California Home Sales Drop in August Compared with Last Year


The median home price of an existing, single-family home in California rose 1.2 percent compared with July and 8.6 percent from a year ago, the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) reported this week.  Following two months of consecutive month-over-month declines, California home sales edged up 1.8 percent in August compared with July, but were down 14.9 percent compared with August 2009.

  • According to C.A.R. President Steve Goddard, home buyers who are waiting on the sidelines should consider the opportunities available in today’s market.  Favorable home prices and interest rates at or near historic lows make housing affordability the best in recent years.  Anyone who is in a position to buy a home should do so before either of these key factors rise.
  • The statewide median home price posted its 10th consecutive year-over-year gain in August, according to C.A.R.’s report. The median price of an existing, single-family detached home sold in California during August 2010 was $318,660, an 8.6 percent increase from the revised $293,400 median price recorded in August 2009. The August 2010 median price was up 1.2 percent compared with July’s $314,850 median price.
  • C.A.R. Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young says California’s housing market is transitioning from the conclusion of the federal home buyer tax credit and that home sales are strongest in the higher-price range.  The strength in the upper-end market combined with inventory levels that are higher, but still lean by average, has led to home prices holding steady.
  • To hear more from Ms. Appleton-Young, please visit http://videos.car.org/mediavault.html?menuID=1&flvID=10.

Empire Mine, Nevada County

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cLsSzr0qOn0
This is a video prepared for the California Preservation Foundation and was also a history project.

Brief History: The Empire Mine was the richest hard-rock mine in the State of California producing 5.8 million ounces of gold in its operating history of 106 years (1850-1956). George Roberts, the original discoverer of the gold soon sold his interest and by 1869 William Bourn Sr. owned controlling interest. The Bourn family maintained control of the mine until 1929 when it was sold to Newmont Mining. It ceased operation in 1956. In 1975 the State purchased the surface property as the Empire Mine State Historic Park. The Park continues to draw thousands of worldwide visitors each year and is noted for its historical tours of the Bourn Cottage, the mineyard and “living history” events.

Park Attractions: In addition to the tours noted above, the Park museum has a scale model of the underground workings of the Empire/Star mine complex, a “gold room” which displays ore samples from local mines,an Assay Office, and an extensive mineral collection. A video entitled “Tears from the Sun” depicting various gold mining techniques is shown on a regular basis. On Mother’s Day Weekend a Springtime Open House is held .It features the “Living History” programs,food service, and entertainment. As an added bonus the Gardens are in bloom!! The annual Miner’s Picnic is scheduled for late summer and over Thanksgiving weekend the Park sponsors a “Holiday Open-House”. For groups of 25 or more a Miner’s Luncheon is available. For additional information on these events click on the appropriate heading on the “Site Index”. For details on schedules fees click here

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Martin Sexton Coming to the Center for the Arts, Grass Valley

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-kzxRdeA-74

Martin Sexton is coming to our local Center for The Arts in Grass Valley this coming weekend, October 1, 2010. Tickets are $30 for information they are located at 314 West Main Street, Grass Valley, California 95945, telephone 530-274-8384.
Box Office hours: Noon to 5:00PM, Wednesday through Saturday

Martin Sexton is one of the most talked-about arrivals on the “new folk” acoustic music scene. The guitarist, singer, and songwriter has an amazing vocal range and makes effective use of it on his recordings and in his live shows. His vocal style can be described as truly soulful, combining the best qualities of singers like Van Morrison, Al Green, Aaron Neville, and Otis Redding.

Sexton, a self-taught guitarist and singer, was raised in a family of 14 and formed his first rock & roll band in eighth grade. In high school he was in a profusion of garage bands, playing the music of the Beatles, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, and Led Zeppelin. He left his home in Syracuse, NY — and the rock & roll life — in 1988 and headed for Boston, encouraged by what he’d heard about the coffeehouse scene in that city. Despite the ultra-competitive nature of the Boston scene, with too many folksingers and too few coffeehouses, Sexton quickly rose through the ranks. He began playing his brand of soul-filled folk music around Boston’s open-mike nights and street corners in 1989.

His 1992 collection of self-produced demo recordings, In The Journey, was recorded on an old 8-track in a friend’s attic. He managed to sell 20,000 copies out of his guitar case busking. From 1996-2002 Sexton released Black Sheep, The American, Wonder Bar and Live Wide Open (mixed by Jon Alagia – Dave Matthews Band, John Mayer). The activity and worldwide touring laid the foundation for the career with an uncommonly loyal fan base, selling out venues from Nokia Theatre (NY) to LA’s House of Blues.

In 1994, Sexton won the National Academy of Songwriters’ Artist of the Year Award. By 1996, Sexton was sharing stages with Art Garfunkel, Jackson Browne, and John Hiatt on tours. His songs are featured in film and television including recent placements on NBC’s Scrubs and Showtime’s hit series Brotherhood. His latest studio release, Sugarcoating, finds this one-of-a-kind-troubadour doing what he does best: locating larger truths within the specific details of the life he’s living.

John J. O’Dell
Real Estate Broker
Call 530-263-1091

World Class Lumberjacks to Perform at Draft Horse Classic at the Nevada County Fair

Lumberjack Shows, Clogging Jamboree, Western Music Fest, Art at the Classic are all part of Draft Horse Classic and Harvest Fair

Visitors to this weekend’s Draft Horse Classic and Harvest Fair will get the chance to see world class wood-chopping lumberjacks, axe throwers, wielders of mighty chain saws, and the opportunity to see competitor Melvin Lentz, 2010’s Top American All-Around Logger.

Lentz was recently awarded Top American All-Around Logger at the Still Timber Sport Series featured on ESPN, and has been awarded world champion more than 10 times. Visiting from West Virginia, Lentz has been competing for more than 40 years and currently competes all over the world.

In addition to Lentz, this year’s loggers include Mike Forrester, TJ Bexton, Tom Martin, Dennis Cahoon, Annette Cahoon, Julie Reyes, Jenny Owen, and Dennis Harvey. All are world champions from across the United States.  Watch these world champions as they chop through a 13-inch thick log in 20 to 25 seconds, while standing on the log; rip through a 15-inch log in six seconds in the double hand bucking contests that feature two loggers using a crosscut saw; or compete in the Jack and Jill hand bucking event that features a man and woman team. World champion log rollers, Julie Reyes and Jenny Owen, will be competing in log rolling – on dry land.

The 24th Annual Draft Horse Classic and Harvest Fair starts today and runs through Sunday, September 26 at the Nevada County Fairgrounds in Grass Valley. While there is a charge for Draft Horse performance tickets, admission to the Fairgrounds is free for the Harvest Fair activities. Lumberjack shows will start at 2:30 and 5 pm on Saturday and at 2:00 pm on Sunday on The Green, just as you enter the Fairgrounds at Gate 1.

Live entertainment at the Pine Tree Stage, a world class art show, Treat Street goodies, vendors with western wear and items, a clogging jamboree, a live shoeing competition, community exhibits, and visits to the barns to see the magnificent Gentle Giant Draft Horses are all part of the Harvest Fair line-up.

In addition to the Harvest Fair activities, the Draft Horse Classic features six stunning performances of Draft Horses in the arena. Tickets to the performances are on sale during the event, and may be purchased by calling the Fair office at 530-273-6217 or stopping by the Arena box office. Visit www.NevadaCountyFair.com for additional information.

By: Wendy Oaks
Publicist, Nevada County Fairgrounds
(530) 273-6217
wsoaks@gmail.com

Obama Care

I hear a lot about “Obama Care” and how we should not have socialized medical care.  Interesting that we would prefer to have the majority of people in this country un-insured, and than trusting our health to insurance companies who are in the business to make as much money as possible and try to deny health care when we get sick.  I recently talked to two former employees of a very large insurance company. Both were former managers.  This particular company has (or had)  a division devoted to auditing large claims in the hope of finding something in the records to deny coverage. Is that what we want for health care, more of the same, the true death squad?

The argument I hear from people say that the American government can’t run anything (other than the military, the police, the road systems and on and on) In general I hear we have the best health care in the world. Sorry, according to the National Health Organization, the top health care country, that is the country that has the best health care for their citizens is France, followed by Italy. Where do we rank? Thirty seven out out of a hundred and ninety countries. Yep, we’re two steps above Cuba.

If you think we have the best health care, than you need to read the article  in the Bloomberg Businessweek  Harvard researchers say 62% of all personal bankruptcies in the U.S. in 2007 were caused by health problems—and 78% of those filers had insurance. In other words, health issues in this country is the largest cause of bankruptcies in the United States. A portion of the article states Unless you’re Warren Buffett, your family is just one serious illness away from bankruptcy.”

If you don’t like socialized medicine, well, you don’t know what you’re missing, other than what the insurance and drug companies are telling you.

For a taste of socialized medical care here is a portion of an article I wrote earlier:

“While in Rome last May, for some reason I got an asthma attack.  I haven’t had an asthma attack since I was a teenager which was a couple of years ago, more or less.

In talking to the receptionist at the place we were staying at, he suggested that I go to the emergency room, since that would be free and if I wanted a doctor to come to our place it would cost a $100 euro’s.  (try getting a doctor in the US to come to your home for $122)  I also had the option to go to a private hospital, but that would be expensive.

I arrived at the emergency room, not knowing what to expect, since in the U.S. you can wait a couple of hours or more. However, within 30 minutes or less, a doctor interviewed me (not some clerk wanting to know my life history and a promise to go to mediation if the doctor screwed up)

I told him I was having an asthma attack. He took the information down and told me to go to the waiting room. Sure enough, I had to wait about 30 to 40 minutes.  I was then taken to another room, a doctor listened to my chest, put me on a nebulizer, with vapor and oxygen coming out of it, put an IV in my arm , took blood samples, did a EKG and sent me back to the waiting room.  While in the waiting room, someone came and took me up for two x-rays.  Finally after two doctors examined me, one a specialist in bronchial problems, I was told that indeed I had had an asthma attack.

The doctor gave me a prescription for three drugs, a full printout in Italian of the blood test results, the EKG, his diagnoses and told me when I got near another hospital in the next week or two, to go and talk to another doctor and give him this report to see how I was doing.

Total cost – zero. If I had been a senior citizen of Italy, the drugs would have been free. By the way, the total costs of the drugs were $83 euros.

I can well imagine the costs of going to an emergency room in the U.S. and getting that kind of treatment. The hospitals in the U.S. would charge at least $10 to $15 thousand for two doctors and all of the tests.  It was really nice to have the doctors in charge of my treatment, instead of a hospital administrator or an insurance company dictating what a doctor can do or not do.

You know by now, that because medicine is so high in this country, people in this country are buying airplane tickets to India and other places because they can’t afford our great medical system.

Of course, the biggest joke I’ve seen in years was senior citizens protesting Obama’s attempt to have insurance for everyone.  They said they don’t want socialism but it was OK for them to collect their social security and have Medicare insurance.”

Jerry Garcia’s Home up for Sale for $3.995 Million

If the walks could talk, the stories would be as riveting as your favorite Grateful Dead song to say the least! This single-family residence located in Northern California’s Marin County is the same house that Grateful Dead bandleader Jerry Garcia owned at the time of his death in 1995.

The Mediterranean-style house has more than 7,000 square feet of living space and sets on an 11-acre spread that looks out onto the Pacific Ocean and Mount Tamalpais. The celebrity once-owned property is listed at $3.995 million. It is in Nicasio, Calif., which is approximately 30 miles north of San Francisco.

The Grateful Dead has one of the most loyal and largest fan base in musical history. Jerry Garcia, the band’s beloved late leader, is a member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and is on Rolling Stones’ 100 Greatest Guitar Players of All Time tributary list.

Charles Schmidt Local Furniture Maker

By Charles Schmidt:

(Charles Schmidt is a local Nevada County furniture maker)

I probably started getting a feel for putting rustic furniture together from growing up in Montana, living and working on ranches and farms that were quite poor; and quite pioneer in lifestyle, where we built what we needed; often with hatchet, hammer and hand drill.  My wife Barbara and I lived in Oregon for years where there’s a lot of roadside rustic furniture to pique the mind. So ideas were always perking.

When the economy started south in ’07 I got the idea to try to add to our income by making rustic furniture and selling it at local craft fairs here.  We have our own style and make benches, chairs, coat-racks, end or coffee or chair side tables, footstools, freestanding shelves and do custom orders.  We’re currently working on an all-manzanita queen bed that goes to a Tahoe home.  We use manzanita (Little Apple), Oaks, Pines, Locust, Maple, Cherry, Laurels, Sycamore, Cedar, Hawthorne and Crepe Myrtle.  We use about every wood you can find here in the foothills.  A chair will normally have 12-14 different woods in it.

Most rustic furniture is log-gy looking; ours is a bit more artistic in look and made from sticks salvaged from brush piles.  Meaning most all the lines are curvilinear instead of straight. The joints are fastened with bronze screws.  The furniture tolerates foul weather quite well.

It’s quite enjoyable work in that one has an idea that it’s a chair you want to build.  But the contours of the wood rule how it will go together.

Wood-will over craftsman’s-will, so to speak.

Our prices here are around half what our pieces sell for in galleries and retail stores; which we have done in the past.  People from Colorado come here to buy from us at way less than they pay there; and get a different style with prettier woods also.

We have no web-site; but you can Email your request and we can send you pictures of similar pieces we’ve built.  You may want something from inventory or we can build it for you.  Perhaps from wood off your own land.  Charles & Barbara, forest-furniture@att.net

24th Annual Draft Horse Classic and Harvest Fair Schedule

Dates: Thursday, September 23 – Sunday, September 26, 2010

Where: Nevada County Fairgrounds 11228 McCourtney Road Grass Valley, CA 95949

Time: Draft Horse Performances: Thursday, September 23 6:30 pm Friday, September 24 6:30 pm

Saturday, September 25 10 am Saturday, September 25 6:30 pm Sunday, September 26 10 am

Sunday, September 26 4 pm

Harvest Fair: Harvest Fair activities are on-going at the Fairgrounds during all four-days

Gates open: Thursday at 4 pm Friday at noon Saturday and Sunday at 9 am Gates close: Each evening, following the last performance

Website: www.NevadaCountyFair.com

Facebook: Nevada County Fairgrounds

Phone number: (530) 273-6217

Admission: Performances:

Reserved Seating – $21 (in advance) or $24 the day of event

General admission seating – $18 (advance) or $21 the day of event

Harvest Fair:

Admission to the Harvest Fair is free

Parking: $5 per car