Tag Archives: Westchester Homes for Sale

Westchester Homes for Sale

3 Annoying Social-Media Mistakes Businesses Need to Avoid | Bedford NY Realtor

Are your social-media  marketing habits attracting people to your brand or scaring them off? If you  litter your Twitter feed, Facebook page and Pinterest boards with blatantly  self-centered, hard sales posts — or even insensitive, potentially offensive  posts — you could be guilty of sending your followers packing, right along with  their spending cash.

Here’s a short list of notorious social-media  mistakes business owners should remember to avoid and why:

1. Only talking about your products and services. By  now, this one should be a no-brainer. Don’t be that guy at the party who only  talks about himself. Posting status updates, tweets and pins that  narcissistically revolve around your brand only is tantamount to social-media  suicide. You’ll quickly come off as too corporate, self-serving and disconnected  from your customers and their needs. An exodus of followers is sure to, well,  follow.

Small-business expert Steven D. Strauss, author of The Small Business Bible (Wiley, 2012)  suggests following the 80-20 rule to establish a meaningful connection with  customers via social media. That is to say that 80 percent of the content you  post should address your customers’ problems and only 20 percent should be about  your company and what you do.

2. Not playing (sharing) well with others. Instead of  tweeting repeated promotional messages about your products and services, make an  effort to retweet, share and pin your followers’ content often. Also exchange  friendly, conversational tweets with your followers, particularly those who are  significant influencers within your industry. Doing so can encourage a sense of  community within your social networks, boost your brand exposure and help you  earn your followers’ trust.

Share like a champ on Facebook and Pinterest as well by sharing follower  posts and pins that are relevant to topics your target market cares about. For  example, if you sell children’s toys, consider sharing follower and influencer  posts and pins that are of value to parents of young children, like toymaker Melissa and Doug often  does on its  Facebook page. These often include family arts and crafts ideas, fun  playdate themes and printable coloring pages.
3. Posting  insensitive content about sensitive subjects. One of the fastest  ways to get people trash-talking your brand over social media is to post  poorly-timed, offensive remarks about sensitive topics, especially those that  are political in nature and inspire strong emotions.

Fashion designer Kenneth Cole has been guilty of this more than once. Most  recently, the designer and self-described “frustrated activist” published a  tweet that made light of the “boots on the ground” comment U.S. President Barack  Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry used in reference to potentially  deploying ground troops in Syria. The crass remark instantly ignited a firestorm  of angry backlash reply tweets that continue to pile up.

 

 

Read more: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/228574#ixzz2i53yLJkA

Teatown Lake Reservation News | Chappaqua Real Estate

Teatown Lake Reservation
October 17, 2013                                                                                     Like us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterFind us on PinterestView our videos on YouTube
Visit Teatown

1600 Spring Valley Road
Ossining, NY 10562
914-762-2912
Nature Center hours:
9:00am-5:00pm everyday
Trails are open 365 days a year from dawn to dusk.

Teatown Lake Reservation’s mission is to conserve open space and to educate and involve the regional community
in order to sustain the diversity of wildlife, plants and habitats for future generations.

Your donation can make

an immediate impact to help

conserve and protect the

diversity of wildlife, plants

and habitats…

today and into the future.

 

Like us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterFind us on PinterestView our videos on YouTube
In Teatown’s Gallery
Coming Soon!

Natural Light
Teatown Area Photographs by
Berl Brechner October 19- December 31

Berl Brechner, an area resident for over 35 years, presents 30 scenes from nearby that he has captured,  most of them from trails, nooks and crannies of Teatown Lake Reservation. Much of the exhibit has been created with a relatively simple digital camera, with special attention to form and light.  All photographs are for sale, and all proceeds will be donated to Teatown Lake Reservation.
Camp Alumni Reunion
Recap

We had a blast catching up with camp alumni at the reunion this past Sunday.

It was a beautiful day, there was delicious food and drink and Two Dollar Goat performed! Thanks to all of those who shared in the festivities

Teatown’s Boardwalk Gets New Use

A retired section of boardwalk from Teatown Lake Reservation gets a new use at the Peabody Preserve Outdoor Classroom in Sleepy Hollow. Many people are familiar with the soccer field located on
Rte 9A but they may not know it is connected to a 37 acre property that extends to the Hudson River. Teachers, administrators, parents and volunteers have worked to build a trail system to create an outdoor classroom for Tarrytown School District children.

Teatown educators have met with 3rd grade teachers to discuss ways that the Peabody Preserve can best be used to enhance the science curriculum.  Teatown will be visiting Washington Irving school in December with our Hudson Valley wildlife program to reinforce their learning and allow them to see some of the animals up close and personal that inhabit the Peabody Preserve.

Here is a link to more information about the project:

http://tarrytown.patch.com/groups/schools/p/no-child-left-inside-3dc80dbc

All programs require pre-registration. 

To register call 914-762-2912 x 110

unless otherwise noted.

Click here for more of Teatown’s upcoming programs.

 

Tech After Hours
October 19 & 26, November 2 & 9, 9:00am- 1:00pm
A special weekend series for teens, called “Ecology,” for those interested in working in environmental science is being offered by Putnam Northern Westchester BOCES and is being held at Teatown. In this course, learn and participate in hands-on exploration of several ecosystems including lake, stream and forest. The course will build students’ knowledge of science research and give them an opportunity to explore and learn about the field of ecology

Ages 12- 15.

 

Register here 

If you have questions, contact Gerry Battista, School Counselor, at The Tech Center. 914-248-2220.

The Nature of Poetry with Bhisham Bherwani 
Sunday, October 20, 1:00pm – 5:00pm

Presented in collaboration with the Hudson Valley Writers’ Center. Participants will be prompted to identify their own experiences with, and insights into, nature and to apply these in their own poems. The session will start with an exploration of Teatown’s trails led by an expert Teatown guide. Bring a notebook, pen, and sturdy shoes! Please note, this program takes place at Cliffdale Farm, Teatown Road, Croton-on-Hudson. Adults only.

 

To register, contact the Hudson Valley Writers’ Center at 914-332-5953 or click here.

 

FOCUS ON NATURE Series
Through October 29
Jacob Burns Film Center

Wings of Life

Sunday, October 20, 12:00pm

Family Film! A close-up look at a very special group of superheroes: the pollinators! Narrated by Meryl Streep, Wings of Life reveals the complex worlds of bees, butterflies, birds, bats- and the plants that rely on them.

 

Art Workshop for Kids: After the film, teaching artist Mary Jane Nusbaum guides kids (ages 5+) in an eco-art project in the Jane Peck Gallery.

Fall and Winter Thursday, October 24, 7:30pm

 

Matt Anderson spent five years driving across the US searching for answers to the country’s ecological and other problems- and was stunned to find many creative people devising ingenious new strategies for the future. With breathtaking images, Fall and Winter is a hypnotic, disquieting voyage into our contemporary crisis that also charts a way out again.

 

Click here for more details about the series.

This series is presented by Jacob Burns Film Center in partnership with Teatown Lake Reservation and Scenic Hudson and made possible through generous support from the Hoch family and the van Hengel Family Fund.

 

Teatown Members may purchase tickets for any of the films in this series at the JBFC member price.
Reap the rewards of being a Teatown Member!
Join today at  teatown.org
Earth Art After School

October 25, November 1, 8, 15, 22, 3:30- 5:30pm
Kathryn W. Davis RiverWalk Center,
Kingsland Point Park, Sleepy Hollow
Children recharge after school while exploring the Hudson River and its shores with wonder, shared discovery and creative expression time. In this Nature, Art and Science program, children are encouraged to develop observation skills, create art with natural materials, and learn about native
plants and animals. Through art, they learn creative problem solving skills and enjoy teamwork with new friends. Ages 8- 12.
To register contact Strawtown Studio at (845) 558-0877, strawtownstudio@gmail.com or online at strawtownstudio.com
OSSINING IN 3D

Art Exhibition
On display through October 26, 2013

Teatown Participates in App for Ossining 3D Walking Tour:

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A walking tour app for the art exhibition, Ossining 3D, is now live and available free of charge at the iTunes app store-click here.  When you download the app you will find audio recordings for each of the artists who donated sculptures for the exhibit.  At the end of the walking tour you will see a link to an audio about Teatown with directions to our preserve.

Bedford Post Inn To Feature Local Farmers In ‘Harvest’ Dinners | Bedford Hills Real Estate

Bedford Post Inn will host its first in a series of ‘Harvest’ dinners on Sunday from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m., featuring some of the Hudson Valley’s farmers and purveyors

This night will honor Mimi Edelman of I & Me Farms, a purveyor that the inn’s executive chef, Jeremy McMillan, and his team regularly rely on for a bulk of their seasonal produce.

In October, the Bedford Post Inn’s Farmhouse will hold an Oktoberfest celebration featuring German inspired fare including potato and rye dumplings, wurst, sauerbraten, saurkraut, and braised red cabbage.

Guests will also be able to listen to German music.

Reservations can be made by calling 914-234-7800 or emailing reservations@bedfordpostinn.com

The Bedford Post Inn is at 954 Old Post Road.

 

 

 

http://bedford.dailyvoice.com/events/bedford-post-inn-feature-local-farmers-harvest-dinners

Sales of new homes rise nearly 8 percent in August | Pound Ridge Real Estate

Sales of new single-family homes rose nearly 8 percent in August and are 12.6 percent higher than a year ago, according to new data released Wednesday by the Census Bureau.

The rise — which comes just a month after new home sales plunged by more than 14 percent— is the latest turn in what economists say will be a volatile ride for this segment of the housing market.

The number of new homes sold in August was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 421,000, up from the revised rate of 390,000 homes in July. That figure is still below the rate of construction needed in a healthy market, according to analysts. Right now, it would take five months to run through the supply of new homes, according to the report.

A six-month supply of homes is considered healthy, and the housing market is still facing a shortage of inventory.

 

 

http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2013-09-25/business/42378348_1_new-homes-housing-recovery-low-inventory

‘Quintessential,’ Yet Curious, Palm Beach Manse Asks $30M | Bedford Corners Real Estate

5 images

Location: Palm Beach, Fla. Price: $30,000,000 The Skinny: The details surrounding this “quintessential Palm Beach” mansion are sparse. It was built in 1926 by Marion Syms Wyeth, a favored architect of Palm Springs’ gilded age. After that, there’s a pretty big gap in its history until 2004, when it was purchased for $8.8M by an LLC-shielded buyer. The new owner restored the 17,000-square-foot palace and just yesterday put it back on the market for $30M. And that’s about it. There are only five listing photos, which surely don’t tell the whole story, but the story that they do tell is ridiculous: the house looks like the kind of place that a fictional drug lord would have lived in in the ’80s (especially with the enormous privacy hedges). C’mon, there are at least four winged lion statues.

Bob Hope’s 1939 Toluca Lake ‘dream house’ is for sale | Chappaqua NY Real Estate

Richard Nixon’s helicopter once landed on the back lawn so the president could play a round at the nearby Lakeside Golf Club. Lucille Ball and Jack Benny drank and gossiped at the holiday parties in the living room. And the homeowner, Bob Hope, tried out punch lines on his kids in the dining room.

For the first time since the long-lived entertainer built his home in a San Fernando Valley walnut grove in 1939, Hope’s 5.16-acre Toluca Lake estate will go on the market Monday, at an asking price of $27.5 million.

The compound that Hope shared with his wife, Dolores, and their four children has a nearly 15,000-square-foot house, a golf hole, an indoor pool and a manicured rose garden. The flat, sprawling lot is unusual for the upscale neighborhood and others like it; in Toluca Lake and similar ZIP Codes in Sherman Oaks, Encino, Studio City, Bel-Air, Holmby Hills and Beverly Hills, there are only 22 properties of more than five acres that belong to a single owner, according to a property search conducted by the estate.

The comedian and movie star collected real estate and at one point was one of California’s largest individual property owners, holding some 10,000 acres in the San Fernando Valley alone. But it was the house at 10346 Moorpark St. that he considered home, according to his daughter, Linda Hope, who still lives a few blocks away.

“The Moorpark house is a very special property in the Valley and something that meant a whole lot to my mother and dad,” she said. “They built what for them was kind of a dream house.”

The sale will mark a major change in the neighborhood that the Hopes helped to shape.

The home, which is listed with Jade Mills of Coldwell Banker and Drew Fenton of Hilton & Hyland, has grown and evolved over the years. Architect Robert Finkelhor designed the original English traditional-style main house, and in the 1950s, John Elgin Woolf renovated it in a more contemporary style, using glass to accommodate Dolores’ desire to bring the expansive feeling of the grounds inside.

 

 

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-hope-house-20130923,0,2485953,full.story

Housing affordability dips to a four-year low | Armonk NY Homes

According to an article in The Wall Street Journal, the average mortgage payment on a median-priced home in August as a share of median income was 16%. Furthermore, housing affordability hit a four-year low during the month after the market experienced gains in home prices in the spring and higher interest rates over the course of the summer.

While the data released earlier this week show affordability has been dented, homes are still more affordable than any time between 1989 and late 2008, according to the NAR’s figures.

At prevailing interest rates in August, the mortgage payment on the median priced home stood at $851, or around 16% of the median U.S. income. By contrast, the equivalent mortgage payment one year earlier, at $683, accounted for 13.3% of the median income.

                    Source: WSJ

Mt. Kisco’s Rocky Hills Garden Open For Viewing | Mt Kisco Real Estate

Come stroll through Rocky Hills — The Garden of William and Henriette Suhr from noon to 4 p.m. Oct. 19. Photo Credit: Chelsea Pomales/Garden Design magazine.

 

 

The Garden Conservancy’s new “Open Days” program will include Rocky Hills — The Mt. Kisco garden of William and Henriette Suhr.

The garden will be open from noon to 4 p.m. Oct. 19. for the event. Rocky Hills, 95 Old Roaring Brook Road in Mt. Kisco, was started about 50 years ago and planting continues to this day. It features mature specimens of black walnut and ash, complemented by recent additions of weeping beech, dawn redwood, stewartia, dogwood and an impressive collection of magnolia and conifers.

Tree peonies and an extensive planting of rhododendrons and azaleas compete for attention with the carpet of bulbs throughout the 13 acres.

One can stroll along the hillside meadow and explore the ever-expanding rock garden, as well as the hills and terraces, walls and paths, fern woodlands, self-sown primula and natural brook that serves as the heart of the garden.

Working in partnership with individual garden owners, as well as public and private organizations, the conservancy provides horticultural, technical, management, and financial expertise to sustain these fragile treasures. It helps ensure long-term stewardship of these natural assets, which are essential to the aesthetic and cultural life of our communities. For more information, click here.

 

 

 

 

http://mtkisco.dailyvoice.com/lifestyle/mt-kiscos-rocky-hills-garden-open-viewing

Nearly Half of Renters Lack Insurance | South Salem NY Real Estate

Some 46 percent of renters are uninsured even though renters are more satisfied with their insurance than homeowners, according to a new JD Powers study released today.

Price is the leading driver of the satisfaction gap: price satisfaction is a significant 45 points higher among renters than among homeowners.  Satisfaction with insurers is higher among renters than among homeowners (809 vs. 787, respectively, on a 1,000-point scale), the study found.

State Farm captures the largest share of the renter insurance market (26%), followed by Allstate (12%) and USAA (10%).

Customer retention rates with their current insurer are higher among renters who bundle an auto policy (91%) compared to renters who do not bundle an auto policy (67%).

“Many insurance agents focus their time selling high-dollar products, such as auto and homeowners, with higher commissions instead of the average $200 per year renters policy,” said Jeremy Bowler, senior director of the global insurance practice at J.D. Power. “This is shortsighted because agents who satisfy the large renter population today are more likely to retain and service their growing household insurance needs over time” (learn more in the review of SuperMoney).

Rankings
Overall Customer   Satisfaction Index ScoresJ.D. Power.com Power   Circle Ratings
(Based on a   1,000-point scale)For Consumers
Homeowners Segment
Amica Mutual

842

5

State Farm

813

4

Auto-Owners Insurance

812

4

Erie Insurance

811

4

Automobile Club of   Southern California

808

4

Encompass

798

4

American Family

797

4

Progressive

796

4

COUNTRY

795

3

Allstate

789

3

GEICO

789

3

The Hartford

787

3

Homeowners Average

787

3

NCNU Insurance   Exchange

786

3

Nationwide

780

3

MetLife

778

3

Safeco

778

3

Automobile Club Group

776

3

CHUBB

768

2

The Hanover

766

2

Farmers

763

2

Liberty Mutual

762

2

Travelers

756

2

__________________________
USAA*

894

5

*USAA is an insurance   provider open only to U.S. military personnel and their families and   therefore is not included in the rankings.
Homeowners Segment:   Included in the study but not award-eligible due to localized availability   and/or not meeting minimum sample requirements are Alfa Insurance, Allied,   Cincinnati Insurance, Fireman’s Fund, Homesite, Mercury, North Carolina Farm   Bureau, Shelter and Tennessee Farm Bureau.

Will Housing Save the Economy? | Bedford Hills NY Homes

Don’t count on it, says a leading macroeconomist at the Booth School of Business at the University of Chicago.   “We need to temper our optimism on what a housing recovery can do,” says Amir Sufi, professor of finance.

Thought leaders ranging from President Obama to Bill Dudley, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, have pinned the nation’s economic progress on the housing recovery, but the fact is that “we will not be returning to the boom years that preceded the Great Recession. The days when housing was the predominant force driving economic activity are gone, and I view that as a good thing,” says Sufi in an article in the fall issue of Capital Ideas, a Booth School publication.

However, the housing wealth effect is less than meets the eye and price growth owes as much to investors as to homeowners, which means home ownership won’t recover more to

“An increase in house prices drives economic activity in two ways. First, it induces investment in new residential construction. Second, it leads some households to spend, either for home improvement or consumption. The latter effect has generally been called a “housing wealth effect,” but in my view that’s the wrong way of thinking about it. Instead, the positive effect of house prices on household spending relies crucially on the degree to which a given household is constrained from spending as much as it would like in the short run, either because of borrowing constraints or behavioral biases.

But Sufi argues that spending as a response to an increase in house prices was not uniform, which is a critical point often neglected in the discussion of housing wealth effects. “In our study of the housing boom, we found enormous differences in the propensity of homeowners to extract equity from their home based on credit scores. Homeowners with the lowest credit scores were very aggressive, borrowing 40¢ against every dollar of increased home equity. Homeowners with the highest credit scores were almost completely passive, pulling almost no equity out of their homes when house prices increased,” said Sufi.

“In research with Kamalesh Rao of MasterCard Advisors, Mian and I also found the exact same relationship during the housing bust. For a given dollar decline in house prices, constrained borrowers cut back on spending much more dramatically than unconstrained households. The marginal propensity to consume out of housing wealth was three-to-four times larger for constrained versus unconstrained households.” wrote Sufi.

Today these constrained borrowers have been shut out of housing and mortgage markets, he said. ‘The only households that can buy a home or borrow against one are precisely the unconstrained households that are least likely to spend out of an increase in housing wealth. Therefore few homeowners are aggressively borrowing against their homes, precisely because they have high credit scores. If we take the results from our previous research, the housing wealth effect for these households may be close to zero, which would substantially dampen the effect of house prices on spending.”

Another way to measure the wealth effect is to look at home improvement, he said.  Year-over-year spending on home improvement, appliances, and furniture was up 2.4% in January through March of 2013, while other retail spending was up 3.5%. Spending on home-related purchases remained weak even as house prices climbed. In contrast, during the 2002-06 boom, year-over-year spending on home improvement, appliances, and furniture outpaced other retail spending every single year.

“The nature of the housing recovery is quite different than what we’ve seen in the past. Up to this point, it appears to be driven in large part by investors and cash-buyers. The direction of causality is difficult to discern: investors may be responding to house price growth as much as driving it. But the recent growth should be understood in the context of the boom in investor activity,” he wrote. The most direct effect would be a permanent return to homeownership rates in the United States of 65% or perhaps even lower. Further, investors renting out apartments and single-family homes are likely to invest less in the homes than homeowners would. We still need good theory and data to back up this argument, but it seems to be accepted wisdom among professionals working in housing and durable goods markets. It does make intuitive sense. Landlords tolerate more depreciated washing machines and kitchen appliances, and more transient renters are less willing to pay the landlord for better equipment.

 

http://www.realestateeconomywatch.com/2013/09/will-housing-save-the-economy/