Friday, January 14, 2011

Plant a Tree!

Budding lemon, May 30, 2010
It is often suggested that one should plant a tree before they die. I remember helping my sister and mom plant one on the Briargrove Elementary grounds. When I drive by, I always wonder if that little tree is still there, what with all the changes that have been made to that campus since the early 80s.

My husband Chad and I would like to plant a tree of our own. While we haven't scratched it off our list yet, a previous owner of our home did. Fruit trees! And we are lucky to be enjoying the fruits of their labor. 

They are both still young--one Lisbon Lemon and the other a small orange variety called Dwarf Calamondin. When we first moved in, the calamondin orange tree had much fruit on it. We plucked them all off, and sadly it did not bear any fruit last year. However, this year the fruit is back, but still teeny tiny.

Teeny tiny calamondin oranges
On the other hand, the lemon tree was bare when we moved in and has remained so until this past May. One day I walked outside and was amazed by the little bitty bud on it. (See the opening photo above.) 

Lemon tree before we bought the house, November 2008
Lemon tree this week, January 2011
Is that amazing growth or what?! We have no idea how big and fruitful these trees will get, but are excited to watch them grow and enjoy their fruit.

Close up of growing lemon, September 11, 2010
Close up of ripe lemon, January 11, 2011
While I did use a lemon a month or two ago to freshen up our garbage disposal, we had not tasted one until the other night. It was delish in our peppermint tea! A fresh batch of lemonade would be in order...if only it were summer.



Peppermint tea with fresh lemon juice
So, hopefully now I have you wishing you were growing your own fruit in your backyard. If so, lucky for you, tomorrow is Urban Harvest's annual Fruit Tree Sale! It will take place at the University of Houston Robertson Football Stadium from 9AM-1PM or until sold out. They will have a host of fruit trees, from Darlene sweet domestic muscadines to Bloomsweet Asian grapefruits. I cannot advise you on what to grow in our climate, but the good people of Urban Harvest should be of help.

Personally, I would not mind adding an avocado (mmmmm!) or fig tree to our yard, but I am just not sure where they would go...unless we unearthed our Cycas revoluta, which would be fine by me since they are toxic to pets. But, even if we don't make room this weekend, there are several organizations in Houston that provide opportunities to plant trees, like Trees for Houston and the Buffalo Bayou Partnership.

So in closing I will leave you, my beloved reader, with a Chinese Proverb: The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The next best time is now.

Friday, December 24, 2010

Merry Christmas Lights!

One of my favorite things to do at this magical time of year is to drive around at night listening to Christmas carols and admiring Christmas lights. I have to say that this year in particular the Magnolia City has done an impressive and inspiring job. The Woodland Heights neighborhood, who hosted Lights in the Heights a couple weekends ago for the 24th year, was quite a sight. Unfortunately, I did not have my camera with me then. But, I did take a spin the other night with my camera and snapped a few beauties in Montrose, Boulevard Oaks, Southampton and River Oaks. Enjoy! And from our house to yours, Merry Christmas!

 
Montrose
Montrose
Montrose
Boulevard Oaks
Boulevard Oaks
Southampton
River Oaks
River Oaks

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Easy As Pie

With Thanksgiving only a day away, many are surely gearing their appetites for a feast. From turkey to mashed potatoes and cranberry sauce to pumpkin pie, this is by far my favorite meal of the year, and I know I am not alone. I always love an excuse to bake, and Thanksgiving is one of them. I tore out a recipe for Sweet Potato Pie with Marshmallow Meringue from Southern Living recently. I consider myself a baker, famous among friends for duplicating Magnolia Bakery's delicious cupcakes, but I had never baked a pie before the one in this here post. Additionally a fan of sweet potatoes, I had never had a Sweet Potato Pie. So, I thought I'd make things right and document the effort here. After all, the magazine called the recipe "Easy As Pie," how hard could it be?

Doesn't that marshmallow meringue just look divine?


The instructions say it will take 20 minutes ("hands-on") and 2 hours, 30 minutes ("total") to prepare this.  While I had never baked a pie before, the experience I did have baking gave me doubts. Twenty minutes just seemed awfully quick...but I forged ahead with high hopes.


I tried to make the ingredients look pretty here for a photo, like my friend's professional cooking blog, NotThatMartha. How did I do? I think I managed to squeeze everything in but the corn syrup (more on that later).


Here I am preparing the crust. Yes, those are black-eyed peas in the parchment paper. They are used to weigh the crust down--to mold it--and then are tossed.


There she is baking in the oven. I covered only the sides with foil, a tip from one of my cookbooks.  (The recipe at hand actually suggested covering it entirely.)


I bought all the ingredients at Whole Foods, and they did not have marshmallow creme (likely because it is full of unwholesome stuff). I improvised by making my own marshmallow creme with 16 marshmallows and 2 teaspoons of corn syrup over a make-shift double-boiler.


Here she is after the bake. So far, so good... 

Now it was time to add the marshmallow meringue and bake it for 6 more minutes. It sure didn't appear to have the fluff from the magazine. I gave myself the benefit of the doubt though, thinking maybe the fluff will happen in the oven. I'd peek, and still no fluff. A few more minutes. A few more. And a few more. Finally, after at least 3 times the amount suggested, I pulled her out.

And, voilà...


So maybe it didn't turn out quite as fluffy or mouth-watering as the Southern Living one. It took me a "total" of six and half hours (not including the trip to Whole Foods), so beware of magazine recipe timelines! Admittedly, I was in uncharted territory. 

I think it tasted pretty good. Different, but good nonetheless. The pie was my contribution to John Daugherty, Realtors' annual Thanksgiving lunch. I didn't come away with the accolades my cupcakes bring, but at least I had some leftover pie to share with others. My mom politely said it wasn't my best. Luckily for the Covey side of the family, I will be bringing mashed potatoes and a green salad this Thursday.

With so much to be thankful for, I  want to say that I am thankful for you, my beloved reader. I wish you much success in your kitchen this week. Happy Thanksgiving!

Saturday, November 06, 2010

The Anthropologie in Real Estate

 This is a test.


Rorschach Card 1


It is intended to be like the Rorschach inkblot test. Remember that from Psych 101?





I am asking that you look at the following five spreads from the new Anthropologie catalog. You may look at each spread as long as you like. 





Print it,





rotate it, 





look at it however you wish!





What do you see?



What do you see?





What do you see?





What do you see?
 





What do you see?





Did you see what I saw? The paper doll cat dressed in Victorian clothes wearing a bonnet? (Because I love cats and old stuff, I cut this out of the real catalog and put it on my fridge!) Did you see the black-and-white spotted llama? Did you see the owl? The cat wearing a dog sweater?

I thought this catalog was so creative. But, I missed the clothes! I missed the boots on the sheep. I missed the Christmas ornaments hanging from the white parrot's beak. And I missed the feather-boa pillows under the Papillion.

I bring this up because Anthropologie is only trying to do what home sellers everywhere are trying to do: move product. If you can't see the product, it makes it quite a bit harder to sell.

Eliminating clutter is so important in getting a house ready to sell. If you are selling, remember that buyers are there to look at the house, not your wedding photos, your kid's honor roll ribbons or your rare collection of ostrich eggs. For a quicker sale, clean out 2/3 of your belongings. You will be amazed at the difference it will make!

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Greetings from the Magnolia City!

Many of my beloved readers and clients might not know that before I became a REALTOR®, I was employed in the publishing industry for a number of years. I majored in Advertising at the University of Texas and was part of the creative sequence. While I complemented my major with a concentration in Business Foundations, my heart leans to the creative. My first "real" job was as an advertising sales assistant in San Francisco for a premier West Coast publishers’ representative firm. While it put me in the magazine business, it was not what I was seeking to do. I wanted to write and be on the creative side of the business, not in sales. To get more relevant experience, I wrote copy for a start-up website delivering online content until finally landing the job I wanted--an editorial position at a magazine. I worked as an editorial assistant at Golf Magazine in New York, mostly doing research, copy editing and small writing assignments but occasionally getting to interview famous PGA players and actors with a penchant for golf. It was great! But after two-and-a-half years I decided I'd had enough of the long New York winters. When I moved back to Texas, I helped launch Houston Magazine. I wrote articles and eventually became the associate editor doing a number of things, but mostly writing and editing. It was a fun job with good people and was a great way to reconnect with my hometown. I just didn't feel that Houston offered the progressive career in magazines like New York did, and I knew I would not be moving back to New York soon. Don't get me wrong: I heart New York! But my roots were planted in Texas, and that's where I saw them growing old.

My roots also have so much real estate in them, from my grandmother to my mom and now almost everyone related to us! So my blog is a way for me to merge that creativity that I enjoy with my real estate career. But sometimes I feel stifled by the fact that my blog is about real estate. I want to blog about real estate, home maintenance and the like, but I don't want to feel boxed in anymore. Real estate is my career now, but it is not everything I am. I like photography, eating out, bookstores, interior design, window shopping, antiquing, old buildings, baking, etc., etc.

So, much like the Future Mayor of Cherryhurst's blog post, "We Need to Change," I hereby declare that H-Town w/Emily Covey will from this day forward be called Magnolia City.

Magnolia City? Yes. It is one of the earliest of Houston’s many nicknames. The Texas World, a newspaper first published in 1900, is said to have labeled Houston "the Magnolia City," but the nickname had been in use among the locals since the 1870s. Areas of east Houston, particularly Harrisburg and Magnolia Park, were once natural magnolia forests that were wiped out by urban sprawl by the 1920s.

To me, the title represents not just where I am writing from and where I am working, but what Houston once was, what it is now, and what it can be. I am hoping that this change will allow me to blog in a more free-wheeling style--and more often. I'm not sure exactly what this means yet, but I hope it works out better for all of us. I feel better already!

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Tour de H-town

Again I've found myself dormant in the blogosphere. I missed the month of June entirely. Woops! I think it was the Houston heat suffocating my will to write. All summer long I've been wanting to revert to my childhood and go to summer camp! Well, this past week my wish came somewhat true. I spent the week in Colorado celebrating the Fourth of July, my birthday and summer in general--sprinkled in the mix was a little bit of remote real estate business. What a beautiful place Colorado is to be in the summer!

Just before the trip, my husband Chad and I gave each other bikes for or second anniversary. While we haven't even had a chance to use them yet, we were able to ride bikes quite a bit in Colorado. We rode to a Farmers' Market, lunch spots and also just for exercise. The longest we rode was about 25 miles to Glenwood Springs to visit a brewpub. All the bike riding got me to thinking about how Colorado does such a better job of incorporating fitness into their everyday lives be it through hiking, biking, golfing and even using bikes to get to work. A lady we met at the brewpub in Glenwood Springs had biked uphill all the way from Vail with her husband and son. She said Colorado is the "fittest" state. I believe it! I recently read that Texas ranks as the #13 "most obese" state.

 2nd anniversary bikes!

Now I don't plan to take my real estate business to the bike, as I don't think my clients would like to ride on my handlebars. However, I would like to challenge myself to find opportunities to ride my new bike here in Houston, despite its not being known for being too pedestrian- or biker-friendly. I would like to help foster a change in that direction though.

Riding along the Roaring Fork River in Colorado

While I don't live there, I know the Heights has a new hike and bike trail, which would make living there great. Other designated biking areas around town are Terry Hershey Park Hike & Bike Trail and the trails at Memorial Park and along Buffalo Bayou. But I'm hoping to use my bike to ride to some of the Farmers' Markets here, to restaurants and just to ride around my neighborhood and the environs.

Well, joke's on me! As I am finishing this post, my husband informs me that my car is dead as a doornail. It has been parked in the garage since the torrential rainstorm before our trip. I must have left on the headlights or something. Woops, again! Looks like my only transportation options tomorrow will be my two feet or my new bike! Anyone want to go see a house?

Saturday, May 01, 2010

John A. Daugherty, Jr., Vintage Boats and "No"

My broker, John Daugherty, was featured on PBS Thursday night. Here are a few clips from the show, where he talks about how he got into the residential real estate business in Houston, his passion for vintage boats and ink wells and how he deals with the word "no."






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