Leaving the city for rural Oregon, finding nature in the country.

“Take me home, country roads, to the place, I belong…” A song we all know. A yearning some of us indeed have. This Winter, I helped make it a reality for some sweet clients of mine.

What does it mean to move from the bustle of the city to the countryside? Open spaces, wooded acres, your neighbors not a stone’s throw from your window, the quiet of nature surrounding you. The yearning for country life can be realized and sometimes deals can be had, as many rural properties remain on the market longer than their city counterparts due to location and sheer size of the properties, which often means more room to negotiate! So many people nowadays have the opportunity to work from home, so wherever home is, is a choice they get to make, not their employers. What a joy that can be if you want to live the rural lifestyle!

This Winter, my clients decided to leave the suburbs, the close neighbors, the HOA’s, the constant traffic noise, and traverse the seas of rural Oregon to find their slice of nature. What they found had been on the market for over a year, already had multiple price reductions, and had been empty and vacant for the whole time this house was on the market. So much can happen in a year’s span of time with a vacant property. We discovered that pipes had burst from the recent ice storm, trees felled, toilets no longer working, water not running hot, the list was long. But still they pursued it. The property had been pending multiple times throughout that year, but all sale failed. It went pending right when we put their house on the market. We sadly lost our first offer on it to an out-of-town buyer. But then, miraculously, right when we went pending with their home in the burbs, the out-of-town buyers backed out, and we were able to come in full force with a great offer. This nearly 4 acres, over an hour and a half from Portland was wooded, had a flowing creek running through it, the home had just enough space for the family, and was on a dead-end road. Idyllic. They were so excited we won the second time around.

What changes would they need to undergo with owning a rural property? There was much they had to study and learn with my guiding hand throughout the entire process. The two major changes were that they no longer would rely on the city for water or sewer. The septic and well had to be tested to ensure those showers would be hot and clean, the water drinkable and safe, and that the waste would go from the house to the septic tank to the leech field in a safe manner. Not only did we need to do the general inspections on the house to ensure it was stable, safe, and livable, but also on those two major systems that they, my clients, would now need to monitor and maintain. “Well water is the BEST water”, I often hear from past clients and friends that live on a property with a well. Required annual testing from a well company ensures that the water is clean from arsenic, nitrate, E. coli, and coliform. Plus having a well flow test done to ensure that the water is flowing properly from the house to the well and vice versa. Important tests!

It was a new way to live for my clients, lovers of nature, birds, and all things rural Oregon. We were able to negotiate credits for some repairs, a quick close, and they were able to get into their dream home in the middle of nowhere. Just how they liked it. They can now live out their Lord of the Rings dream in the woods with a creek. I’m oh so happy for them!

Is that yearning for a country life in you? Let’s talk shop, go out to the country and make your rural life a reality!

Gorgeous Green Hills Property

 

Congratulations to Sophie & Patrick!

I’m not sure if many of you know this about me, but my first love was actually Architecture. I studied at Iowa State University and worked as an Architect for over 6 years before making the switch to Real Estate in 2004. It really comes in handy to understand engineering and materials when I’m helping just about all of my clients. Although in this in this situation it really came in handy that I have a degree in Architecture because Sophie and Patrick were interested in finding as much land as possible, as close in as possible to build their dream home. They found a gorgeous acre in the Green Hills neighborhood! And we were able to talk shop and confirm it’s a great spot for their next big chapter. 

I’m so thrilled to be able to help them and I’d love to work with anyone you know who might need my expertise. 

 

Sheltering in Place…in Paradise

Country living has long been a dream of clients & friends Keri and Justin.

Long imagined boundless spaces for the children to play, to swing on swings, to dig in the dirt, to garden without limits, to breathe the freshest air, to live unencumbered by the vastness of Oregon beauty, all close enough to town and in a good school district, it took some real energy to find just the right love connection with a spot of land.

It’s all now no longer just a fantasy. With all of its form, fit, style, and function, this drop-dead gorgeous Stafford wine estate will entertain and sustain these wonderful hobby-farm enthusiasts for years and years.

Starting this new reality of shelter-in-place orders from the Oregon governor for the next unknown period of time is for now a wonderful excuse for this family to explore, understand, and connect with every square inch of this over 5-acre parcel.

 

CONGRATULATIONS!

~Natalie Strom, Living Room Realty

 

 

New house for an old friend

As an Oregon transplant from Indiana, it isn’t too often that I get to work with someone who has known me for almost my whole life. Sara and I met in 1978 when I was four and she was three.  She rang my doorbell and asked if there were any kids her age who lived there, and that is how our friendship began.

 

As kids, we played together after school and on weekends with our little gaggle of friends from the neighborhood.  We collected lightning bugs in jars, rode our bikes to the neighborhood pool, and played Annie and V until dark when our parents would yell through the yards for us to come home.

 

Our neighborhood HOA discouraged fences so everyone’s backyards were open and our doors were always open, too.

 

Sara’s family moved away from Indiana to Kansas when Sara was 11 or 12 and we lost touch. Without Facebook I never would have known that my old friend had moved to Portland, too.  We reconnected shortly before she and her husband relocated to Hawaii.

 

I was so excited to hear that she was back in the Portland area this winter, looking to purchase some land outside of Portland.  It wasn’t long before we found her property in Tillamook.

 

Congrats, Sara.  Sorry for the old photos, friend.  It was the 80s. :