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Troy, ID

Spokane Day Trip: Troy Idaho (The other Twin Peaks!)

06-01-10
Scott May
Scott May: Real Estate Agent in Spokane, WA

This is the lumber mill at Troy Idaho, located about 12 miles or so to the East of Moscow Idaho.

To me these pictures capture the colors, the texture and because they are taken on Holiday (Memorial Day) the workers are gone and so it has this ery deserted feel to it and that reminded me very much of the old David Lynch Series "Twin Peaks".

Doesn't this look like the set straight out of Twin Peaks?

...and of course the pile of sustainables. I had to get a shot of the lumber; this is what we make our houses out of!

Here's the yard:

If you come to Troy, there is a little cafe there, a gas station, a post office, and a few little shops and such along the one main road, but no stoplight.

If you keep going through town and on down the road a ways there is a pull off at a trail head on an old abandoned railroad line. It's a great place for jogging or a day hike. Otherwise you can turn right and continue on to Lewiston this way and see a whole other part of the Palouse. If you head on the road way to the left it takes you further out into the country until the road eventually stops at Elk.

Extra Purrks for the New Homeowner

01-13-09
Paul Duffau
Paul Duffau: Inspector in Lewiston, ID

Inspections often go awry within the first few minutes. Agents sometimes throw a curve, clients frequently do and the house is always unpredictable.

Yesterday I had the pleasure of doing an older Cape Cod that was listed as vacant. The weather that we have had out here has been challenging (a couple feet of snow still on the ground in a couple of spots where I post-holed through and had to lunge my way out).

My client wasn't attending - he - or rather his wife - was off having a baby, so I was on my own. I walked into the house and set up my gear, pocketed a few tools and proceeded to do a quick tour of the house. First stop the basement.

Turned out to be my last stop for a while. When I clicked the lights on for the basement (it had a combination basement and crawlspace), the cat started yowling.

Cat. Vacant house. No good. Call Realtor. Not available. Wonderful.


Task #1 - Do not let the cat into the house.

Task #2 - Figure out how it got in.

I shut off all the doors to the upstairs and worked on Task #2 and discovered that the crawlspace and the basement were linked. Meanwhile, the cat yowled. It couldn't have been here long since it was downright chubby.

I found the interior access for the crawlspace by the stairs and ducked underneath to take a look. Easy access to the basement right at the floor joists. And the second cat. Well fed but quieter. First cat is still yowling.

How did they get in? Through the open door under the deck. I didn't close the door because I didn't want to trap the cats in the house. - the crawlspace already had an odor like a litterbox and I didn't want that getting worse.

So I finish the crawlspace and foundation - might as well, I'm already in there and go upstairs to the kitchen to type up my notes. Done with that, I start on the ground floor and discover, by the exterior door to the mudroom, a bag of catfood. Immediately outside the door, two chubby cats last seen in dimmer surroundings and an empty food bowl.

I'm a soft touch. My wife knows it, my kids know it, even the dog knows it. I feed the cats.

And I change the report to read: "Cats observed in the crawlspace during the inspection. These appear to resident to the home and are being feed on a regular basis here."

In the email to my client, I suggested double checking the disclosures and talking to his agent. The house was coming with a few additional purrks.