Monday, December 24, 2012

Merry Christmas from Key West!!

Just sharing a bit of our Christmas in Key West with you!  Hope all our friends and family enjoy a holly jolly holiday filled with love, peace, joy, and great cheer!

Pre-holiday Greetings from West Palm Beach

Welcome to Paradise, Boyd's Campground, Key West

Let the holiday festivities begin!

Decorations abound throughout the town!

Creative Christmas at the Docks


Christmas Movie Marathon must carry on...regardless of the weather!


Santa on "island time"....

Karly and Jake too!

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Fabulous Fall: Foliage & Football

Without a doubt, the fall grape harvest in Napa Valley is spectacular, with its wine-perfumed air and gilded-leaf vineyards dotting the hillsides.  However, the stunning mosaic foliage of mountain-side forests, crisp nose-tingling air, and electric energy of long-lived football rivalries that accompany the celebration of fall on the East Coast is incomparable!

We have spent the last few weeks following the peak fall foliage season on the East Coast from the Shenandoah Mountains in Virginia, to the Blue Ridge Mountains in North Carolina, to the Cherokee Foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains in South Carolina...and now we are nestled in the heartland of Georgia, Athens to be specific, where the U of Georgia vs. U of Florida football rivalry perfectly exemplifies the energy of East Coast fall traditions.  And of course there is nothing more sweet than a hometown victory, as the [under] Bulldogs beat the Gators!

The weather has been exceptional, sunny but cool days (perfect for hiking!) and crisp nights, allowing the blazing technicolor leaves to grace the trees for maximum enjoyment.  Fortunately, the path of our travels has managed to skirt the ravages of Storm Sandy up the East Coast and we look forward to the hurricane  season soon ending before we head into Florida for the holidays.

Fall truly is a most spectacular time of year, but only photos truly can do justice to its splendor, enjoy!

P.S.  Don't miss the Halloween greeting from Jake!

Shenandoah Mountains, VA

Hiking along Skyline Drive, VA

Virginia, A Swing State??
Virginia is for Puppies!

Blue Ridge Mountain Homestead ready for Fall
The tapestry of a North Carolina country road


Table Rock Mtn, Cherokee Foothills, South Carolina


The view from Table Rock Mtn

Hiking among the Golden Aspens

Cherokee Foothills, South Carolina


A Tapestry of Technicolor

Quintessential East Coast (Cherokee National Scenic Highway)

View from Sassafras Mtn, highest peak in SC



"The Hedge", UGA Stadium, Athens GA


How 'bout them Dawgs??!!

Happy Halloween from Jake!





Thursday, July 26, 2012

Housing Market: Geronimo!


It's been a while since an economic post, and the data points we keep seeing are too tempting to pass up a comment now. At this point, it doesn't look like the US is in a recovery by any measure. What we are at the end of is a monstrous debt cycle that has been perpetrated over the last 40 years (yes, this is bi-partisan clusterf**k). It started with Nixon flushing Breton Woods down the toilet and closing the gold window. Every year/administration since, we have been consistently devaluing our currency and engaging in an orgy of massive borrowing in the private and public sectors.

This has many implications for all of us. The housing market is one that hits the hardest for most. Take it on fact, not faith, that the housing market is getting ready to go into collapse mode again and that the "tight inventory" argument being put forth by utterly biased frauds like the National Association of Realtors is total BS.

Traveling through the country, I take a great interest in real estate listings. The listings that are in short sale, foreclosure or just hundreds of days on market are growing. As an example, from a New Jersey newspaper: "The long-expected second wave of foreclosures in states where courts delayed their processing appears to have begun in New Jersey and area counties, with filings jumping in the second quarter from a year ago.LINK

Then this morning Bloomberg reported this:  "Foreclosure filings rose in almost 60 percent of large U.S. cities in the first half of 2012, indicating many areas will have more distressed homes on the market later this year, RealtyTrac Inc. reported." LINK

THEN, the National Association of Realtors reported that pending sales for June dropped 1.4% unexpectedly in June.  A .9% increase was forecast by Wall Street's Einsteins. Even more significant - and reinforcing a serial of downwardly revising previously reported data - the NAR downwardly revised the pending homes sales number for May.  Here's a LINK.  The disturbing reality is that this is the seasonal time of year that the housing market is supposed to be at its relative healthiest.  In fact, the NAR data is seasonally adjusted - imagine how ugly the raw data must be.

The NAR's excuse for the drop in pending home sales is "tight inventory."  But we know that's a bunch of BS.  Short-sales are failing to close en masse.  I personally know (and you may too) someone who was sitting in a house with a defaulted mortgage waiting for a short sale to close that failed because the financing fell through.  Furthermore, a lot of the bank-owned inventory was shifted to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, who then off-loaded it onto investors in big blocks through a sale-to-rent program initiated by the Obama Administration.  The rental inventory is going to balloon back up, including many apartment buildings that have been started and which have caused the building starts statistic to bounce over the past year.  Rental prices for homes in many parts of the country have softened up from this past winter.  I wonder why?

As the rental inventory expands and drives rents lower, it will also drive home values lower.  This process will be exacerbated by this coming second wave of en masse foreclosures.  I'm not the only one who perceives this insidious negative feedback cycle starting back up. For every area of the markets, I have certain analysts to whom I pay attention, mostly to confirm my own thinking or gain new insight. Mark Hanson is the guy worth paying attention to for housing market analysis. Here is a link to some of his analysis, and it's worth reading. LINK



If you are thinking about buying a house because your realtor is telling you that the market is tight and prices are going higher, don't do it.  If you are thinking about selling your house to capture remaining equity value, get it done as soon as possible.  This fall/winter could be very ugly, and not just for the housing market...

Friday, July 13, 2012

Living it up in the UP

We've been travelling through Michigan's Upper Peninsula for the last month, and it has been everything we were expecting and more. Being filled with National Forests, it's been easy to find secluded spots to camp for free off the grid. We spent 16 days in one spot near Munising, MI.

Sixteen days without any electric, water or sewer hookups is our current best. We should be able to easily push that up to 21 days someday when we find the right spot. Actually, it's hard to call this "camping". We have electricity (solar), satellite TV, a big refridgerator/freezer, bathroom/shower, and our own bed and sofa to come home to every night. This definitely isn't roughing it.

We do cook over an open fire most nights (much better than using the gas range or the convection oven). One night we cobbled together a meal of grass-fed organic sirloins purchased at a local farm we visited, some long grain wild rice hand harvested by native american indian tribes using traditional methods (available only in northern Minnesota and Wisconsin), and some fresh local greens from the Munising Farmers Market. To top it off, we opened a bottle of 2002 Keever Vineyards Cabernet Sauvignon (Yountville,  Napa Valley). Definitely not roughing it.

This campsite in the Hiawatha National Forest was 10 minutes from Lake Superior in one direction and 10 minutes to dozens of inland lakes in the opposite direction. We were five miles from town, but had absolutely zero noise at night. Ours was the only camp fire or light for miles. We could walk the dogs anytime without needing to worry about running into other people or cars. It would have been nice
to be on a lake or stream, but if we were, it probably wouldn't have been as secluded (or as bug-free).

There are too many great photos to post them all. Here are some for now. I would say the hiking, lakes, streams, beaches, and scenery are as good as anything we saw in a month in New Zealand....and this place is a lot less crowded than NZ! If you're thinking of going to New Zealand for the outdoor activities of the South Island, save yourself some money and check out the area around Munising, MI first.

 Typical sunset.

 A small piece of the Pictured Rocks. Those pictures deserve their own post later.

 Just miles and miles of empty white sand beaches. You can drive to some of them or hike in for even wilder scenery.



 Some of the 300 foot cliffs seen from the lake.

Another typical sunset. (they never get boring)


Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Tails from the Back Seat: Dam Good Fun

Back in 1804 and 1806, when Lewis & Clark traveled the Missouri River, it was a winding shallow waterway. However , beginning in the 1940's the river was dammed to create four massive reservoirs, aka the Great Lakes Region of South Dakota. And why would this be of any interest to Karly and Jake? Because boon docking on Lake Oahe (one of the great lakes) in Pierre, South Dakota afforded them not only an opportunity for a first-in-their-lifetime adventure of romping through lake shore waves, but also to enjoy the experience being off-leash, as people were few and far between.


Karly danced through the lapping water with ease, sometimes venturing farther than her non-swimming abilities should allow, but Jake more timidly stayed at the waters' edge, not quite sure what to make of the muddy shoreline that attacked his paws with every step. His fear soon subsided as he was distracted by birds skimming the water just far enough in front to make it a game of dart and duck...the challenge was on and both puppies took off into the water mutually enjoying the pleasure, Karly in calculated silence and Jake with yelps of excitement.

What good fun for Karly and Jake, what a muddy mess for Susan and John!!
But who could deny such joy??  Sometimes it's damn good to be a dog!!!!!!
Up to their "elbows" in mud







Wednesday, May 23, 2012

How Awesome is This?

So far we have been able to find uncrowded off the grid places to camp for free that offer loads of hiking and even some fishing. All we need to do is provide our own water, food, electricity, and waste removal! Whether we are able to find these places after Memorial Day Weekend kicks off the travel season will be the big question.

Since we previously haven't been to any of the places we camp, it's always a little exciting and scary wondering what we'll find. When we rolled into the Soldier Creek Wilderness Area and the Nebraska National Forest in the far NW corner of Nebraska, our expectations were definitely exceeded.

We were all alone at the top of a bluff overlooking a pretty little valley with three creeks.

We did get some company when a couple showed up to do some exploring in the wilderness area with their four mules.

We had a dozen options for 10-12 mile hikes every day. You could hike all day and not see any signs of development. Not even a plane in the sky.

This area was very active in the last major war between the US and the Plains Indians in the 1870s. We were about 7 miles up a dirt road away from Fort Robinson. George Armstrong Custer spent some time here before heading north to meet his fate. Soldiers from Fort Robinson were also responsible for the massacre at Wounded Knee and the capture/death of Crazy Horse. There were a few old military wagon roads through the wilderness area.

We weren't next to the water, but 50 yards away from our rig was this little gem of a creek.

Hiking in all directions you could find little pools teeming with small, wily native brook trout, brown trout and some rainbows.




Native brook trout.

Native brown trout.

We explored the strangely eroded Legend Cliffs which bordered the east side of our valley. We hiked all day for seven days and didn't see any other people.


There were a few little ledges to get out on and sit for a while. This one almost looked like it was made for walking the plank.

Susan didn't feel like checking out the view from the tip (she's the smart one).

The best part was happy hour and the sunset at the end of each day.