San Antonio is still considered a buyer's market, with the median price for a resale home during the first quarter of 2009 at $146,300. This is down 1.5% compared to a year ago, according to the San Antonio Board of Realtors.
Lower mortgage interest rates and this year's beefed-up tax credit for first-time buyers seem to have spurred buyers into action this spring. The 8 months' worth of housing inventory needs to be reduced to 6 months in order to get back to a balanced market, in which the negotiation advantage is split more evenly between buyers and sellers. This assumes no new homes would be built, or at least they would be absorbed quickly and not swell the housing inventory even further.
And in fact, new home starts numbered 1,400 for the first quarter of this year, down by 40 percent from the first quarter of 2008.

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According to another index, using sales price information from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, San Antonio ranked 28th for the best year-over-year price appreciation, at 1.68%. It may not take long to get to a balanced market after all.
Ever since I got back from my cruise to Hawaii, I have been busybusybusy. That is my excuse for taking so long to post more photos from my trip. But first, the news flash: the hummingbird moths are back! They have been visiting the lantana blossoms in the evening, making it tough for me to get a sharp photo of them in low-light conditions. I did my best:


Now, here's the cool thing. A couple of days after I took these pictures, I got an e-mail from Sandra, who lives on the southern coast of South Africa. She was visited by a hummingbird moth in her garden one evening, and found one on her veranda the next morning. Apparently, it was attracted to the "love palm" blooming in front of her house.
Hummingbird moths are also known as hawk moths, but I think the first name is more descriptive of the way they hover over the flowers as they sip nectar. Thanks, Sandra!
Wandering around the McBryde Gardens, now part of the National Tropical Botanical Garden, was so peaceful. I enjoyed the breeze and the shade from the tall trees. In a section devoted to palms I came upon these lovely palms growing in the shade of a much larger tree.
Many of the trees in the garden are homes to orchids--stay tuned for more photos!

I really want to get one of these trees. I hope it would grow in our garden; I think it might, because I found one last year in the Sunken Gardens. This one was flowering in the fabulous McBryde/National Tropical Botanical Garden on the island of Kauai. First I need to find out what it's called--I think it may be a type of bauhinia. Anybody know?

My lucky husband won a cruise to Hawaii online from Princess cruise line. The first place we went after four days at sea was Hilo, Hawaii. Our second stop on the tour was the Ahalanui Beach Park. It has a geothermally heated lagoon for swimming. Although it can be like a hot tub, when we were there the water was just tepid, since sea water is washed into the lagoon when it is stormy, as it had been the previous week.
After sitting quietly for 10 minutes, I got a photo of this shy creature venturing out to see what he could find to eat.

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