning out, your belly’s getting bigger, your stocks are taking a dive.  They regale in seeing you squirm, feel embarrassed or downright depressed.

Unfortunately for us as realtors, we seem to attract an excessive amount of doom and gloomers.  They started surfacing in late 2004, letting us know that the real estate market was just a boom and a big bust was to follow.  They were partly right, but their smugness put an ugliness to their message.

Now that the overpriced market has dropped prices to more reasonable levels, the doom and gloomers have picked up on the mortgage foreclosure aspect of real estate.  That’s their new whipping boy at the company coffee pot.

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Three recent phone calls from clients in the Philadelphia area and North Jersey suburbs had a familiar ring.  “I hear there’s 1500 condos being foreclosed on in Wildwood.” Another said 2000, and the other claimed 2200.  Their source is always, “Somebody said …” or “I heard it from a reliable source”.

Here’s the facts.  Our island consists of the vacation destinations of Wildwood, North Wildwood, West Wildwood, Wildwood Crest, and Diamond Beach.  In those communities, as of today (Jan 16, 2008), there are 1147 condominiums and townhomes for sale.  Of those, nine are bank owned, meaning they’ve already been foreclosed on.  In addition, the county sheriff’s website lists 16 more properties currently in the foreclosure process.  So these five beachside towns have a whopping 25 foreclosures.  Not 1500, not 2000, certainly not 2200. 

So what makes some folks so intent on repeating such blatantly false numbers to anyone who will listen?  The result of their tattling is that the word soon gets out that the Wildwoods are crumbling.  “It’ll become a ghost town”, they say.

The truth is that they aren’t making anymore seashore or beachfront.  It’s in demand.  Baby boomers have worked hard all their lives and know they want to enjoy the fruits of their labors.  What better way than a home at the shore.

Our real estate market is 95% second homes.  They are mostly folks who own their own business or have a high paying corporate job.  They can afford to buy a $400,000 to $700,000 vacation home.  They don’t need sub-prime loans, they don’t need interest only loans. 

New Jersey holds the distinction of having the most millionaires – 7.12% of households, and that doesn’t count equity in their primary home.  That’s a lot of affluence, and a lot of them find their way to our island.

So to the doom and gloomers:  The real estate market here is just fine, thank you!  By the way, is that your real hair color?

- Mountain Man

The Voice

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

Who do you think has the most powerful voice in the world?  You know, the one who most influences people’s opinions. 

It’s not George Bush.  It’s not some presidential candidate or Hollywood star, professional athlete or music idol.  It’s not even the Pope or the Dalai Lama or Bill Gates. 

It’s the MEDIA.  Yes, the media decides what is important and what isn’t.  Who’s good and who’s evil, what is right and what is wrong.  It sways opinion, builds concensus.  It can give someone their 15 minutes of fame or tear down and destroy a person.  Consider how the media has influenced your perception of Anita Bryant, Jimmy the Greek, Vietnam, Patty Hearst, Thomas Eagleton, Walter Mondale, Muhammed Ali, Richard Nixon, hippies, the World Trade Center bombing, John Dean, Mel Gibson, Bill and Hillary Clinton, Paris Hilton, and Hurricane Katrina.  And …, the real estate market.

The real estate market was the darling of the media from 2001 to 2005.  “Buy, buy, buy”, they said, and people did.  But then that story got old and tired.  Time for a new slant.  “There’s gonna be a bust” became the new story.  Folks backed off from the real estate market, choosing instead to sit on the fence to see what happens.  Actually, most were just waiting for the media to say it’s okay to buy property again.  The media hasn’t yet bestowed its blessing on that notion.

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In the second half of 2007, our real estate agency noticed a decided upturn of business in our Cape May County, New Jersey area.  Buyers were coming back.  It seemed to be people mostly in their 50′s and 60′s who came to the realization “What am I waiting for?  I’m not getting any younger”.  If they wanted their piece of the pie at the Jersey shore, now was the time.

 The trend continues here in early 2008, making us wonder when the media will catch on.  Interest rates are under 6%, there is plenty of inventory to choose from, and prices are down about $100,000 from 2004.  To the opportunist, the conditions are perfect to get a good deal.

To those unwittingly hog-tied by the media, they’ll continue to sit on the sidelines.  But for folks who have worked hard all their lives while dreaming about owning a condominium or house at the shore, their time is now!

- Mountain Man

To read more about the real estate market in Cape May County, New Jersey go to our website at http://www.JewellRealEstateAgency.com and click on “Newsletters”.  You’ll find years worth of our Newsletters, full of our thoughts and observations.