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Kingston, ON

SOLD IN KINGSTON - MORE HAPPY FIRST TIME BUYERS!

Susan Emo   in Kingston/Brockville/Gananoque: Real Estate Agent in Gananoque, ON

Did you hear Susan Emo LOVES working with First time buyers? Another happy couple now living in their own home in Kingston Ontario

SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD SOLD

Old Quarry Road, Kingston, Ontario

Susan Emo, Salesperson, RE/MAX Riverview Realty Ltd. Brokerage

Gananoque Ontario
613 382 2211

Gananoque & the 1000 Islands Region to Host Music Festival

Susan Emo   in Kingston/Brockville/Gananoque: Real Estate Agent in Gananoque, ON

GANANOQUE & 1000 Islands Region to Host One of Ontario's Largest Music Festivals

The organizers of this year's inaugural 1000 Islands Music Fest 
are proud to announce the festival is now confirmed! 
This will be one of Ontario's largest music festivals of 2009, 
The 1000 Islands Music Festival 
will take place August 13, 14, 15, 2009 at The Dingman Farm, 
located at 15 Pykeview Drive, Gananoque, 
in Leeds and 1000 Islands Township.
               
 It's expected that The 1000 Islands Music Festival will draw crowds 
from all over Ontario, Quebec and Upper New York State 
and bring an expected 15,000 new visitors to the region. 
The festival organizers 
have assembled a roster of artists that have established world-wide success, 
and also a great list of Canadian independent and major label recording artists. 
The location will house two stages; accommodate over 30,000 people, 
camping for as many as 4,000, with food vendors, 2 beer gardens, 
and a VIP LLBO Tent near the main stage.

The festival kicks off on the evening of Thursday Aug 13th

with a celebration of the community. The event

will wrap up with a large fireworks display Saturday August 15th.

Line Up To Be Announced In Gananoque - Press Conference May 28th

CONGRATULATIONS! YOU'VE JUST WON . . . . .

02-25-09
GEORGE LUCK
GEORGE LUCK: Real Estate Agent in Kingston, ON

We have all been plagued from time to time by telephone sales calls. "Do you want a great deal on carpet cleaning?,or " Do you want a great deal on window cleaning?" or " Do you want a great deal on curtain cleaning?" or "woolen rugs" or , or, or, ( why is it that nobody ever calls and offers to clean the kitty litter?).

At any rate, I, over the years, had worked out a fool proof plan that deflected the calls without insulting or hurting anyone's feelings ( well this is Canada and we must be polite) So over the years, I had convinced all sales agents that my Wife and I lived in a house with no carpets, no windows, no curtains, no woolen rugs, etc, etc, etc. In fact we lived in a cardboard box with a telephone. It was a perfect cover!

But then technology changed and the calls became automated. You know the ones. The phone rings, there is a two second silence and the prerecorded message starts. There was no protection against the computerized caller. Every time the phone rang, we waited for the dreaded two second delay and whammo-blammo we were caught again.

Well in Canada we now have our own "do not call" list. Works pretty well at keeping those Canadian call centres from bugging us, except . . . . . . . . Except that apparently Americans can access the list so now we are receiving calls from American call centres. And don't think that at least we still have that two second delay to forewarn us of an impending sales pitch.

No, the latest development in the technologic war to invade every crevice of our private lives has been developed by a Cruise line. Yes, sometime over the last year, in a smoke filled room, packed with Captains, stewards, members of the 'black gang' ( engine room technicians), board room 'yes men' and at least three entertainers singing "Ain't we got fun!" came up with the most insidious idea. The A-bomb of sales call techniques; the prerecorded FOG HORN BLAAAAAAAAAT! which precedes the sales pitch so that you can no longer enjoy the two second warning.

So here is what you can expect - RING RING RING - "HELLO?" - BLAAAAAAAAAAAAAT! If you are on a roof - BLAAAAAAAAAT! If you are in a crawl space - BLAAAAAAAAAAT! You are never safe from the dreaded FOG HORN. It is supposed to make you want to take a cruise on one of their boats. It makes me want to sink one!

THE PROBLEM WITH HOME INSPECTIONS

01-26-09
GEORGE LUCK
GEORGE LUCK: Real Estate Agent in Kingston, ON

The problem with home inspections is that it is too easy to chase a purchaser away over even minor discoveries.

The wrong word. The wrong phrase. A misinterpreted glance. The tone of voice.

A purchaser is like a deer. In the woods a snap of a twig, the crunch of leaves, anything can spook him. And so it is with the home inspection. I have heard stories of purchasers spooked out of a perfectly good home over a dripping tap or a non-functional G.F.C.I. outlet. And it was all because of the way the information was presented by the inspector. It is called perspective. Perspective allows the inspector to present his findings in a manner that informs the purchaser without alarming him.

Asbestos, poly-b pipe, eureaformaldihide insulation, vermiculite and so many more can legitimately kill a home purchase even when found in minor amounts. But even major 'infestations' when presented in perspective and with reasonable solutions do not have to doom a purchase.

The problem with home inspections is that it is too easy to chase a purchaser away over even minor discoveries. And completely unnecessary.

THE WORLD ENCONOMY IS GOING DOWN THE DRAIN BECAUSE . . .

Susan Emo   in Kingston/Brockville/Gananoque: Real Estate Agent in Gananoque, ON

"The world economy is going down the drain because of some repossessed, boarded up, unsellable homes in Cleveland."

But how does that bring down a 60 or 70 trillion dollar world economy is a whole other story!

I thought you might be interested in the following article that was in our REALTOR® EDGE newsletter this morning . . .

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If you believe a lot of what you hear and read in the financial media, that's what you'd think, according Jeff Rubin, Chief Economist, Chief Strategist and Managing Director CIBC World Markets, speaking at the Real Estate Forum in Toronto in December.

"We all understand how those mortgages were securitized" said Rubin, "and we all understand that when people send in the keys instead of a mortgage cheque those (mortgage-backed securities) couldn't make the coupon payments that they said they were going to make. The value of those instruments fell. There were massive write offs in the financial sector. That is very clear.... But how does that bring down a 60 or 70 trillion dollar world economy is a whole other story."

Rubin blames the global recession on the skyrocketing oil prices earlier in the year.

"Four of the last five recessions were caused by huge increases in oil prices," said Rubin, precipitated in 1973 by the War in the Middle East, in 1979 by the Iranian Revolution, in 1991 by the first Iraqi War and today.

"In fact the 1998 Asian Meltdown is the only real global recession that didn't have oil's fingerprint all over it."

First the good news
Rubin says the real oil story out there is supply destruction. Even before prices collapsed, oil supply had not grown from 2005 to 2008, he said.

"We may have a one- or two- or three-quarter decline in oil demand but in any economic recovery what we are really going to see is the supply destruction and that's why I think oil prices are going to come back rapidly with any pick up in economic activity. We are looking to oil prices going back to $100 per barrel range within 12 months."

And rising oil prices, says Rubin, is a good news story for Canada in the long run.

Now the bad news
Rubin expects the US housing crisis to moderate with housing prices there to stabilize by the end of the first quarter of 2009.

Where the US economy will have to deal with recession in 2009 is in vehicle sales, which will fall to 1982 sales levels, he predicts. Ninety per cent of all automobile sales have been financed and that financing has become increasingly problematic.

"The problem facing GM, Chrysler, Ford isn't so much whether they are competitive with Honda or Toyota; the more fundamental problem is that the industry can build 15 to 20 million vehicle units a year in a market that will only be buying eight to 10 million units. And that is not a cyclical change. That is going to be a secular change, and one that is going to leave a huge imprint on the North American economy - on both sides of the border."

The economic stimulus
Future taxpayers, says Rubin, will wish that we bit the bullet for two to three quarters, instead of "mortgaging their futures." Rubin believes that Washington's plan to stimulate the economy with an injection of hundreds of billions of dollars is an over-reaction, but added:

"Up here in Canada, that kind of response provides a unique opportunity for us to be freeloaders, because you cannot stimulate the US economy to that extent without that stimulus leaking into Canada," particularly if that stimulus is going to be directed to integrated industries, like for example the auto industry, he said.

"If we were smart we would do nothing and let Washington do all the heavy lifting, and let US taxpayers pay for the stimulus in the future."

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Thanks to Joan Bailey, Editor, REALTOR® EDGE Newsletter, for sharing the above article.