Beautifying Your Bathroom for Buyers

September 26th, 2009


The bathroom is one space in your house that everyone spends a good portion of their day and one of the spaces that prospective buyers will respond well to if they find it inviting. Depending on the condition of the bathrooms in your house, there are a variety of treatments that you can apply to boost up its charisma.

First, look at the condition of your counters and cabinets. If your counter tops are worn, consider replacing them; there are many inexpensive options for replacement counters. If the laminate counter tops are in poor condition and you can’t afford to have them replaced, consider painting them. There are some good products for this purpose and will look much better than a worn counter surface. Likewise, if your cabinet doors are looking dated or discolored they can be refinished or refaced. If your bathroom just has a vanity, then shop around to see if just replacing that is in your budget.

Next, paint your bathroom. Make sure you fill any holes in the walls and seal any seams around the bath, shower, or sink with fresh silicone caulking first. A fresh coat of paint brightens up the room, even if you paint it the same color as before. Remember to paint the ceiling as well; freshly painted ceilings look clean and reflect the light in a small room better. Refrain from getting too adventurous with stenciled or wallpaper borders; a new owner will likely have different tastes than you.

In addition, baskets or bins that can go in the cupboards to organize bathroom items will help keep the room organized. When your house is being shown, all personal items should be off the counter tops and toilet tank so it is imperative that there is ample room for these items to be stored away.

Now, to complete the fresh new look, purchase mats or rugs, counter top accessories, and a shower curtain in colors that accent the colors in your bathroom. Consider having an extra mat or rug to put down for when your house is being shown so that it looks fresh and unused. A vase on the counter top with fresh or silk flowers makes the room more inviting as well. Finally, fill a basket with rolled guest towels and fancy soaps or lotions to place on the counter top to give your bathroom a luxurious spa atmosphere that any prospective buyer would find inviting.

Lord Byron – The Greatest Romantic of All Time?

September 25th, 2009


Lord Bryon, at this stage of the game, more myth than man, was the first of the rock and roll stars, a maverick and an original. His life is like a cartoon, everything appears larger than life, he lived it by his own set of rules, no matter to the consequences. He was born in 1788 into the ying-yang relationship of Captain Mad Jack Byron and Catherine Gordon, heiress of Gight in Aberdeenshire and descendant of King James I. Mad Jack bolted soon after the birth of George Gordon, Catherine took the infant back to her native Aberdeenshire whereupon the death of his fairytale sounding great uncle The Wicked Fifth Baron Byron, the young George Gordon became the Sixth Baron Byron. As Lord Byron, he inherited the Newstead Abbey estate in Nottinghamshire, England. He was schooled at Aberdeen Grammar School, Harrow and Trinity College, Cambridge.

On the surface, Byron’s childhood would indeed appear blessed, but of course it had it’s problems, indeed it had some very dark problems. He was the product of quite the maniacal home life, his father wanting nothing to do with him and his mother been partial to the more than frequent hysterical episode; he was born with a club foot and this attached to problems with his weight led to self esteem issues; sinisterly there are also many accounts of his sexual activities with his governess while still a child, indeed she was fired from the position amidst accusations of beating Byron. In Harrow, he became quite the tearaway, perhaps his mischievousness stemming from his feelings of inferiority due to his lameness and the fact that although he had a title he was still dreadfully poor in comparison to most of his schoolmates.

However, although far from the model student, he eventually rose to prominence with his dramatic Speech Day recitations. Harrow, is where Byron began to become Byron. After finishing at Harrow, Byron entered Cambridge University in 1805 where he immersed himself in the extra-circular activities of wild parties and love affairs. However, 1806 saw the publication of his first volume of poems, Fugitive Pieces; but it wasn’t well received and Byron recalled as many copies as he possibly could and had them destroyed. He persevered though and continued to publish material, releasing Poems on Various Occasions (1807) and Hours of Idleness (1807) and English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (1808), the latter was a sell-out success. Upon leaving Cambridge, it appeared that Bryon may have put his wild past behind him, he moved back to Newstead Abbey, began to write in isolation and even took up his seat at the House of Lords. The latter endeavour went horribly wrong, nobody accepted him at the Lords, dragging up all his insecurities once again, he affirmed that he would define himself in the world by his own terms.

He rode away from England, quite literally, travelling on horseback across Spain and Portugal, boarded a frigate and crossed the Mediterranean, landing in Greece by way of Albania. In Albania, he fell into company of the notorious brigand turned ruler Ali Pasha, together they travelled in some splendour. Byron spent almost two years living the high life on the Continent, scribbling constantly, he returned to England in July 1811, just two weeks before the death of his mother. In the spring of 1812, his account of his travels on the Continent, Childe Harold was published and sold well. Byron was beginning to achieve the fame that he so long coveted, in addition his sale of the Newstead Abbey estate made him a wealthy bachelor, women of high society soon came flocking. One of whom was the married Lady Caroline Lamb, their tempestuous affair shocked London society, however Byron soon tired of the relationship and abandoned any further trysts, leaving Caroline broken-hearted. Devastated, Caroline did not go gently, she wrote letter after letter imploring the cruel Byron to take her back, he refused, she tracked him down, he refused, she went a tad delirious burning effigies of her erstwhile lover along with his letters. Byron had moved on to fresher pastures, bedding a friend of Caroline’s, Lady Jane Oxford and then moving swiftly on to a cousin of Caroline’s, Anne Isabella Milbanke.

This latter affair with Annabella as Byron called her, was to have some longevity, in fact he married her and they had a daughter Augusta Ada, and with that they separated a month later. It was a strange relationship, mostly something of a mystery, they appeared very much in love but then split up very abruptly. There were financial woes, indeed creditors were coming a knocking and arrest seemed imminent. There also exists the lingering rumour that Byron had married to cover up an incestuous relationship he was conducting with his half-sister Augusta that had produced a child but this has never being confirmed. In any case, many in the London high society set cut off both Byron and Augusta, Byron had enough and fled England once again. He traipsed through Europe, eventually shoring up at Lake Geneva where he met and hit it off with Shelley. Shelley had arrived in Switzerland with the inseparable half-sisters Mary Shelley (nee Godwin) and Jane Clairmont, known as Claire. The foursome spent four carefree months at Lake Geneva, it was also a very important time for world literature with Byron writing Prisoner of Chillon, Shelley writing Mont Blanc and Hymn to Intellectual Beauty and Mary Shelley writing Frankenstein. Bryon had paired off with Claire, who fell almost immediately pregnant, whence Byron became disillusioned once again and cast her aside. Claire returned to England with the Shelley’s, while Byron meandered around Italy.

He was to remain wandering around Italy for a year, embarking on love affairs and writing. In the summer of 1891, he began a serious relationship with the married Countess Teresa Guiccioli. The affair was to cause serious ructions between the Guiccioli and the Gamba (Teresa’s family) families, resulting in an ecclesiastical separation of the couple. Byron was in fine fettle, canoodling with the Countess, keeping a practical zoo in his Venice residence and in 1821 hanging in Pisa with a glut of Romantic poets including the Shelleys, the Hunts and Edward Trelawny. Tragically, Shelley was killed in 1822 in a boating accident, which had the result of breaking up the circle. Byron began looking around for options, in true Byron style he chose the quixotic and outlandish decision of organising an expedition to go to Greece to support the Greek war of independence against the Turks. He charted a one hundred and twenty ton ship, Hercules, arriving in Greece in August 1823. The expedition didn’t go as expected, Byron was harried for money by Greek commanders, money that he simply did not have. Tragically, it was to be Byron’s last hurrah, in April 1824 he caught a fever and died.  

Central Texas Hunting Land

September 25th, 2009


Hunting is a passion in the hill country of Central Texas. Whether you do your hunting with double-ought or a 35mm, you’ll find an enormous variety of wildlife on which to set your sights. If you’re seeking an investment or retirement property, and you love to hunt, why not look into the enormous stock of Central Texas hunting land for sale?

Central Texas, the fertile river valleys and rolling hills between the Colorado and the Brazos Rivers, was among the earliest areas in Texas to be settled. The earliest settlers of the area found rich farmland and an abundance of game for hunting and fishing. That abundance has not changed in the hundreds of years since the land was first settled. Land here is naturally stocked with every type of wild game from black bear to rabbit.

Imagine owning a little piece of that hunting heaven for yourself? Owning your own hunting ranch is not as far-fetched a dream as you might think. Depending on the area where you choose to settle, you can still buy hunting land in Central Texas for less than $5,000 an acre, and full working ranches for as little as $150,000. Have you always dreamed of riding the fence line or hunting on your own land? Today’s prices make that an affordable dream.

If you’re interested in hunting land for sale as an investment, this is the right time to buy, according to many investment counselors. The prices on large tracts of land are still reasonable enough to buy parcels of 1,000 acres or more that can be subdivided into smaller parcels or kept whole.

The interest in buying smaller tracts of hunting land is rising as baby boomers start retiring to the beautiful climate and more beautiful scenery in central Texas, and as the interest rises, so do the prices on smaller tracts of 6-20 acres of hunting, farming and ranch land. The investment potential of Central Texas hunting land for sale is being compared to the investment potential of Florida land thirty years ago.

The circumstances are similar: Central Texas is just entering an era of enormous and rapid expansion. Population in and around the urban areas of Central Texas has more than doubled in the past decade. As the urban metropolitan areas are built out, the land that surrounds them will rise in value, often with minimal investment from the land owner. As infrastructure is built; access roads, airports, transportation centers and commercial centers, the land that becomes more easily accessible will also increase in value.

But what if you are seeking the land for its beauty and remoteness? You’ll find plenty of Central Texas hunting land for sale in rural areas that are still untouched by developers. A great deal of this land is bordered and bounded by government and publicly owned land that is marked for preservation, making it easier to preserve your own land in its pristine natural state.

If your intent is to buy this land for income, you’ll find a ready market for hunting lodges and land that is leased for hunting by the day, week, month, season and even year. Hunting ranches are very viable income-producing properties that require little management and have high earning potential.

Whatever your interest in Central Texas investment, whether it be personal or business, you’re bound to find hunting land that meets your needs. Financing for large portions of acreage is easily available, as is funding for development. Land for sale here include lots of thousands of acres for real estate development or hunting lands right down to small 6-10 acre hunting lots for your own personal use and pleasure.

The time to buy is now, though. According to Texas A&M, Texas land has become a very attractive lure for foreign investors seeking to buy in the U.S. The low prices and dropping value of the US dollar are encouraging those foreign investors to buy up large parcels of land for development and investment purposes.

As the land is developed, and demand increases, the prices for land will inevitably rise. West Texas is already seeing the effects of the increased demands; prices for West Texas acreage increased over 15% in just one year, from 2005 to 2006.

If you’re looking for the perfect retirement or investment property, or the ideal place to raise your family, take a look at Central Texas hunting land for sale to see all that it has to offer you.