Monthly Archives: January 2011

Life Prefers Warmer Temperatures

I read thru a political forum from time to time.  I find it interesting for a number of reasons and it gives me an opportunity and a reason to try and educate myself on a number of things.  Just recently someone posted an article about prosperty and global temperatures.   The premise is pretty basic.  When it is warm out life grows more readily there is more food and more wine consumed!  When it is cold food is scarce, wars break out and societies collapse. 

The article doesn’t attempt to explain the reasons for the warming and cooling and it really isn’t the point.

I thought it was relevant because we are trying to move from a climate that has extreme swings in temperature thru the seasons to one that is much more steady.  In the summer in Colorado it can get up to 110F degrees and in the winter it can get to -20F.   I’ve started to notice that with those swings I also experience a change.  In the summer things are growing, I have more energy and am generally way more productive.  In the winter things die, I have less energy and it’s more difficult to try and be productive.

I would think that not experiencing the extreme changes in seasons and temp would keep humans (and all life for that matter) just a bit more on the productive and energetic side.  It will be interesting to see what my own experience is like living closer to the equator.

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January Fun in Greeley

We’ve been having some fun times so far this January. For New Year’s Eve we went over to our friends Matt and Jamie’s house and played the Xbox Kinect which is the newest virtual reality game similar to the Wii that is very active. We were sweating and laughing and in general enjoying ourselves, especially as we played against a three-year old with boundless energy.

Britton and Matt playing Kinect on New Year’s

We stayed up until midnight and watched the re-run of the countdown and ball dropping in New York (since we are two hours earlier here in Colorado) and toasted to the new year.

Earlier that day we took our niece, nephew and my cousin Tommy who was in town out to lunch as part of their Christmas present. We decided to go to Pho Duy which is a new Vietnamese beef broth soup place in Greeley. Britton and I love going there so we thought we would show the kids. Plus, it was really snowy and cold, a perfect day for soup!


At Pho Duy in Greeley

Then this weekend we were invited to a re-wrap your crap party, AKA white elephant party at my friend Kelly’s house. We love these parties and have even had one at our house! After Christmas you always find stuff you really don’t need anymore or that is just plain silly so it’s a great way to have fun with the excesses.


Party

We ended up with a tea timer -for people who can’t remember to take their tea bag out of their cup! lol And another glass chicken/rooster. I am starting to amass quite a lot of weird chicken paraphernalia thanks to my love of our real chickens I suppose.


With some friends from work

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Life as a Landlord

Besides our regular 40 hours a week jobs that both Britton and I have, we also have our rentals in the Greeley/Evans area. We have four rentals that are single-family residences and we also rent out our basement bedroom/bathroom a few months out of the year.


(For illustration only. Not one of our properties)

Really, being a property manager (I like that term better than “landlord”) is like any other job with ups and downs. The only difference is that in this job, our business is the keeping of homes and so when someone’s home life gets chaotic, it affects us as well. So to be an effective landlord/property manager, we have to have a very stable and financially secure home life ourselves.

Our home life is sort of  the foundation for all the others. If we couldn’t manage our home life, how would we pay our mortgage? And if we couldn’t pay our mortgage, you can bet that the other rental mortgages, insurance, taxes, repairs, etc would be the last to be taken care of. Therefore it would create an unstable home life for the tenants residing in the properties. So we take on a great deal of responsibility and obligation to maintain not only our home, but the homes of all of these people who in a contractual way rely on us as much as we rely on them.

And so, it saddens us when we hear that one of our rentals -our first!- will more than likely be vacated soon. It’s too bad because they’ve not only been great tenants, but are also our friends.  And for that reason we’d rather they stay. They’ve lived there going on 4 years! But sometimes, that’s not up to us. No matter how stable and settled our home life is, we can’t make everyone’s that way.

We’ve been thinking about whether we want to sell the property or rent it out again. Because it was our first, it was also our most expensive. When we bought it, it was in move-in condition. Which was great to get our feet wet in the whole rental business, but not so great for the cost because the mortgage is more than we get in rent. So, especially as we are trying to save up for Puerto Rico, this is not very good timing when our basement apartment will be empty, too.

So we feel a little less stable than usual. A little bit edgy. A little anxious. But, you know what? We will be ok, no matter what. We always are. We have our great paying jobs, we have substantial savings and we’ve never had trouble renting any of our properties within just a couple of days of posting them. What I’ve learned in life is that even the weirdest most obviously “bad” things can actually be seen as an opportunity if you let them. We built this foundation strong after all. It can handle a few good shakes.

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¡Salud!

Since it is the first of the year, I thought I would give a quick Spanish tip: ¡Salud!

The word salud is used for three different occasions with slightly different meanings. 1) Most commonly, it means “health” 2) when someone sneezes it means “bless you”.
3) it means “cheers” as when you are giving a toast, instead of saying “cheers!” you say “¡salud!”

When I was in Mexico I learned a more intricate rhyming toast that goes a little something like this:

“Arriba, abajo, al centro, pa’ dentro.”  (Literally : “Up, down, to the center, inside”)

This means “raise your glass up, lower it down, bring it to the middle (clink them) and then drink up (bring it inside the body)”.

A todos mis lectores: ¡a su salud en el año nuevo!

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