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In this week's episode of Hey, Sis, Eat This, sisters Whitney and Courtney welcome two very special guests, Host of the Table 5 Podcast, Lindsay Luttrell and her sister Habitual Hostess Co-Founder, Leigh Hansen. The sister banter flows as easily as sweet tea on a hot summer day, with these fellow Southern gals. Lindsay and Leigh shed light into their Coastal Florida upbringing all while paying tribute to their quintessential Southern mother, Momma Susan who'd never leave the house without a “lip!” The episode kicks off with a charming discussion about their shared Southern roots and the beautiful influence of hospitality in their lives. Leigh and Lindsay reflect on how Momma Susan, not only rolled her children's hair in baby socks for those perfect curls but also set a glamorous standard by never leaving the house without her “face on.” She was also the hostess with the mostess, frequently entertaining and putting the girls to work, "stuffing and fluffing" a ritual Leigh still practices today. At weeknight dinners in the Luttrell household, proper manners and English were strictly enforced. You could be “finished” with dinner but never “done!” Square Burgers were a favorite dish of the sisters as well as the plethora of dips that to this day magically appear on the counter when the siblings return home to Florida for a visit. Reflecting on their mother's sacrifices, Lindsay and Leigh honor her unwavering support. Whether it was making sure they had summer camp experiences, teaching them the importance of a thank you note, or drilling down on table manners, her influence would make any Southern belle proud. Whitney and Courtney are all ears as Lindsay gives us a peek into her podcast, Table 5, where she dives into the lives of famous chefs while also highlighting her love for all things culinary. Leigh shares her passion for setting a beautiful dinner tables through her brand, Habitual Hostess, reminding everyone that weeknight dinners deserve cloth napkins too! So grab your favorite dip because this chat is all about good food, a doting momma and a love of entertaining that will leave you hungry for more! All Things Lindsay Podcast: Table 5 Instagram: @table5pod Youtube: Table 5 With Lindsay Luttrell All Things Leigh https://www.habitualhostess.com Instagram: @habitualhostess Youtube: Habitual Hostess Pinterest: Habitual Hostess What you'll hear: What we've been cookin', who we've been entertainin', and any kitchen conundrums of the week... often in our Momma's Texas accent Chatting with siblings about what it was like around their dinner table growing up, favorite family recipes and stories that celebrate moms Interviews with celebrity chefs, restaurateurs, and culinary entrepreneurs about the influence and inspiration from their moms Weekly recipes from us and our guests posted out the Hey Sis, Eat This website - Website: https://www.heysiseatthis.com - Recipes from our Us and Our Guests: https://www.heysiseatthis.com/our-recipes - Call into the Hey Sis Hotline: 1-866-4 HEY SIS or 1-866-443-9747 - Email: hello@heysiseatthis.com - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/heysiseatthis/ - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/heysiseatthis - YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@heysiseatthis
Today we have Captain Chris Williamson back on the podcast to talk about everything Williamson Outfitters, what duck hunting is really all about, and much more! Williamson Outfitters is a premier waterfowl outfitter located in the forgotten coast of Florida specializing in coastal waterfowl hunts targeting species such as Red Heads, Blue Bills, Buffleheads, & more! If you listened last week you heard us announce that Chris is now a sponsor of the podcast and we are excited to have him as a partner of what we do here! Check out Williamson Outfitters at the link below! https://floridaducks.com/Companies we LOVE | Ways to Support the Podcast ↓froggtoggs - USE CODE ZD315 FOR 15 PERCENT OFF @ www.froggtoggs.com *Cannot be used in combination with any other promo code. Offer only available at www.froggtoggs.com.*Valid 8/30/2023 thru 12/31/2024Williamson Outfitters (Coastal Florida Waterfowl Hunts, Fishing, Gator Hunts and Much more!)https://floridaducks.com/ Code: ZERODUCK30 for 15 percent off Hook and Bullet Sunglasseshttps://purposebuiltoptics.com/Code Duck30 for 20 percent off Huntwise!https://huntwise.com/pro/checkout?code=DUCK30Looking to waterfowl hunt in Arkansas? Give our good friend Kade Weatherford, Owner of Delta Thunder Outfitters a call at (870)-926-7944You can use code ZeroDuck30 for 20 percent off all products at https://ackleyoutdoors.com/ !Code Zeroduck15 for 15 percent off https://dirtyduckcoffee.com/Special shout out to @Gavin Powell for letting us use his song "The End" in our videos!
This week, Cathy and Jon take a meandering look at what Florida's tourism board call each section of coastline. Some of the names make sense, others are a little weird, but at the end of the podcast, we'd all learned something.Links we mentioned:• (Warning: Wikipedia link ahead, but these are largely accurate) List of what people call different parts of the Florida coastline • The oldest operating hotel in Florida, nestled on the beaches of the no-longer-called-this Surf Coast.• A road Jon thinks is the prettiest road that was much longer than he thought along the Nature Coast• A nude beach (sort of; take your chances and keep your coverup close!) on Florida's Space Coast• Sebastian Inlet State Park and the McLarty Treasure MuseumWant more Florida? Subscribe to The Florida Spectacular newsletter, and keep up with Cathy's travels at greatfloridaroadtrip.com. Follow Jon's road trip adventures at Don't Make Me Turn This Van Around. Have a Florida question or comment? Love the show? Hate it? Let us know – email us at cathy@floridspectacular.com. Support the show
Coastal Florida has seen a disastrous season of harmful algae blooms, unprecedented in scale, duration, and severity. Mayor John Holic of Venice Florida, and Dr. Larry Brand from the University of Miami explain the impacts on the community and why this is happening. What Doesn't Kill You is powered by Simplecast
Coastal Florida has seen a disastrous season of harmful algae blooms, unprecedented in scale, duration, and severity. Mayor John Holic of Venice Florida, and Dr. Larry Brand from the University of Miami explain the impacts on the community and why this is happening. What Doesn't Kill You is powered by Simplecast
Northeast Florida Real Estate Tips for Buyers and Sellers by Chris Snow
What is your home worth? The answer depends on the reason you’re asking the question.Looking to sell your home? Click here to use our home evaluation tool. Looking to buy a home? Click here to search all Coastal Florida homes for sale.You’ve probably seen the ads out there that tell you to just enter your address to get an automated estimate of your home’s value. Websites like Zillow have features like this too. You’ve got a few different options out there to get a valuation for your home, but do they truly tell you what it’s worth?Before you figure out where you’re going to get your valuation from, you have to ask yourself why you are getting it. If it’s purely for informational purposes, any automated system will satisfy that curiosity. They are typically within 5% to 15% of your home’s value. A rough estimate, if you will.However, if you want something more that you can use to determine a potential sale or refinance, you want to get in touch with a professional Realtor. A third-party site won't be able to give you accurate data. A Realtor can go through the numbers and tell you what to expect from the market.“If you just want a rough estimate,any online tool will do. ”If you’re thinking about refinancing, a Realtor can help determine if it’s the right move. Any refinance will require an appraisal, so the Realtor can look at your home’s current value and determine what it will appraise for.A good Realtor can look at the latest market numbers to determine your optimal price. In this case, they aren’t looking at what the home will appraise for; they are looking at what the market will pay for it in today’s environment. It’s based on what homes have sold for, what homes are under contract, and what homes are currently on the market.If you feel like you need more than just an automated estimate, reach out to a local professional. If you have any questions for us or would like our assistance, don’t hesitate to give us a call or send us an email. We would love to help you out.
Northeast Florida Real Estate Tips for Buyers and Sellers by Chris Snow
When searching for a home online, it's always better to use alocal real estate professional's website rather than a big, national site.Looking to sell your home? Click here to use our home evaluation tool. Looking to buy a home? Click here to search all Coastal Florida homes for sale.When you're searching for homes, it's better to look to local websites rather than national websites. Why?National websites tend to focus on a bigger geographic area and the data is not as specific as the data you'd find on a local website put out by a local agent. You'll also find a lot of advertisements on national websites, which is where a majority of their revenue comes from. They also generate revenue by selling your information to third parties.When you look at local websites, you won't have to put up with advertisements and you don't have to worry about your info getting sold off to any third parties. The information you provide is used by the local agent to contact you and give you whatever information you're looking for.“Always search for homeson a local website”The third reason to use local sites rather than a national site is that you get a local real estate professional attached to that website. On our website, for example, you find that we have a lot of neighborhood data already populated in there along with school information. We also break up the information by neighborhood to speed up the process for someone searching for a home in a particular area.If you have any other questions about the benefits of using a local real estate search website over a national site or you're thinking about buying or selling a home in the northwest Florida area, give me a call or send me an email. I'd be happy to help you.
Northeast Florida Real Estate Tips for Buyers and Sellers by Chris Snow
As a homebuyer, there are a few things you can do when you make an offer toget the price that you want. I will go over my top three tips today.Looking to sell your home? Click here to use our home evaluation tool. Looking to buy a home? Click here to search all Coastal Florida homes for sale.When you sell your home, there are six things that can sink your sale.Today, I wanted to give you some tips on how to avoid these six sale sinkers.1. Don't go it alone. Use a Realtor to help you, because 90% of all home sales take place with a Realtor. Last year, the National Association of Realtors found that homes that were sold 'for sale by owner' sold for an average of $210,000, while homes sold with a Realtor sold for an average of $249,000. Homes sold with a Realtor sell faster, too.2. When interviewing agents, don't make your decision based on the price they tell you for your home. Instead, ask what they will do to market your home and what kind of pricing strategy they will use.3. Don't trust the automated values. It's easy to get an automated value from sites like Zillow or Trulia. In many cases, we find that these automated values are either much higher or much lower than the home's true market value. Make sure you get a complete equity evaluation on your property that uses many points of data, not just one set.“It's easy to go to Zillow or Trulia, butyou can't trust their automated values. ”4. Make sure you have professional photos taken of your home. Buyers on the Internet gravitate toward homes with great photos, so don't try to take listing photos of your home with an iPhone. Even if you have to wait an extra week to list your home for the photographer to take their pictures, it's well worth it.5. Don't ignore your agent's requests to do some fixes to your home, or at minimum, a deep clean of the house. Buyers are very sensitive to a home's presentation, so if you could also stage your home, it would be the best of both worlds.6. Don't refuse to negotiate. At times, you may receive a really low offer on your home. The best way to handle this is to give a counter offer no matter what, even if it's just $100 off your list price. I say this because you always want to keep things moving forward. When you draw a line in the sand, it takes the opportunity to potentially bring that buyer back into your camp away. When an offer doesn't meet what we're looking for, we tell them 'We really appreciate you taking the time putting the offer together, but unfortunately, it doesn't allow us to exit the property the way we need to, so we'd like to give you a counteroffer back at...'If you have any questions about these tips, don't hesitate to give me a call or send me an email. I'd be happy to help you.
Northeast Florida Real Estate Tips for Buyers and Sellers by Chris Snow
As a home buyer, there are a few things you can do when you make an offer to get the price that you want. I will go over my top three tips today.Looking to sell your home? Click here to use our home evaluation tool. Looking to buy a home? Click here to search all Coastal Florida homes for sale.When you make an offer on a home, there are a few tricks you can use to get the price that you want.First of all, put a face with the offer. In real estate, things can get very cut and dry sometimes, and people forget about the human element. In order to put a face with the offer, I recommend writing a letter to the seller explaining who you are, what your situation is, how many people are in your family, and what you love about the house.There should be an emotional connection between you and the home and between you and the seller. The more the seller knows about you, the better off your offer will be. While considering your offer, the seller will see you as a human being rather than just focusing on the number that is being presented. “Establish an emotional connectionwith the seller. ”My second tip is to make sure you write a clean offer to the seller. Make sure to dot your i’s and cross your t’s. The last thing we want is an error in the contract that we have to go back and scratch out or initial. We don’t want to give the seller any reason to pause when looking at your offer.The cleaner your offer is, the easier we make it for the seller to sign off on it and send it back to us. Remember, time is of the essence in real estate. Any delay gives someone else the opportunity to sneak in and make a competing offer on the home.Finally, make sure you detail the credentials of the buyer’s agent that you are working with. Listing agents often receive offers from buyer’s agents that are part-time or inexperienced, which creates more work for the listing agent. Make sure that your buyer’s agent has a lot of experience and writes many offers, and let the listing agent know that’s the case. That way, they know your agent will make the transaction as easy as possible and will do their fair share of work to get everyone to the closing table on time.If you follow these tips, your offer is sure to stand out. If you have any other questions about buying a home or about real estate in general, give me a call or send me an email. I would be happy to help you!
Northeast Florida Real Estate Tips for Buyers and Sellers by Chris Snow
There are two types of contingent offers. How you handle either one depends on what kind of market you’re in. Looking to sell your home? Click here to use our home evaluation tool. Looking to buy a home? Click here to search all Coastal Florida homes for sale.Since our market has been changing the last couple weeks, I’ve seen more and more contingencies out there. What do you need to know about contingent offers? How should you handle them?There are usually two types of contingencies: contingencies upon the sale of another property and contingencies upon the closing of an existing property.The first contingency means that the house is either on the market or is about to go on the market, but there is no contract on it. This is a very open-ended contingency because we don’t know how long it could take for that property to sell.The second contingency means that the property is on the market, it has a contract, and there is a defined closing date. This contingency is a lot more typical in the marketplace. You see this a lot with move-up buyers who have a home to sell and can’t qualify for both mortgages, so they get their house under contract and go find another house, and it’s still contingent on the closing of that property. “How to handle a contingency depends on the market you’re in. ”How you respond to either contingency depends whether you’re in a fast-moving or slow-moving market.If you’re in a fast-selling market (e.g. houses are selling in 90 days or less), I would not advise that you put yourself in a position to accept a contingent offer upon the sale of another property, but I would advise that you consider a contingency on the close of an existing property.If you’re in a slow-moving market, you have to weigh factors like how strong the offer is, whether you’re getting terms and conditions that are acceptable, and whether you can define the amount of time you’d give the buyer to sell their property. A good amount of time would be 30 to 45 days to get their house under contract. If they’re giving you a good price, then it’s something you should strongly consider.If you have any further questions about contingencies or have a topic in mind you’d like me to address in the future, please feel free to email me or give me a call. I look forward to hearing from you!
Northeast Florida Real Estate Tips for Buyers and Sellers by Chris Snow
If your home is for sale and you receive early offers, do you know the best way to handle them? Your best course of action depends on what kind of market your neighborhood is currently in.Looking to sell your home? Click here to use our home evaluation tool. Looking to buy a home? Click here to search all Coastal Florida homes for sale.If your home is for sale and you receive early offers, how should you handle them?You want to start by identifying whether you're in a buyer's market or a seller's market. Certain neighborhoods have a lot of inventory and are in a buyer's market, while some have low inventory and a lot of people wanting to move in, creating a seller's market.If you're in a buyer's market, you want to respond to the offers as quickly as possible and keep the buyers engaged; we don't want them moving on to the next property. If you're in more of a seller's market, we will sometimes say that no offer should be accepted in the first seven days. Also keep in mind your motivation to sell. Are you in a time crunch? Do you have a pending relocation? Do you have another property that you've bought and need to close on? These are the things you'll need to weigh as you receive early offers. If you are highly motivated to sell, you want to respond as soon as possible to keep that buyer engaged and moving forward.“Identifying the state of your market can guide your decision making. ”If you have no time constraints or anything pushing you to sell right away, you can draw it out a bit and see if you can get some additional offers. You also need to consider whether the buyer who put in an offer has a certain time period for response in their contract. If you're currently on the market or you plan to sell a house in the future, this information should help you decide the right course of action for your situation. If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to call or email me. I'd be happy to help you out.
Northeast Florida Real Estate Tips for Buyers and Sellers by Chris Snow
The holidays are such a busy time. However, we didn’t forget about your support this year and we wanted to thank you for it.Looking to sell your home? Click here to use our home evaluation tool. Looking to buy a home? Click here to search all Coastal Florida homes for sale.I wanted to take just a moment out of my busy holiday schedule to wish you and your family a merry Christmas and a happy holiday season. This is one of my favorite times of the year to reflect on the past year and what has happened. Hopefully you get a chance to spend some time with family and friends, as well.We appreciate everything you’ve done for us and we appreciate you keeping up with our videos and blog posts. We look forward to bringing you even more helpful content in the new year.If you have any questions for me in the meantime, I’m always just a phone call or email away. Happy Holidays!
Northeast Florida Real Estate Tips for Buyers and Sellers by Chris Snow
Winter is a great time to buy or sell a home. While most buyers and sellers wait untilspring to enter the market, there are a few unique benefits you can reap from the winterreal estate market. Looking to sell your home? Click here to use our home evaluation tool. Looking to buy a home? Click here to search all Coastal Florida homes for sale.Lately, a lot of sellers have asked me about waiting for spring or summer to put their houses on the market. Today, I thought I would let you know that winter is actually a great time to buy or sell a home. For sellers, waiting until spring to put your home on the market may not be in your best financial interest. Why? Everyone else will wait until spring or summer, so if you wait along with them, there will be more houses for sale, more inventory for buyers to choose from, and more competition for you. If you put your home on the market now, there will be fewer sellers for you to compete against. “Get ahead of the competition by entering the winter market. ”If you’re a buyer, it might not be in your best interest to wait for the spring inventory. You actually have a great opportunity to purchase a home during the winter. Winter and holiday sellers are highly motivated. The more motivated the seller is, the more flexible you can be on price. If you have any other questions about buying or selling in the winter, give me a call or send me an email. I would be happy to discuss your options. I look forward to hearing from you!