Contact Us

  • Lucy D. Kelts
  • PO Box 8001
  • 16236 San Dieguito Rd. Bldg. 5-10
  • Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067
  • P: 858.756.0593
  • F: 858.923.2046
  • E: lucy (at) lucykelts.com
  • Contact Form

Social Media

Subscribe to RSF New Homes

expand Contact Us

Rancho Santa Fe Homeowner turns yard work into Artwork.

April 12, 2010 by Sharon Corp · Comments 

Homeowner turns his property into a truly unique landscape

Art work at the home of Chuck and Pilar Bahde of Rancho Santa Fe

Charlie Neuman

Art work at the home of Chuck and Pilar Bahde of Rancho Santa Fe

Art work at the home of Chuck and Pilar Bahde of Rancho Santa Fe

Photo by Charlie Neuman

An untitled sculpture (left) pointed across a walkway at the home of Chuck and Pilar Bahde of Rancho Santa Fe. “My sculptures are unusual. Some say I’m a little weird,” said Chuck Bahde (below), strolling past another of his sculptures, this one twisting skyward.

RANCHO SANTA FE — When Chuck Bahde bought the rambling wooden house in Rancho Santa Fe, the 5-acre spread already had plenty of grass and gardens. But that wasn’t to his liking. Besides, it seemed such a waste of water to keep the lawn green. So Bahde set out to create a new landscape, filled with meandering streams, pools and waterfalls — all created with blue and green glass, hand-painted rocks and plastic.

Today dozens of artworks adorn Bahde’s expansive property, in addition to the waterless pools and rivers. Every last piece is made from recycled or found materials. Pebbles, broken bottles, computer chips, seashells, beads, railroad ties, old-fashioned glass doorknobs and even an old, 5-cent parking meter have been turned into artwork in his hands.

A solar panel from a defunct pool-heating system is now the basis for a towering sculpture called “The Wave.” Plastic CDs are put to use as sun-catchers, and warped, time-faded, wooden tennis rackets and a tiny gold trophy add to the décor surrounding the tennis courts. Every rock lining the numerous pathways was found on the property, he said.

Bahde, 84, was an industrial architect by trade and a graduate of the Institute of Design In Chicago . Over the years he enjoyed a wide-ranging career that included everything from designing and building custom homes in the Midwest to practicing public relations in Europe , where he met his wife, Pilar, who is Swiss and Spanish.

“I was more or less a job-jumper, because I was curious,” he said.

Though he started creating art while in school, and design work was often part of his job, Bahde was never a professional artist. “My sculptures are unusual. Some say I’m a little weird,” he said with a laugh.

But few aside from family members and friends have seen his sculptures and unique landscape of art. “I just do things for myself,” he said.

A vacation in San Diego and a subsequent job offer from Convair, where Bahde worked designing airliner interiors, led the couple to settle in San Diego to raise their two children. After many years living in Point Loma and actively participating in the planning group and other community efforts, the Bahdes bought the Rancho Santa Fe property in 1974. He has been remodeling the house, and the yard, ever since.

Bahde’s landscape is ever-changing, as he continues to add to it and create newer pieces. Even more sculptures fill several garages that once housed a car collection; Bahde plans to put them on exhibit at a gallery someday.

But he is most proud of the fact that his intricate and eye-catching landscape takes very little water to maintain, other than what is needed for the macadamia trees, two coral trees and a small rose garden that were already on the property when he bought it.

In fact, the recent rains kept Bahde busy drying out the “pools,” since standing water could loosen the glue holding the mosaic-like surface together.

Bahde credits a school coach, in part, with some of the modesty that has kept him from making his artwork public. “My first football coach told me: ‘As good as you all are, I don’t want to see you bragging. Just show people what you can do.’ ”

Leslie Wolf Branscomb is a freelance writer in San Diego.

Posted via web from slcorp’s posterous

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Rancho Santa Fe Rotary – RSF Rotary donation to Kids Korps

April 8, 2010 by Sharon Corp · Comments 

Rancho Santa Fe Rotary donation to Kids Korps

Rancho Santa Fe Rotary Club donates $ 2,000 to the Kids Korps “Build a bike” program
Cindy Bloch, Past Regional President and founding memer of Kids Korps, receives a check along with Robin Chappelow the Regional Program Director from President Michael Manhard

Content image

Is California Real Estate Turning a Corner?

April 8, 2010 by Sharon Corp · Comments 

whew_small-150x150 Is California Real Estate Turning a Corner? While California home prices are still far below the peak levels of 2006, some economists think California is on its way out of the woods. “Now we’re seeing the interior [of the state] has stabilized – because prices have fallen by 50% to 60% already,” says Stuart Gabriel, director of UCLA’s Ziman Center for Real Estate. The combination of cuts in price, reductions in mortgage rates and all sorts of state and federal programs to incentivize buying activity have brought stability. “Prices are increasing only modestly, but for all intents and purposes, they’ve stopped falling,” Gabriel says.

Posted via web from slcorp’s posterous

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Now that the Government has left the housing market, will private investors come back in?

April 1, 2010 by Lucy Kelts · Comments 

Fannie Mae at 3900 Wisconsin Avenue, NW in Was...
Image via Wikipedia

As Fed’s mortgage purchases end, eyes turn to investors

Hope is that private money will again flow into housing market.

Mortgage programThe purchases have given the Federal Reserve its largest balance sheet ever. Above, Janise Sengupta leaves after checking out a home for sale in Los Angeles. (Jae C. Hong / Associated Press / March 30, 2010)

By Nathaniel PopperMarch 31, 2010 | 7:14 p.m.
la-fi-fed-mortgages1-2010apr01
Reporting from New York – The government’s $1.25-trillion program to prop up the housing market by purchasing mortgages came to an end Wednesday — in a small, messy room at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York with four desks and a Nerf basketball hoop.For the last year, a small team of traders has worked here to buy massive amounts of mortgages to fill the void left after institutional investors quickly retreated in the throes of the 2008 financial crisis, unable or unwilling to put money into the fast-melting mortgage arena.

The purchases have given the Federal Reserve its largest balance sheet ever and triggered fears of runaway inflation. But most analysts now credit them for lowering mortgage rates, providing a vital lifeline for the battered housing market.

“Something like this had never been tried on this scale before,” said Mark Gertler, a former resident scholar at the New York Fed and an economics professor at New York University. “The fact that they got it mostly right is quite remarkable.”

Now, with home prices stabilizing and an economic recovery beginning to take hold, the hope is that private investors will fill the gap left by the Fed, ensuring that money will continue to be available to underwrite home loans. Turning mortgages into salable bonds provides lenders with fresh cash that can be used to make new loans.

The team at the New York Fed has been tapering off its purchases in the last few months as other financial institutions began to step in and pick up some of the slack. Mortgage rates have not moved dramatically, and industry experts estimate that they are unlikely to do so in the near future.

“The average guy looking for a mortgage is not going to see much difference,” said Scott Simon, a managing director at bond giant Pacific Investment Management Co. in Newport Beach.

Before the Fed program began, Pimco and other investment firms such as BlackRock Inc. were major buyers of so-called mortgage-backed securities, which are bonds backed by bundles of home loans.

Pimco and other bond investors will step back into the market, Simon said, but they’ll demand slightly better investment earnings than the Fed settled for. That in turn will push up interest rates for borrowers — but only a little, perhaps an eighth of a percentage point, he said.

The program’s end removes one of many supports the government has been providing to the housing market. Others include the federal takeovers of mortgage financing giants Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae and incentives for banks and loan investors to modify mortgages, thus lowering borrowers’ payments and curtailing foreclosures.

The team of traders at the New York Fed began buying up mortgage-backed securities about a year ago. Setting up shop on the ninth floor of the New York Fed’s imposing stone headquarters near Wall Street, the team eventually grew to about 30 people.

Initially the team directed groups of traders at other investment houses including Pimco and Goldman Sachs who purchased the securities on behalf of the government.

The back-office staff then helped move the bonds to JPMorgan Chase & Co., which serves as a holding bank for the Fed. Early this year, the actual trading shifted to four Fed employees working out of a small office cluttered with old newspapers, empty water bottles and Broadway playbills.

Each day, the traders put out requests to some of the 18 big banks that work with the Federal Reserve, stating what types of mortgage bonds they were looking to buy, and in what price range. As responses came in, the traders determined which prices were good enough — if any — and then executed the trades on TradeWeb, a computer network used by other banks.

Andrew Huszar, a 37-year-old trader who has run the mortgage purchasing program, was recruited to the team from a private investment bank, where his compensation was significantly greater.

“I felt like, ‘Wow, this is a chance to really help at a pretty unique time in history,’ ” he said.

Huszar and his colleagues were not merely chasing profits, like most trading floors. They were also chasing stability in the financial system. The timing and size of each purchase were carefully calibrated so as not to upset the markets or to put the trading team at a disadvantage.

“We had the ability to move the markets with our purchases, so we had to be very careful,” Huszar said, standing outside the trading room.

The end of the program still leaves many uncertainties. The purchases have made the Federal Reserve the world’s largest single holder of mortgages, a problem for the federal balance sheet if many of those mortgages go sour. It also has ballooned the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet to $2.3 trillion, up from $700 billion before the crisis.

“We face an extraordinary challenge with this exit,” Brian Sack of the New York Fed’s markets group said recently. “This challenge, which involves operating in uncharted territory along several dimensions, will inherently involve some uncertainties and risk.”

That is unprecedented, and it could make it hard for the Federal Reserve to do its main job of managing interest rates. Sack has spoken about a number of tools for dealing with the unusual situation, including paying interest to banks that park cash at the Fed.

Sack and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke have also spoken about the possibility of selling some of the mortgages that they have just bought, a job that would, in all likelihood, fall back to the team on the ninth floor in New York.

For now, the team is looking for things to slow down, however briefly.

As the last of the $1.25 trillion in mortgages were purchased Wednesday, a crude countdown sign at “Team Room 1″ said, “Only 1 MBS Buying Days Left.” Just outside the room, Huszar had a smile on his face.

“We’re going to have a little party for ourselves at the end of the day,” Huszar said. “This has been an incredible year in the history of the Fed.”

nathaniel.popper@

latimes.com

Times staff writer E. Scott Reckard contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2010, The Los Angeles Times

 Now that the Government has left the housing market, will private investors come back in?

  • EmailE-mail
  • PrintPrint
  • add to DiggDigg
  • http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-fed-mortgages1-2010apr01,0,7490736.story]” title=”Add this to Twitter” rel=”nofollow” target=”_new” alt=”Add this to Twitter”>add to TwitterTwitter
  • add to FacebookFacebook
  • add to StumbleUponStumbleUpon
  • Share
  • Getting a loan to purchase a home has been problematic, except at the “lower-end” of the real estate market. With the fed out of the loop, will the lower-end now rejoin the difficult situation that has been continuously faced by upper-end market purchasers? When is money going to loosen up for credit-worthy, responsible purchasers??

    Posted via web from Rancho Santa Fe Homes

    Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

    The Ranunculus! North Coastal San Diego Flower Fields

    March 30, 2010 by Sharon Corp · Comments 

    032910_21-150x150 The Ranunculus! North Coastal San Diego Flower Fields

    One of the great things about living in San Diego this time of year is that everything is in bloom and full of vivid color. There is no better example of that than the gigantic hillside of Ranunculus at the corner of Palomar Airport Rd and Paseo Del Norte in Carlsbad, located on North Coastal San Diego--famous for its perfect year-round weather.  I visited the fields this past Sunday and it was a spectacular day- 80 degrees, sunny and the air was filled with the fragrant aroma of these beautiful flowers and the nearby Pacific Ocean!
    The fields are at 65% of their full bloom as of today and should be at 100% by next weekend. You can get more information,  read about the history and get directions by                                               visiting their site : www.theflowerfields.com
    If you get the chance, try to go in the next week or so. You will be glad you did!

    Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

    Federal Regulators Close La Jolla Bank

    February 20, 2010 by Tamara Stephenson · Comments 

    La Jolla Bank, FSB FDIC (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation) OneWest Bank, FSB
    FDIC Information for La Jolla Bank, FSB, La Jolla, CA

    On Friday, February 19, 2010, La Jolla Bank, FSB, La Jolla, CA was closed by the Office of Thrift Supervision. Subsequently, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) was named Receiver. No advance notice is given to the public when a financial institution is closed.

    All deposit accounts have been transferred to OneWest Bank, FSB, Pasadena, CA. For more information on OneWest Bank, visit us at www.owb.com.

    The FDIC has assembled useful information regarding your relationship with La Jolla Bank, FSB. Besides a checking account, you may have Certificates of Deposit, a business checking account, a Social Security direct deposit, and other relationships with the institution.

    Please select the link below to read more about this event:

    FDIC Bank Closing Information for La Jolla Bank, FSB

    Online service will remain available.

    Continue to La Jolla Bank, FSB’s Online Banking Login

    Federal regulators close La Jolla Bank

    Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

    The Covenant

    February 11, 2010 by admin · Comments 

    The Crosby

    February 11, 2010 by admin · Comments 

    Fairbanks Ranch

    February 11, 2010 by admin · Comments 

    Rancho Santa Fe, CA Real Estate Market Conditions

    February 8, 2010 by Tamara Stephenson · Comments 

    Up to date Market Statistics for Rancho Santa Fe. If you would like specific neighborhood information or have questions, call us at 858-756-0593.

    7-day stats for Single Family properties in
    RANCHO SANTA FE, CA as of February 5, 2010
    Median List Price $3,395,000 Average List Price $4,348,079
    Total Inventory 253 Price per Square Foot $542
    Average Home Size 6,192 Median Lot Size 86,249
    Average # Beds 5.09 Average # Baths 5.52
    Homes Absorbed 9 Newly Listed 9
    Days on Market 304 Average Age 18

    Median List Price is holding and we expect to see more inventory coming on the market now that January is behind us.

    Median Price for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes

    Median Price for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes as of February 5, 2010 is $3,395,000

    Inventory for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes

    Inventory for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes as of February 5, 2010 is 253

    Average Days on Market for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes

    Average Days on Market for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes as of February 5, 2010 is 304

    Median Price Per Sqft for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes

    Median Price Per Sqft for homes in RANCHO SANTA FE, CA All ZIP Codes as of February 5, 2010 is $542

    When you look at the charts.... the overall reduction in price per square foot is dramatic. The buyer can get A TON for his $$$$$.

    Reblog this post [with Zemanta]