Category Archives: Yard & Outdoors

Real Estate Secrets: What You Need To Know About Home Sales

Real Estate Secrets: What You Need To Know About Home Sales

When it comes time to sell your home, your rental property or commercial space, there is a lot to consider. Take the time to read the tips and information in this article, to get a head start on your sales project. You’ll be glad that you did.

Improving the lighting in your home will increase its appeal. Take down any dark curtains you might have up, replace light bulbs with higher wattage bulbs and clean all of the windows until they shine. A bright, well-lit home, is at the top of the buyers wish list, right behind a good location, so be sure to do all that you can to illuminate your home.

To help you sell your home, consider painting every wall a neutral color. Choose colors other than beige or white; a potential buyer walks through your home and tries to envision themselves living there. If the color of the walls are too bold or too bland, they won’t think that the house fits their personality, and they will move on.

When preparing a home to sell, consider some basic landscaping. Lush green grass and flowering plants can be put in at low cost and will greatly add to the curb appeal of the home. The increased curb appeal of your property will translate into more interest and even a higher selling price.

Appeal to tech-savvy and younger prospective home buyers by including video tours and panoramic views of your property. These need not be very lengthy or elaborate, but should load quickly and change seamlessly from one room to the next. Offering a full 360 degree view can help to highlight the most attractive areas of the house.

If you have significant experience with the real estate market, consider selling your home FSBO (For Sale By Owner). This is the industry shorthand for selling a property on your own, without the services of a real estate agent. It is not as simple as the alternative, but you can save significant money by avoiding agents’ commissions.

Have your house ready to sell by February. Most houses sell in the spring. Anyone with children are not going to want to uproot in the middle of the school year. It is advisable to have your home ready by late winter in order to beat the rush.

If you need to add plants to improve your landscaping for showing your house, do not add trees. Immature trees look scrawny, and they really do not add any appeal to the landscaping. Mature trees are too expensive. Instead, consider planting bushes, which will give your landscaping a fuller, more established look inexpensively.

When you are trying to sell your home, do not set any deadlines for yourself. If you have it in your mind that you need to sell the property by a certain date, you are more likely to entertain offers that are too low. Keep in mind the price that you want for the home, and don’t allow yourself to feel pressured into a decision.

Having this information will definitely give you the advantage when selling your real estate. Knowledge is power, especially in this business. Selling a piece of real estate can be a long and tedious process, but with a little bit of help, you can make it as quick and painless as possible.

Landscape Fabric-Is Landscape Fabric Really Necessary For Proper Landscaping?

Landscape Fabric-Is Landscape Fabric Really Necessary For Proper Landscaping?

Landscaping fabrics are by no means an answer to a no maintenance landscape. I know a lot of folks are under the impression that they can simply buy it, place it, cover it, and forget it. Forever.
First. There is no such thing as a no maintenance landscape. In many instances landscape fabric can make your life a lot easier. However, there is an upside and a downside to using it. And as with most everything else, proper installation and maintenance is required if you intend to use it.
Also, keep in mind that I’m referring to professional quality grade materials and not the flimsy products sold in do it yourself and home centers. If you’re going to use that, you might as well use newspapers or cardboard boxes under your groundcover.
Landscape fabrics have their applications. They aren’t necessary in all applications but might be preferred in regards to the type of groundcover you use.
Our company uses landscape fabric in 95% of the designs we create. It’s the nature of our business as we use decorative rock as the preferred groundcover around here. When using rock for groundcover and path work, it’s necessary to have a separator between the soil and groundcover. Otherwise, you’ll have mud rocks by the first rain storm.
In theory you should be able to use almost anything as a separator. I’ve seen do it yourselfers use anything from plastics to newspapers and cardboard boxes to old carpet remnants. Of course, as a professional, I can’t use or even suggest something like this to my clients. You’re on your own there.
Now personally, on any given project, I would much rather do away with fabrics altogether. I prefer to create living soil planting areas that are mulched and tended rather than being covered and forgotten. However, some areas are simply too large to apply this method and some folks just outright prefer to cover an area with decorative rock.
Both mulched living beds and rock beds underlain with fabric will require some work to keep them beautiful. Neither is maintenance free. As long as there is wind, rain dirt, and blown in seed, there will be something for you to do in your yard.
When we create a design using landscaping fabric and rock, I make the client aware of a few things. 1) There will be blown in seed and dirt. 2) Something will have to be done about it to keep it from accumulating. I assure them that with the quality of fabric we use, nothing will grow in from the bottom. However, we have no control of what blows in on the top.
Spraying the unwanted weeds with herbicide will take care of the weed problem. However, this does nothing for the dirt, leaf, and plant particles that are hiding under your rocks. And if you allow these to accumulate, they’ll continue to accumulate and you will never get rid of them. So periodic maintenance is required even if you do use landscaping fabric.
Periodically using a blower to clear out your bedding areas will slow down the accumulation of dirt and in some cases eliminate it altogether. How easy and thorough this is depends a lot on the type and size of rock you use.
Small pea gravel accumulates and holds onto dirt, and is harder to clean than rock of a 1 ½” nature. Not only does it hold onto dirt but has a tendency to be blown all around when being cleaned with a blower. Pea gravel works well for paths, walkways, and smaller areas but I don’t recommend it for covering larger areas.
As far as using landscape fabric under bark and mulch covered beds? In many cases this can actually be easier to take care of than living beds or rock covered areas as it can easily be picked up and replaced every few years. This will keep your landscape always looking new without having to blow dirt or mulch beds.
Remember. There’s no such thing as a no maintenance landscape. Landscape fabrics can make things easier in many applications but like everything else, they require a little bit of keeping up. No, they aren’t necessary in all landscaping applications. However, I believe you’ll find them to be your best choice for many types of groundcover.

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