Archive for May, 2009

A Little Summer Fun!

Kathy Riggs May 31st, 2009

Welcome back to my blog about news affecting Kinston real estate. We have taken a long journey with the buyer from getting pre-approved to getting to the closing table. And last week, we took a break to remember Memorial Day.
Without all of our veterans, the American dream of homeownership would never be a reality.
Now that Memorial Day weekend has passed, the economic season of summer is in full swing. Although it is three weeks until summer is officially here, the warm days, the traffic headed to the coast and the bright colors in all the stores say summer is here!
Summertime is calling me…this week it has called me to Emerald Isle, where I’m taking a break from the office. But technology allows me to work from anywhere. That’s one of the great things about real estate. You can take your work with you!
So if you are traveling along through my blog, we are just about ready to begin the seller’s journey. Regardless of what the news media is saying…this is a great time to sell a house. First time buyers can take advantage of the $8,000 tax credit and interest rates are low. Buyers have every reason to be looking. If you have been thinking of selling, why are you waiting?
The first thing you should do before selling a house is to get yourself mentally prepared. When your house goes on the market, it is no longer a “home”, it is a product and it has to compete. Think about that one ahile, and we’ll start focusing on making that product the best on the market…Meanwhile, I have some serious R&R to complete…the next post, we’ll be back to business.

Remembering Memorial Day

Kathy Riggs May 24th, 2009

Well, we have completed our journey to the closing table as traveled by the buyer and before we begin the walk in the seller’s shoes I must use this space to remember what has almost become a forgotten holiday.
I needed a reservation to get a spot on US 70 when I left the office Friday afternoon as scores of vans, SUV’s and cars were in a race to get to North Carolina’s beautiful coastline. Sometimes I wonder if Emerald Isle will become so loaded with people that it might sink into the ocean. But, this was a three-day weekend, the official start of summer! How smart of Congress in 1971 to move Memorial Day to the last Monday in May, so we can celebrate it with gusto – cookouts, beach trips, sales. Did you buy some new furniture this weekend? There were great Memorial Day sales. Buy it on Saturday and have Sunday and Monday to throw out the old and bring in the new…how convenient that Memorial Day just follows a weekend!
But it isn’t about convenience..it’s about remembering….remembering those that gave the ultimate sacrifice in battle so we might endure freedom and pursue the American Dream.
The origin of Memorial Day predates the Civil War when groups of Confederate women decorated the graves of fallen soldiers. It was proclaimed by General John Logan, national commander of The Grand Army of the Republic and first observed on May 30 of that year. After World War I, people observed the day to honor those who died in any war…one special day to remember those who sacrificed with their lives. When Congress approved the National Holiday Act of 1971 to create three-day weekends for federal employes, the significance of other affected holidays was not diminished as much as the significance of Memorial Day. Somehow the race to recreation has made us forget we set aside a day to remember those who died in America’s wars.
Three-day weekends are great, but placing a solemn holiday in this category insults the memory of those who gave their lives to preserve and protect our freedoms. It certainly wasn’t convenient for those who died.
Yes, there were scores of memorial services in towns across America this weekend, but they were brief in comparison to a weekend that heralds the start of summer. To restore the meaning of Memorial Day, we need to return it to its rightful place on our calendar, May 30. If you agree, visit www.usmemorialday.org and sign the petition to return Memorial Day to May 30.

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