Susan's Online Guide to PortlandLet me Help You Find a Home and a Neighborhood |
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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
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Real Estate Market
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Homes for Sale: Click on a green icon (zip code) to view photos and details about the homes for sale
Moving to Portland monthly newsletter now available to downloadMay 18 — Portland is abuzz with real estate activity this spring. New listings continued to rise—at 3,623, the number of new listings for the month was the greatest in any one month since August 2010. This also was a 20.7% increase over March’s 3,002 new listings. You can read the detailed report from the Regional Multiple Listing Service (RMLS) by clicking on this link - April RMLS report. Or you can read the summary version of the Portland metro area April home prices along with other articles of interest about the Portland metro area by clicking on this link - Moving to Portland April Newsletter. This month's featured article is about health care in the Portland area. To subscribe to the newsletter click here. Lake Oswego School District ranks third on national list of best districts with affordable homes
May 20 — The Lake Oswego School District is the third best school district in the country with the most affordable homes, according to a recent report by ZipRealty. The real estate brokerage company ranked school districts by coming up with a 1 to 10 score for schools -- based on 2010 test scores and student-to-teacher ratio -- and using the median price per square foot for a home in the district. Lake Oswego’s 9.6 school score combined with a median price per square foot of $167 netted it the third-place spot. The majority of the districts in the top ten are suburban ones outside major cities. Read more... |
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Homes & Health |
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Some of my best friends are germsMay 19 — I can tell you the exact date that I began to think of myself in the first-person plural — as a superorganism, that is, rather than a plain old individual human being. It happened on March 7. That’s when I opened my e-mail to find a huge, processor-choking file of charts and raw data from a laboratory located at the BioFrontiers Institute at the University of Colorado, Boulder. As part of a new citizen-science initiative called the American Gut project, the lab sequenced my microbiome — that is, the genes not of “me,” exactly, but of the several hundred microbial species with whom I share this body. These bacteria, which number around 100 trillion, are living (and dying) right now on the surface of my skin, on my tongue and deep in the coils of my intestines, where the largest contingent of them will be found, a pound or two of microbes together forming a vast, largely uncharted interior wilderness that scientists are just beginning to map. Read more... The strange beauty of density taken to the extreme
Eat my dustMay 19 — For the allergy sufferer, there is truth to that adage linking April with cruelty. May isn’t much kinder. For several weeks now, the rooms of my apartment have whirred with the sound of a half-dozen portable air purifiers I have been testing, each supposedly stripping the allergens, pollutants and odors from my indoor air. My cat, whose ungodly smelling litter box was another motivating factor, seemed to sense a change in the atmosphere. I have been closely monitoring my usual symptoms, the watery eyes and nose, to see if — as the manufacturer of one model trumpets, in language at once wildly boastful and vague — a home air purifier “completely revolutionizes the clarity of the air you breathe, so you feel better.” Read more... |
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News |
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10,000 runners descend on Portland for a rockin' half-marathon
Scientists excited about new lab at bottom of Pacific OceanMay 20 — Scientists are eager for access to information from a quarter-billion dollar lab at the bottom of the Pacific Ocean that they hope will teach them about climate change, earthquakes and even the origins of life on Earth and other planets. The $239 million National Science Foundation project will install video cameras, seismic monitors and other gauges along a volcano in deep waters off the Pacific Northwest coast, giving researchers the ability to monitor activity 2 miles below the ocean surface. The project could potentially warn of earthquakes that would threaten the Seattle area, according to scientists. "It really will make a huge difference," said University of Washington oceanography professor John Delaney, who is leading the effort. Read more... Flying high on the North CoastMay 20 — Wind, sea and sky – could there be a better combination for summer? Well, add one kite and the mix jumps to an, ahem, higher level! Or at least that’s what our local kite makers, kite sellers and kite enthusiasts think. Among the other wonders of the North Coast, we’ve also got a little bit of kite heaven. There are people and places to go to get both the information and the supplies you need, whether you’re an old-hand at kite flying or newly-minted. One of the first places kite aficionados should consider visiting this summer is the World Kite Museum in Long Beach, Wash. Executive Director Chelsea Libby emphasizes that “we have a new family-friend mission: We want to tell the story of kites and their effect on world culture, art and scientific innovation through hands-on learning exhibits for all ages.” Read more... Young entrepreneurs unite!
Breaking the chains of historyMay 20 — When Greg Nokes of West Linn found out that one of his Oregon ancestors was a slave owner he was surprised to say the least. His relative, Robert Shipley, took his slave, Ruben Shipley, with him, moving from Missouri to Oregon with the promise of releasing Ruben after he helped settle a farm back in 1853. First, Nokes was not pleased to learn about that component of his family’s history. Second, he was interested to learn there were slaves in Oregon, what was known as a state closed to slavery. Intrigued, Nokes started researching and writing. The result is his latest book, “Breaking Chains: Slavery on Trial in the Oregon Territory,” which launches May 19. Read more... Watchful eyes in the night: Waste Management drivers trained to spot security, safety issuesMay 20 — Seth Fuger was hours into his Monday morning recycling pickup route in outer Southeast Portland when he noticed a silhouette in the road ahead. As he drew close enough to recognize details in the predawn light, Fuger's heart sank. An elderly man, shoeless and wearing only light pajamas on a chilly February morning, was waving at passing cars with the vacant look of dementia on his face. "I got out of the truck and asked if I could help him," Fuger says. "The first thing he said was, 'I'm lost.'" Fuger, 31, a former missionary who served in an Italian convalescent home and watched his grandfather battle Alzheimer's, knew immediately age-related mental decay was to blame. The 89-year-old had wandered from his home in a nearby neighborhood, Alzheimer's quickly erasing the reason for his errand and the direction back home. Read more... At Wilson Ranches Retreat outside Fossil, guests connect with a working Oregon ranch
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Welcome to my Web site about the Portland, Oregon, metropolitan area. It's my way of helping you become acquainted with the neighborhoods and communities of the Portland metro area and to inform you about the Portland area housing market. Your comments and suggestions about my Web site are always welcome.
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