Tag Archives: Mt Kisco Real Estate
BoomTown earns Google Partner status | Mt Kisco Real Estate
BoomTown is set to receive special training and support from Google that it says will help it improve the marketing services that it offers agents.
The customer relationship management (CRM) system and marketing services provider has achieved certified Google Partner status in search advertising, giving it exclusive access to private Google events, Google beta programs, marketing support and a Google Partner profile page, the company said.
“BoomTown is proud to be part of the Google Partner program, and thrilled to offer this heightened level of service to our clients,” said Rivers Pearce, director of inbound marketing at BoomTown, in a statement. “We work diligently to exceed client expectations, and demonstrate their PPC dollars are expertly managed.
This partnership enables us to continue maintaining Google’s high standards while enjoying the benefits and continued learning provided in the partner program.”
– See more at: http://www.inman.com/2013/12/02/boomtown-earns-google-partner-status/#sthash.mHtJldSo.dpuf
Record $1.6 Billion Loan Approved To Build New Tappan Zee Bridge | Mt Kisco NY Homes
The Department of Transportation has approved a record loan of up to $1.6 billion for construction of a new Tappan Zee Bridge, Congresswoman Nita Lowey announced in a press release today.
The largest-ever loan is part of the DOT’s Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (TIFIA) program.
“This is a huge milestone for the construction of a New Tappan Zee Bridge, a critical link in our region’s infrastructure system and lifeline for commuters and businesses,” Lowey said in the release. “I am excited that the DOT has approved the largest ever TIFIA loan for a transportation project and that the work on a new bridge can continue to move forward.
“The construction will continue to create jobs and help New York’s economy grow. I was very pleased to work closely with Gov. Cuomo and our federal delegation throughout this long process to bring a new Tappan Zee Bridge to the Lower Hudson Valley.”
http://mtkisco.dailyvoice.com/news/record-16-billion-loan-approved-build-new-tappan-zee-bridge
The 10 Most Annoying Types of People on Facebook | Mt Kisco Realtor
Social media amplifies humanity.
Have you ever been to a barbecue and had to listen to someone prattle on about themselves for hours? Attended a cocktail party and had the most intriguing conversation with a tall dark stranger? Been invited to a friends place and viewed so many baby photos that you felt compelled to have a vasectomy!
Facebook, Twitter and social media take those conversations and multiply it via the crowd. Facebook is insights, conversations and news on steroids.
It is a reflection of what makes us human, except that it is visible to billions of people. We are different, fun and sometimes boring. It is a kaleidoscope of emotions, events and the bizarre. That’s why we tune into Facebook. Its a voyeur’s paradise. Never dull and often entertaining.
So what entices us to reveal our lives online? Is it narcissism, vanity or just wanting to get something off our chest. Annoyance is noticed and often shared.
Here are the results of a fun survey to find the 10 most annoying types of people on Facebook.
Infographic source: Lovemyvouchers.co.uk
Who and what annoys you on Facebook?
Read more at http://www.jeffbullas.com/2013/10/15/the-10-most-annoying-types-of-people-on-facebook/#88WiemX4jwB425JI.99
Mt. Kisco’s Rocky Hills Garden Open For Viewing | Mt Kisco Real Estate
The Garden Conservancy’s new “Open Days” program will include Rocky Hills — The Mt. Kisco garden of William and Henriette Suhr.
The garden will be open from noon to 4 p.m. Oct. 19. for the event. Rocky Hills, 95 Old Roaring Brook Road in Mt. Kisco, was started about 50 years ago and planting continues to this day. It features mature specimens of black walnut and ash, complemented by recent additions of weeping beech, dawn redwood, stewartia, dogwood and an impressive collection of magnolia and conifers.
Tree peonies and an extensive planting of rhododendrons and azaleas compete for attention with the carpet of bulbs throughout the 13 acres.
One can stroll along the hillside meadow and explore the ever-expanding rock garden, as well as the hills and terraces, walls and paths, fern woodlands, self-sown primula and natural brook that serves as the heart of the garden.
Working in partnership with individual garden owners, as well as public and private organizations, the conservancy provides horticultural, technical, management, and financial expertise to sustain these fragile treasures. It helps ensure long-term stewardship of these natural assets, which are essential to the aesthetic and cultural life of our communities. For more information, click here.
http://mtkisco.dailyvoice.com/lifestyle/mt-kiscos-rocky-hills-garden-open-viewing
Fireplace cooking may be a lost skill, but it’s one you can regain with a little practice | Mt Kisco Homes
Except for Scouts toasting marshmallows or hotdogs on a stick over a camp fire, the skills of open fire cooking that fed our forebears for millennia are largely forgotten. The wrought iron tools and cast-iron utensils that baked many a venison stew, harbor-pollack chowder, or mess of ham and beans are relegated to antique shops. But much of the terminology lives on in the names of items still found on the kitchen shelves of today, and much of the old ironware is still cast — more for its curio value than for use. In the frantic hassle that passes for modern life, it is good on a chilly fall evening to light a grate fire and take the time to try your hand at fireplace cooking the way great-great-great-grandmother did. If the spit-roasted haunch turns out cold in the middle and the Yorkshire pudding burns you can always send out for a pizza or get some fish sticks out of the freezer and pop them into the microwave.
Any fireplace will happily cook while it heats — persuading your wood to do double duty. Refer to pellet stove guide for it’s installation. You can wrap sweet corn, potatoes, fresh-ca’ught trout, and apples in tinfoil and bury it in the ash bank just as you would in a camp fire. But there’s no timer or automatic thermostat to regulate a live fire for more complex recipes.
It takes constant attention to bake bread in a Dutch oven that is sitting in coals, with more coals shoveled into its dished top so the loaf cooks through and browns on top but doesn’t come out raw in the middle and burnt to a char on the bottom. To maintain a simmer in the stew pot which is hanging by its bail from the trammel hook, the crane must be moved back and forth and the pot adjusted up and down while hot coals are continually moved around with a scuttle and ash rake.
You can have a crane that fits your fireplace wrought by a blacksmith or welded by a metal-working job shop. You can still find small stamped-steel coal scuttles for sale, but you’ll have to fashion your own rake; they haven’t been manufactured for a hundred years and more. Some companies like Skilled Welding can make something simular to a rake as a special request but they can be expensive. You can make your own by brazing a 1/4″ x 2″ x 4″ plate of iron or ribbon steel to a handle made from a 2′ steel rod with a loop fashioned at the end to hang it by. However, a small hand hoe from the garden will do fine so long as you don’t let the wooden handle ignite.
Be sure to have on hand a more than ample supply of cooking wood: quarter and eighth splits of extra-well-dried, dense hardwood sticks for a long fire and a long-lived coal bed, plus plenty of shavings, splinters, and small kindling-size splits to liven the fire quickly if the biscuits threaten to fall. Best is a mixture of quick-igniting and hot-burning softwoods such as pine, and long-burning hardwoods such as hickory or oak.
Open the windows so you don’t roast yourself along with supper, and perk up a banked or low, heating-type, hardwood-log fire until it’s brisk enough to maintain a deep bed of live coals. For roasting on a spit, maintain a skirt of live coals under the burning logs so you can keep raking them out and under the roast. For frying on a gridiron or skillet, simmering beans in a footed pot, or baking in a Dutch oven, you’ll also want to rake coals out onto the hearth and keep them replenished.
Roast Haunch of Beef and Yorkshire Pudding
You will need a spit: a revolving horizontal wrought iron rod with a pair of sliding meat keepers that is rigged to be raised and lowered over the fire or fixed in place so you must continually replenish a coal bed beneath it. The motorized spits sold for charcoal grills are ready-made for the use, though you can have one made of wrought iron to the old patterns by a blacksmith.
Skewer a whole beef loin or rack of prime rib — bone in — and set in front of a hot fire with a good skirt of glowing coals. Keep the coal bed red. Place a long, narrow pan underneath to catch drippings or the fat in the roast will melt, fall into the coals, catch fire, and char the roast. Worse, some will vaporize and rise up the flue with smoke, to accumulate and increase danger of a flue fire. Plus, your hearth will develop a permanent grease spot. Turn the spit frequently and cook the meat to taste. (I cheat and use a meat thermometer, cooking until it shows 130°F — rare, but not still mooing, inside.) When the roast is nearly done, rake coals out around the pan to cook the Yorkshire pudding. When grease is sizzling brightly, add batter and cook until it rises and browns on top. Turn the pan occasionally to even out the cooking. If you have a reflector, place it in front of the meat and the pudding pan if you like. It will distribute the heat and reduce need for turning.
Read more: http://www.motherearthnews.com/print.aspx?id={5BE839CB-8DB5-42D1-8031-27D76CA7794D}#ixzz2hnUx7syS
California home sales to rise with inventory in 2014 | Mt Kisco Real Estate
After declining this year, home sales in California will rise in 2014 along with inventory, according to a forecast released today from the California Association of Realtors.
The trade group anticipates existing, single-family home sales in the Golden State will rise 3.2 percent next year, to 444,000, after a 2.1 percent decrease this year. California’s median home price is set to rise 28 percent this year, to $408,600, and is expected to increase an additional 6 percent next year to $432,800.
“We’ve seen a marked improvement in housing market conditions in a year with the distressed market shrinking from 1 in 3 sales a year ago to less than 1 in 5 in recent months, thanks primarily to sharp gains in home prices,” said CAR Vice President and Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young in a statement.
“As the market continues to improve, more previously underwater homeowners will look toward selling, making housing inventory less scarce in 2014. As a result of these factors, we’ll see home price increases moderate from the double-digit increases we saw for much of this year to mid-single digits in most of the state.”
“The wildcards for 2014 include federal, fiscal, monetary and housing policies — such as the mortgage interest deduction and mortgage finance reform — as well as housing supply and the actions of the Federal Reserve, which will ensure a higher rate environment,” she added.
The trade group projects 30-year fixed mortgage interest rates to rise to an average 5.3 percent in 2014.
– See more at: http://www.inman.com/wire/california-home-sales-to-rise-with-inventory-in-2014/#sthash.6wBKBOmo.dpuf
Mount Kisco To Auction Surplus Abandoned Boats | Mt Kisco Homes
Mount Kisco is holding a public auction for surplus abandoned boats later this month.
The Village of Mount Kisco will open sealed bids at 10 a.m. Oct. 25 at the Frank J. DiMicco, Sr. Board Room in the Mount Kisco Village Hall, according to a notice from the village. The auction will include “surplus abandoned boats from Byram Lake,” according to the notice. Marinas are exclusive recreational facilities built to provide docking, loading and other provisions needed for water transport. Individuals as well as a group of people own them. They may be constructed in inland streams, lakes or other bodies of water. Boating marinas may be seasonal or permanent. Seasonal marinas are usually simple structures built over the water as small docks, boat hoist, ramps or rafts that can accommodate water vehicles. These temporary structures are removed once the boating season is over. Seasonal marinas are found in places that have mostly pleasant weather but do experience inclement weather as well. Several marinas located on the northern five lakes and rivers like St. Lawrence and the upper reaches of the Mississippi are seasonal. Permanent marinas may be wharves, docks, jetties and pier. They accommodate water vehicles throughout the year. Southern water bodies of the United State have permanent marinas. A single boating marina can provide docking for about 60-75 vehicles. Each vehicle occupies a berth. Charges are paid according to the number of hours occupied. Besides renting charges, there can be additional fees for storage, etc. You can check over here about merritt products.
Facilities available in marinas include gas stations, pump houses, restaurants, bars and restrooms. Other weather-related marine supplies, clothes, special gear, etc. are also available. In addition, marinas provide mechanics and other repair necessities. Marinas are found everywhere in the United States. However, the marina at Monte Carlo is considered one of the most luxurious and also the most expensive in the world. Washington, California, Oregon and Florida also boast of world-famous marinas that dot their beaches. Rents vary largely depending on the popularity of the marina. Marinas charge their tenants on a per-meter basis, i.e. according to the number of meters the boat occupies when docked. Most marinas give discounts for groups and seasonal renters. Boats may be inspected at the Village’s Department of Public Works at 43 Columbus Ave. in Mount Kisco, according to the release.
If you like offshore sport fishing and boating then you’ve most likely seen Lowrance electronic products. They are actually a leader in manufacturing GPS, Sonar, depth finders, chartplotters and fishfinders. Lowrance marine has most definitely become one of the best recognized brands in marine electronics among commercial fishermen and boating enthusiasts of all types because of the wide selection of devices they supply.
Having lived for years around the Jersey Shore, I have spent many hours on the ocean and bays. In those times, locating fish was more chance than skill on any day. However these days that has all changed.
If you enjoy fishing, you would be interested in Lowrance marine fish finders. They are equipped with dual frequency sonar, 480 X 480 resolution, up to 2500 feet depth penetration, and other advanced capabilities. Fish Finders are also available in the large screen monochrome monitors. Lets face it, if you wish to “hook” the bigger ones, you have to be able to find them first. The new fishfinder and combo units do a great job. The popular fishing and boating kits can be found in quite a number of sizes, prices and colors matching distinctive requirements. These days you will see fishfinders and combo units on anything from huge fishing trawlers to small bass boats.
What I really enjoy when sailing even in the bays and rivers is the Marine GPS. Marine GPS is easily one of the most common GPS types and Lowrance Marine GPS is at the top of the list. The Lowrance GPS antenna is built-in on most of the GPS enabled systems so installation and use is effortless. Many a time I had to offer up excuses for being late for dinner because I sailed too far. My kids cannot get away with that today because they always know precisely where they are. Those interested in further information, including a listing of the boats, are asked to email Joe Cerretani at jcerretani@mountkisco.org.
“All boats will be sold ‘as is,’ with absolutely no implied or stated warranties or guarantees whatsoever,” representatives said in the notice. “Village management reserves the right to award the bid(s) to the highest responsible bidder(s). Bid forms are now available in the Manager’s Office at Village Hall.”
http://mtkisco.dailyvoice.com/events/mount-kisco-auction-surplus-abandoned-boats
Everyone agrees: Even higher rates won’t impact affordability | Mt Kisco Real Estate
A panel of esteemed housing experts speaking at the ABS East 2013 conference underway in Miami disagreed on Robert Shiller’s recent call that U.S. housing is in a bubble.
Moderator Howard Esaki, managing director at Standard & Poor’s, who himself puts out regular morning emails encapsulating finance news, played a video on Bloomberg of Shiller talking of a housing bubble.
Shiller co-developed the S&P/Case-Shiller Composite-10 Home Price Index and actually said housing was looking bubbly. His words were later moderated in a column in the New York Times.
The panel elaborated on whether or not U.S. housing is actually in a bubble. No one believes it is.
Mark Fleming, chief economist of CoreLogic, said price appreciation is slowing down, and is only correcting for an overshoot in price collapse. He didn’t think it would return to the inflated pricing before the housing bust.
“We are certainly not in a housing bubble,” said Laurie Goodman who heads up a housing thinktank at the Urban Institute. Both Goodman and Fleming said housing could absorb higher interest rates and remain attractive. Goodman posited that even with a 6% interest rate, affordability would remain at 2000-2003 levels, which were pretty stable compared to 2006-2007.
“I don’t see interest rates going to 6% any time soon,” she added.
Esaki then addressed the crowd at ABS East, where attendance is at a record high (3,500+) with an estimated 1,000 investors, according to data released by organizer Information Management Network.
Esaki asked for a show of hands: “Do you think there is a housing bubble?”
Not a single hand went up.
Later an audience member pointed out that “no one raised their hand, so maybe we are.” The devil’s advocate then sat back down and the panel moved on to talk about the slim chance of near-term GSE reform.
http://www.housingwire.com/articles/27270-abs-east-panel-says-shiller-wrong-on-housing-bubble-call
Tornado Watch In Effect For Westchester Monday | Mt Kisco Real Estate
The National Weather service has issued a tornado watch for Westchester through 5 p.m. Monday.
A tornado watch means conditions are favorable for severe thunderstorms to form, but it also means that a few storms may be capable of producing a tornado, according to the National Weather Service. A tornado warning is the ultimate in severe warnings and means that a tornado is either occurring or imminent based on radar.
http://mtkisco.dailyvoice.com/news/tornado-watch-effect-westchester-monday