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Susan's Online Guide to Portland
Let me Help
You Find a Home and a Neighborhood
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Welcome
to my Web site about the Portland, Oregon, metropolitan area. It is
my way of helping you become acquainted with the neighborhoods and communities
of the city and to inform you about the Portland area housing market. Your
comments and suggestions about my Web site are
always appreciated.
If you have questions or if you are interested in buying
or selling a home in the Portland area, contact me
online or call me
at (503) 497-2984.
Susan Marthens
Principal Real Estate Broker/GRI
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House and Home
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Green
home tour September 20
Green can be modern and hip. Green can be small and cozy. And green can
be the energy geek's high-tech fantasy. All this -- plus rainwater
harvesting and earthen floors, gray-water plumbing and granny flats,
even habitable shipping containers -- is part of the annual Build It
Green! tour, sponsored by Portland's Office of Sustainable Development.
Twenty new or remodeled green homes featured on the self-guided tour,
which will include a stop in Estacada as well as stops in Southeast,
Southwest, North and Northeast Portland. Tour-goers will have a chance
to visit with homeowners as they explore the latest green-building
practices, products and technologies. Parents, take note: The tour and
information fair will be kid-friendly. In addition, seven tour sites
will be wheelchair accessible.
Details available
at the Portland Office of Sustainable Developement...
Rate of house prices declines slowly in second quarter
according to Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversightht
August 28 − U.S. home prices fell in the second quarter of 2008according
to OFHEO’s seasonally-adjusted purchase-only house price index.The index,
which is based on data from home sales, was 1.4 percent lower on a seasonally-adjusted
basis in the second quarter than in the first quarter. This decline was
less steep than the 1.7 percent decline in the prior quarter. Over the past
year, prices fell 4.8 percent between the second quarter of 2007 and the
second quarter of 2008. The decline is the largest in the purchase-only
index’s 17-year history, but is much smaller than those of other indexes.
Read
the full report from OFHEO...
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Green Zone
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Plastic containers Q&A August 28 −
Some of the containers in my kitchen do not have a recycling number on
them. How do I know whether these plastics are safe? Why do some
companies not put numbers on their products? The best way to find out is
to call the manufacturer. The "resin identification code"—the number
that appears in the recycling triangle—isn't actually required by
federal law and doesn't appear on every plastic product you buy. It's a
voluntary system aimed primarily at helping recycling centers identify
and sort various products. Some states require companies to put resin
codes on bottles, but they aren't required on products that aren't easy
to recycle, such as bowls, dishes, toys or bottle caps.
Learn more at the Green Guide Website... |
Sports and Outdoors
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More than 500 sockeye return to central Idaho mountains
August 28 − More than 500 endangered sockeye salmon have arrived at a
central Idaho fish hatchery, the most in more than two decades. The
arrival of the sockeye, listed as endangered under federal law in 1991,
has started to slow in recent weeks, but state fish biologists said 507
arrived at fish traps near the Sawtooth Fish Hatchery near Stanley as of
this week. To reach central Idaho, the sockeye travel about 900 river
miles, gain 6,500 feet in elevation and pass eight dams on the Columbia
and Snake rivers. Biologists said the returning fish are from 180,000
smolts released in the valley's lakes in 2006 for the journey down the
Salmon, Snake and Columbia rivers to the Pacific Ocean. Some of the
returning fish were artificially spawned at the Eagle Fish Hatchery in
southwestern Idaho as part of a program to help boost the sockeye
returns.
Read the full story in The Oregonian...
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Neighborhood and Communities News
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At
the zoo, a baby step forward as the elephant herd is reunited
August 28 − Asian elephant Rose-Tu continued Wednesday to behave as a good
mother should, especially after she became reacquainted with the cows in
her herd. The anxious pacing that had troubled keepers -- and kept the 4-day-old
calf from nursing as often as keepers wanted -- seemed to slow after Rose
reached her trunk over a metal gate and touched her companions, Chendra
and Shine. Because elephants are social creatures, keepers speculated that
Rose's anxiety meant she missed the others. Keepers reunited them to calm
Rose, who will turn 14 Sunday, and to introduce the calf to the herd. Chendra,
who has a close relationship to Rose, made an excited noise that keepers
described as "a chirp" when she saw Rose. But Shine and Chendra, separated
from the new mom and calf by a tall metal gate, didn't appear to notice
the baby boy -- at first.
Read the full story in The Oregonian...
Economic downturn boosts college enrollment numbers
in Oregon August 28 − Students started returning to class
this week as Oregon colleges gear up for brimming fall enrollments fueled
in part by a sluggish economy. When the economy bombs, college enrollment
booms, primarily at the community college level, college admissions officers
say. Community colleges in Oregon and across the nation are expecting enrollment
increases this fall, said Norma Kent, spokeswoman for the American Association
of Community Colleges.
Read the full story in The Oregonian...
Coworkers, coincidence help Wally come home
August 28 − Wally, the lost but found basset hound, is the thing of Disney
movies and children’s books. After two weeks of wandering in Central Oregon,
Wally reunited with his Sandy owner — a reunion made possible by a lot of
luck, coincidence and a few degrees of separation between Gresham City Hall
employees. Heidi Seipert was camping and four-wheeling with her husband,
Scott, and their two children, Audrey, 10, and Ben, 6, in rural Wasco County
over the Fourth of July weekend when their two dogs took off chasing something.
Read the full story in the Portland Tribune...
Overhauling our high schools
August 28 − Say you want your kid to take Advanced Placement
history or try a class on video production to see if that would make a
good career. Or simply plug in a laptop in math lab to do the day's
calculus assignment. There's not a single high school in the Portland
district that offers all those opportunities. Portland Public Schools
wants to change that with a systemwide high school reorganization on a
scale it's never attempted — more than tweaking programs, changing
school names or moving staff. It would mean offering demanding classes
at all 14 high schools, incorporating career education at all campuses
for its 13,500 students and upgrading buildings with some of the latest
technology. The overhaul obviously won't happen overnight, but the
school district is devoting this year to making decisions and writing
the blueprint. Already, district officials have generated dozens of
reports based on staff research, community meetings and in-house
discussions.
Read the full story in The Oregonian...
This
‘protest’ was a bit, er, cheeky August 28 − Oh yeah, they
were naked. Sort of. They were also part of a nationwide “protest” – a publicity
stunt, really – focusing on excess product packaging. More than half a dozen
employees of Northwest Portland’s Lush Fresh Handmade Cosmetics store stood
on the sidewalk for about an hour at noon Wednesday, covered only in store
aprons, distributing flyers urging customers to “go naked” by purchasing
products that don’t have a lot of packaging. Employees from two dozen Lush
stores in 36 cities across the nation doffed their duds for the event. They
wore aprons with “Ask Me Why I’m Naked” printed on the front to catch the
eyes of passersby.
Read the full story in the Portland Tribune...
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Burnsider
Stories and pictures from the Burnside Bridge, Portland, Oregon.
The e bloggers live near the bridge and walk across it as part of their
commute every day.
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Documented
LifeLife Planet Earth as seen from Portland Oregon.
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Commission
Sam Adamss Sam's Web site and blog is full of information
about the neighborhoods of Portland.
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Community & Parents
for Public Schools in Portland They seek to redefine parent
and community involvement in Portland Public Schools.
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Discovering
Portland Two women flee California for Oregon to ask if Portland
is the city they've dreamed of.
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Ever Day is a Miracle A blog about families, kids, politics
and current events, travel, books, and living in Portland.
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Home
Ownership A blog about the "Neighborhood Housing Program"
sponsored by the Portland Development Commission.
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Kids in Portland
This blog provides a venue for parents to come together and find out
all of the great attractions, restaurants, activities, ideas, issues,
art, music, and discussions for and about kids in the area.
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Oregon Fly
Fishing Fishing reports, conservation news, fishing advice,
and hot fly patterns.
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The Oregonian Neighborhoods Covers Portland metro area neighborhoods
and communities.
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Portland
Blogs A complete list of all the bloggers who call Portland
home.
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Portland Dog
Blog For people who use Portland parks with their dog.
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Portland
Metroblogging Written from the perspective of people who live,
work, and play here every day.
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Upper
Left Coastoast Thoughts on politics, faith, sports and other
random topics from a red state sympathizer in indigo-blue Portland,
Oregon.
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Walking
in Portland This blogger walks around Portland with his wife
and dogs taking photos and making notes about living in Portland.
Newspapers
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inPortland
A magazine, published every Thursday, has stories about neighborhoods
and communities.
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Portland
Tribune Published on Thursday, one of the Tribune's strength
is their neighborhood news.
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Oregon Newspapers
Links to over 100 newspapers in Oregon. This includes community weekly
papers - check out the stories in smaller towns like Astoria and Pendleton.
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Web by
Dasan Design
(503) 819-0011
Fax (503) 224-9083

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6443 SW Beaverton-Hillsdale Highway, Suite 100
Portland, Oregon 97221
(503) 297-1033
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Susan Marthens
Principal Real Estate Broker, GRI
(503) 497-298484
Fax (503) 220-1131

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