boulder real estate statistics

On the Corner, 3rd Quarter 2023

On the Corner, 3rd Quarter 2023

Bluebell Avenue resident had unusual past,

By Silvia Pettem

In last month’s “On the Corner,” I wrote that early real estate developer David Dobbins built four almost-identical brick bungalows, one on each of the southeast corners of Bluebell Avenue and 15th, 16th, 17th, and 19th streets.  

The house at 1604 Bluebell was owned by Miriam Rieder who lived there from the late 1930s to her death in 1957. Rieder was an assistant professor of Romance Languages at the University of Colorado. She also was considered an eccentric, and she had an unusual past.  

At the time, acres of undeveloped property surrounded Rieder’s home. She bought the land and preferred it wild and unkempt with native plants and flowers providing a sanctuary for ground-nesting birds. After one neighbor complained of her “weeds,” she wrote a scathing letter to the editor of the “Daily Camera.”

“What is the matter with people who are so blind that they see beauty, and utility, only in their own little clipped lawn?” Rieder asked. “How can people go to church and sit in pews and worship God, and then devote their weekdays to trying to destroy what He has generously given us to enjoy?”

Rieder regularly patrolled her property and carried a pistol to scare off intruders. Parents of neighborhood children complained that she chased and shot at them. In 1950, the then-61-year old woman pleaded guilty in court to “threatening the lives of young people,” but she claimed she only did it to frighten them off of her land.

  The public was unaware during her lifetime that Rieder was the daughter of former German professor Mary Rippon.  At CU’s recent May Commencement, the highly acclaimed Rippon received a long-overdue posthumous honorary doctoral degree. But in 1889, she had secretly married one of her adult students, and they had a child. That child was Miriam Rieder.

Rippon conveniently took a year’s sabbatical to Germany where Rieder was born in 1889. Then Rippon returned to CU and continued to teach. The little girl was left in orphanages and passed around an extended family of aunts and uncles for the first few years of her life. Rippon (who would have lost her job if her marriage had been known) never lived with her husband. Eventually he remarried and was able to raise their daughter.

When Rieder lived at 16th and Bluebell, she was separated from her husband Rudolph. Their son Wilfred is now deceased, but he spent most of his adult life on the East Coast. Think of Rieder, her birds, and her unusual background, as you drive by her former home.

Cutline: Miriam Rieder’s former home at 1604 Bluebell Avenue was one of four (initially!) almost-identical brick bungalows built by real estate developer David Dobbins.

 

Silvia Pettem is the author of “Separate Lives: The Story of Mary Rippon,” available in local bookstores and at www.thebooklode.com.

Boulder County Buzz, October 2023

Boulder County Buzz, October 2023

Growing up in Maine was crazy awesome sometimes on so many levels! Besides the coast, lakes and streams, the fiddleheads and lady slippers and the mountains in the mist, Maine had and still has the season of all seasons: fall and its epic foliage. Yeah, that meant summer was over and school started up after Labor Day, but I’ll never forget the glory of Maine in the fall with all the colors in the landscape and and textures of the town—once the tourists blasted off back to the flatlands in their Wagoneers and Volvos. Even as a kid, I remember taking it all in, a tingling of all the senses where the cool breeze and short days replaced the summer vibe and where maple leaves wave goodbye.

This fall, Colorado is giving Maine a run for its maple leaf money—oh my, it has been a rainbow record for spectral colors. The warmth of summer slips and I surrender to the cold. And I am ready..
The real estate market is also in a transition. In the summer of 2022, higher interest rates threatened the affordability for many home buyers and the drop in demand has caused a palpable lull in the marketplace. The first half of 2022 brought home buyers ready, willing, and able to compete for almost every home that hit the market. As we look at 3rd quarter numbers in 2023 compared year over year, we see a great stall from 2022 through 2023. In most cases today our home sellers have to be competitive with price, sometimes starting at 5% or 10% less than a year ago and expect to wait on the market a little longer.

The data collected can be quite different from area to area and product to product and some of that is linked to the fact that areas with fewer sales offer more volatility in their resulting data. Regardless of small differences in the data from area to area, know that the market is acting slower across all areas and that buyers seem to have the negotiating power in most case. Like any market, things change from city to city and from neighborhood to neighborhood but the stoke is high for 2024 with predictable lower interest rates and an opening up of activity. But it’s likely to be a long winter. If you’ve been on the sidelines as a buyer or seller maybe it’s time to act, 'cause if you let the moment pass, you should try it once again! It’s never too late to late to buy or sell.

I had a few listings this fall that saw buyers come in hot with strong prices and great terms. One of them in South Boulder had three offers with the winning offer at 8% over asking price. And we even set the high water mark with our price for the neighborhood at the time of listing. It was exciting to go there in this “weird” market. Cross your fingers it closes next week!

This month I’m featuring charitable organization called the WaterWheel Foundation. The WaterWheel Foundation chooses non-profits from a large sphere of needs including social services, primarily those benefiting women and children; environmental, with a focus on clean water and land conservation with public access; as well as food banks, urban gardening and the like. WaterWheel’s Touring Division has donated over $2,500,000 to more than 500 groups. Please give today!

Happy Halloween and don’t let the housing market spook you! and don’t forget to SMILE!

​HATCH

​​Realtor®, RE/MAX Lifetime Achievement®, RE/MAX Hall of Fame®, GRI®, ABR®
RE/MAX of Boulder

303-513-2834
​​​hatch@boulderco.com
​​​http://www.jonhatch.com

​​Lead photo: East Boulder ash tree, by Jon Hatch

On the Corner, 1st Quarter 2023

On the Corner, 1st Quarter 2023

Bryan and Jones were early Chautauqua speakers

by Silvia Pettem

William Jennings Bryan and Samuel P. Jones were an unlikely pair on a speaking tour, but individually and together they roused crowds in Boulder during Chautauqua's early days.

The national educational and cultural resort opened its Boulder venue in 1898. Although audiences enjoyed entertainers, musicians, and films, they were riveted on speakers. Politics, religion, and anti-liquor sentiments dominated the stage.

William Jennings Bryan, a former U.S. Representative from Nebraska, was the most popular speaker in 1899. The Democrat was known as the "silver-tongued orator" and had run for U.S. president but lost against Republican William McKinley. Still, Bryan was well-liked in Boulder County and other mining districts of the West, as he supported the free and unlimited coinage of both gold and silver.

When he stepped off the train in downtown Boulder, he was greeted by thousands of well-wishers. A reporter wrote, “Cheersyells, hand-clapping, waving of hats and handkerchiefs, a roar of sound and a seething sea greeted the ear and the eye simultaneously."

Six additional trains brought crowds from Fort Collins, the mountain towns, and from Denver, temporarily doubling Boulder’s population. Stores closed at noon, and crowds lined Bryan’s carriage route as he was driven uphill to the auditorium on the Chautauqua grounds. Many people walked from the downtown depot, while others rented horse-drawn hacks or squeezed onto Boulder’s new electric streetcars. Colorado women had recently won the right to vote, and they made up a large part of Bryan’s audience.

At the beginning of the program, a band played “Hail to the Chief.” When the renowned speaker was introduced as “the next president,” men, women, and children burst into wild applause.

Another early speaker was Samuel P. Jones, who was an evangelical minister and anti-liquor crusader. He was known for being humorous and theatrical, but his message was a simple one of living a good life that was as sin-free as possible. 

Both Bryan and Jones returned to Boulder in July 1905 for Jones/Bryan Day. By then Bryan had lost his second presidential election, but the people in Boulder still loved him. The audience gave him a standing ovation and deafening applause.

At the time, speeches went on for three or four hours, and the only seats in the auditorium were wooden benches. After listening to Bryan, Boulder Daily Camera editor L.C. Paddock wrote that the benches were "unthinkably hard," but "Bryan is the only man who ever rendered them tolerable to the spine."

FROM THE TRAIL #49, Christian "Chris" Benitez

FROM THE TRAIL #49,  Christian "Chris" Benitez

I met Christian "Chris" Benitez on a trail run on the Mesa Trail in Boulder on Sunday. It was sunny but very cold and at the the top of the Chautauqua Road (which I never run - it's too many people) and I saw him leaning there strumming his guitar. It was quite lovely. But it was cold. How were his fingers not frozen in the pine trees shade? I said hello and asked to take a video and he gave me his phone. I shot video with both his and my phone side by side. He began playing Santana's song called Dreams. It was wonderful. After this song he introduced himself. He's an engineer. From Mexico City. He's here in Colorado to learn English and get the best job so he can make the best money and bring it back home when he visits his wife and three kids 13, 17 and 23. Then he played for me and a trail hiker an old traditional song called Ratas about corrupt government ways there and he really played it well. A dog even almost jumped in his lap. Eat your heart out Andy Thorn! He approved the video usage. I have shared the videos with Chris. He hasn't responded. I hope he likes it. He didn't have to say it, but I could tell coming here was his joy. His release. His pleasure. A few hikers stopped to listen. It was quite wonderful. Chris has a gift and I'm glad I got to witness it. Please enjoy! HATCH

FROM THE TRAIL #48, EQUANIMITY!

FROM THE TRAIL #48, EQUANIMITY!

WELCOME TO #48! IT'S JUST A THANK YOU! THANK YOU SO MUCH. AND THE WORD FOR 2022 FOR ME IS... EQUANIMITY!

On the Corner Vol. 14 Issue 4 1st Half 2021

On the Corner Vol. 14 Issue 4 1st Half 2021

Historical marker honors Los Seis de Boulder

By Carol Taylor

Walking through the east entrance to Chautauqua Auditorium, you might notice a recently installed

tribute to Los Seis de Boulder, six Chicano activists killed in 1974. As the unveiling was during the

pandemic, most people aren’t aware of the new historical marker.

The inscribed rock is unobtrusive, as there are strict regulations on what can be placed at a National Historic Landmark.

The story of Los Seis remains a sensitive topic. On May 27, 1974, a parked car exploded by the

Chautauqua Auditorium. The blast was heard all over Boulder. First responders faced a grisly scene

as body parts were strewn about the area. Eventually, Neva Romero, Una Jaakola, and Reyes Martinez

were identified as victims….

Hatch Sells Lower Chautauqua!

Dear neighbors and friends, this year marks the 15th anniversary of the very first edition of your On the Corner newsletter. I began publishing OtC in the early days of my real estate career as a way to bridge my professional photojournalism career and my real estate career. It’s kept me very engaged in this neighborhood, which has so many stories to tell. This spring also marks my 15th year in the real estate business. It’s awesome to have grown such a successful business. I’ve worked really hard to make it this far and I definitely recognize that a lot of my business comes from right here in the neighborhood. On the opposite of this big card you’ll see homes that I sold here in 2021. Each of them are so different and they all have such interesting histories. Like many homes here, they also have been through different transformation over the years. The homes built in the LC have just as interesting stories to tell as the residents that call Lower Chautauqua home. “If these walls could talk,” right? Such rich history here, and that’s why I appreciate it so much. And I appreciate you. You’ve entrusted me to market and sell your homes and you’ve trusted me to help you buy the house here that you now call home. The many homes I’ve sold here dot the neighborhood from Bellevue Heights to Interurban Park and from the Cul-de-sacs off King Avenue to Baseline Road. Many of you have referred business to me over the years and for that I am grateful and truly appreciate your business and your referrals! I’d like to continue to earn your trust. Please contact me anytime to discuss selling or buying real estate. I’m happy to offer a market analysis of your home anytime, with no strings attached! Sincerely, HATCH

FROM THE TRAIL #47, DADS

FROM THE TRAIL #47, DADS

While I just published this video today, I shot the frames for it a couple of weeks ago while my son Ethan and his friend fished a special lake together. Since that day on the water my Aunt JoAnne passed away and just last weekend my dad-in-law Corky also passed away. What a year of grief and sadness and while their deaths were not covid related, they compounded what has been a sad year for my family. But we rise above and keep the beautiful memories atop our minds and that lifts our frowns to smiles. Welcome to #47 From the Trail. It stinks to lose people close in your life. Those who raised you. Those who shaped you. Those who loved you. And those who took you fishing. For this I'm grateful for my Dad, my Aunt JoAnne and my dad-in-law Corky. Too much loss but so many good memories, of being free....

On the Corner Vol. 14 Issue 2, 2020 Year in Review

On the Corner Vol. 14 Issue 2, 2020 Year in Review

Holubars put Boulder on the map for outdoor gear

By Carol Taylor

Imagine a time when outdoor recreation equipment was difficult to find in

Boulder. That changed in the 1940s, thanks to Roy and Alice Holubar.

The couple made significant contributions to the outdoor gear industry

and their success encouraged a legacy of Boulder outdoor entrepreneurs.

LeRoy Holubar met his future wife and business partner Alice

Freudenberg at the State Preparatory School, now Boulder High. LeRoy,

known as Roy, grew up in the mountains of Boulder. Alice was from a

German immigrant family. Both took full advantage of their education

and graduated at the top of their class. They earned scholarships to the

University of Colorado. After college graduation, Roy accepted a job

teaching mathematics at CU and the couple married in 1937.

They became passionate about mountain climbing early in their marriage.

Both were active in the Colorado Mountain Club, though at the time there

were few technical climbers in the group. Roy was involved with starting

the first climbing school in Boulder as well as the Rocky Mountain

Rescue Group, formed in 1947.

Finding suitable gear for their adventures was difficult for the Holubars

and their mountain climbing friends. So they tapped into a network of

Alice’s relatives in the Alps for recommendations. Soon the Holubars

were importing the best hiking boots, ski boots, ice axes, tents and other

gear from Europe to Boulder…

Boulder County Buzz - January 2021

Boulder County Buzz - January 2021

Do you remember where you were one year ago? I don’t remember, really. Likely I was setting goals and ramping up for 2020 biz. I know I was eating out, seeing live concerts and going to the movies with family. Masks and hand sanitizer? Nope! What a difference a year makes. However, 2020 had so many great moments for me. I did things differently and explored the countryside and woods more than usual. I slowed down some. And time seemed to stop occasionally, right? We all forgot what day it was. 2020 gave moments to breathe and pray for patience and for those we lost. While it was my best year yet in the biz, I found it hard to cheer out loud, as so many suffered. Here’s to normal again and to leadership, science, community, in-person stuff and live music in 2021!

Now, I know the New Year just started, but it's never too early to start planning your real estate future. While 2020 was a historic year for home sales, 2021 is expected to continue with high demand for housing here in the BoCo. Boulder County again saw a drop in inventory and immense demand and so average sales prices were up 6% from 2019. Properties under contract are way above 50% in some areas like Louisville 85% of listings are pending sales. The low inventory, coupled with low mortgage interest rates at around 2.6%, and relocation are driving the market! In Boulder the average sales price for all of 2020 is $1.291M. The median finally cracked the $1M mark. So if you’re on the fence about selling, wait no more. It just may be time. Please reach out—I’m happy to strategize with you.

I have several new listings coming soon. Please visit my featured Boulder property coming to market in early February: 860 Grant Place in Chautauqua Heights in Boulder. This wonderful home, near Historic Chautauqua Park is going to go fast we think. Several restorations and additions have made this home so comfortable. It’s fully decorated with sunlight and color—a magazine property you could say. Please visit this home on my custom website today and yes, share with your friends!

This month I’m again featuring the non-profit program, American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. This organization's mission is to save lives and bring hope to those affected by suicide. Please see how important this program is and consider giving today!

Finally, thank you all for asking me to help with your real estate adventures and for referring your friends and family. I appreciate it so much. I hope you get what you strive for in 2021 and that all good things come your way.

Don’t forget to smile,
HATCH

FROM THE TRAIL #46, MISS YOU

FROM THE TRAIL #46, MISS YOU

Dad you lifted me up by your actions in so many ways. I can’t count them all but I’ll say the ones that are top of mind: Humor is life’s light. Running is good for your body y mind. Creativity and ingenuity are supreme. Story telling captivates. Nature and camping is a must. Fishing is good cuz your stuck with someone. Hot tubs? Same reason. Road trips to amazing places in a station wagon with family of 7? Same reason. Ice cream sundaes very important. That you get what you give. To ask your kids questions. To look ya straight in the eye. To pray. To be happy. Trust your intuition. Be yourself. To laugh. To treat people fairly. To work hard. To ski hard (water and snow). To love yourself. To love your wife. To love. To say “I love you!” As Maya Angelou said, “I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.” Dad, you make us feel good! Love you dad, aka Calvin Bunyat, aka Spaghetti Bender

Boulder County Buzz - December 2020

Boulder County Buzz - December 2020

It’s December? Holy Schnikes! And despite the grip of Covid-19 on our country I have to say, it feels nice to welcome the winter transition here in Boulder County. One of the greatest gifts this Christmas season will be to say buh-bye to 2020 so we can begin to get back to normal with vaccines coming into view. The year 2020 has been full of strangeness, uncertainty, wonder, sadness and joy, but hello 2021!

What are your plans for 2021? Maybe a change in your real estate landscape? It's never too early to start planning for the busy spring season and if real estate is on your horizon, I’ll be happy to help you with your goals and to share my perspective on the current housing market in your 'hood. It’s not too early to get started.

Expert predictions on the 2021 housing market are very positive. Will pent up consumers be ready to spend? 2020 was a very strong year for real estate — how will 2021 compare? I can’t wait to see.

Please visit my featured Boulder property this month; 11264 Uptown Avenuelocated in Broomfield, CO. This ridiculously awesome townhome at Venue at Arista in Urban Transit Village is totally custom and comfortable. Please contact me today for more information and yes, share with your friends!

Take a minute to tune in to my YouTube Channel and watch From the Trail #46. Who are you grateful for? I’m grateful for the many things my dad showed me all through his life, to make me a better person. Thank you dad!

And this month I’m featuring non-profit program The National Multiple Sclerosis Society. Please see how important this program is and consider giving today!

Thank you all for asking me to help with your real estate adventures in 2020 and for referring friends and family to me. I appreciate it so much.

Happy holidays to you and yours, and see you in 2021!
HATCH

Boulder County Buzz - November 2020

Boulder County Buzz - November 2020

Cold temps and high winds are replaced by warm calm weather this week. It feels good. I’ll take Ethan to a lake and fool trout one last time this season.

I like it calm. I am grateful for calm. I’m tired of the opposite of calm. As we approach the Thanksgiving Holiday, I’m thankful for all that I have in this life. I’m especially thankful for you and I wish you and yours a Happy Thanksgiving Holiday.

As winter otherwise is upon us, it’s amazing that our housing market has not cooled off. Buyers are still actively looking for homes and I know I sound like a broken vinyl record when I say we still have the challenge of record low inventory and so that keeps prices rising. We’re seeing a good number of out-of-towners landing in Boulder. A third of my business this year has been from relocation buyers. We welcome you here—we get it!

Are you looking to find a home before year’s end? Or maybe dip your toes into the investment market come 2021? It's never too early to do your research and have some options, so you can weigh them—what do you say? I'm always happy to discuss our market and answer your questions.

This month I’m again featuring a Boulder based non-profit program called Attention Homes. Attention Homes has always been responsive to the evolving needs of youth facing homelessness in our community. Established in 1966 with the mandate to provide attention to displaced youth, Attention Homes has served over 12,000 young individuals as they become healthy, productive members of our community. Please visit their website today and see how important this program is and consider making a financial contribution today!

Thank you as always for your business and remember that I’m never too busy for your referrals,

HATCH

On the Corner Vol. 14 Issue 1, Q1/Q2 2020

On the Corner Vol. 14 Issue 1, Q1/Q2 2020

If you take a moment to look back to what you were doing around the 3rd week in February this year, where were you? Well, I had the pleasure of sitting down with neighbor Sally Holloway to learn a little bit about her life her in the Lower Chautauqua neighborhood. She’s lived in two homes on lower Bluebell Avenue for about the last 66 years where she raised 3 children with her husband John JP Holloway. The words Covid, pandemic and social distancing were not in your conversation, I’ll bet. It was still wintery and the air was cool and finches were nibbling on seeds at the bird feeder on the opposite side of the window from Sally’s living room chair, from which she shared her stories of her life here. Sally is a very kind person. A smart woman and a wonderful wife and mother. Please join me as we learn more about Sally Holloway, 94, in a question and answer format for you On the Corner readers.

Boulder County Buzz - September 2020

Boulder County Buzz - September 2020

"What's new is old,
what's old is gone
You're pushed up to the edge
So put your wingsuit on.”


-Anastasio/Fishman/Gordon/McConnell

As you know, last week we had 100 degree temps and then within hours, falling ash from Colorado wildfires was replaced by a falling snow. The wet and heavy snow stuck to still full green leaves and large branches snapped and fell to the ground. The crash waking us from our slumber was rather unsettling. It’s not the first time this year we’ve been jostled and made uneasy. We’re reminded how quickly things can change. How things can break. How things can go in a different direction than we want. How do we handle this? Can we pick ourselves up and dust ourselves off? How do we do that? Nature has provided us a wonderful escape this summer with camping in the woods more than ever before. Getting into nature and tuning out has a been valuable reset tool and I trust you’ve been able to find yours.

We're just a few days away from the Autumnal Equinox. This too feels like a good time to recalibrate. I look forward again to my favorite trout hunting season. It’s usually a quiet time of the year to slow down and reflect on all that we have to be grateful for. Many have lost something or someone this year but I hope you’re reminded of what you do have. I’m very grateful for such a good community Kristin and I have and we appreciate your friendship. May you find solace this fall. And please go out and VOTE!

In good vibes,
HATCH

Boulder County Buzz - August 2020

Boulder County Buzz - August 2020

Welcome to mid-August, where the scorching real estate market the past couple months has been eclipsed by the searing dry heat of late summer sun. In fact, several wildfires are burning across Colorado once again and we acknowledge those on the front lines protecting our wild-lands and personal properties from devastation. Here in Boulder County the market has tapered to some degree. But some areas and some price ranges are still soaring. Prices remain stable and this lull is normal for this time of year as we transition to the fall season. Of note for me this year is that my clientele has flip-flopped and I have had more sold listings than buyer purchases. This is great because the number of homes for sale is still at all time lows and the demand has been noteworthy even during this pandemic. Either way I feel fortunate to be still working.

Please visit my featured Boulder property this month; located in North Boulder in the Village at Uptown, 1310 Rosewood #5A is a one bedroom, one bath store front style condo with a modern flair and cool vibe. It’s a great property to get into this Boulder market and enjoy ownership and a live/work lifestyle. Please share with your friends!

Also, please tune into my YouTube channel for my latest production that is From The Trail #45!

In the meantime, remember to thank the essential workers in your life and find ways to support local businesses that are feeling the burn of dealing with limited service allowance and restrictions. And please give to your local charities if you’re able to.

Be well, and don’t forget to smile!
HATCH

Boulder County Buzz - July 2020

Boulder County Buzz - July 2020

What a difference another month makes. Or does it? It’s been four months since things were turned topsy-turvy. We were almost sort of in the clear and then we weren’t. Now we’re here, wherever here is. So much is wrong and yet so much is right. There are lessons everywhere if you look at it right I suppose. It’s easy to feel bummed out and discouraged. However, I urge you still to rise up and be better than the news you watch and especially to give to those who have lost. Go outside and sing a song. Or like my dad does with his trumpet, play your instrument for your neighbors to hear and give them a reason to smile. And wear a damn mask and wash your damn hands, a lot. And conserve water too, while you’re at it. And be grateful!

In February and early March, my business was taking off. CV19 took it off the tracks, but only for a couple weeks. The past few months, my business has been off the hook awesome. While we are practicing safe showings and clean operating procedures, I am as busy as ever. I’m marketing and closing deals left and right. I have some really smart and especially fun buyers and sellers right now. It’s a much different landscape right now and it feels really good to be able to help so many of you. And so much goes back to you all - I thank you for looking out for me and referring your friends and family to me. I’m so grateful!

We’re still craving live music and summer nights in air conditioned movie theaters but we’re making the best of it with camping, back yard patio evenings with tasty food. We've also managed to get out on the river to fool the trout and also run our amazing trails here in Boulder County. I’m so grateful!

Please visit my new featured Boulder properties this month; one is at 2132 Bluebell Avenue in coveted Lower Chautauqua and the other 324 Granite Drive, coming in August, is just a short drive up from Mapleton Hill in close-in Sunshine Canyon. Two amazing homes to retreat to. Please share with your friends! I also have a cool modern one bedroom condo in North Boulder coming soon. Please check in later for more details.

Finally, please tune in to From The Trail, #44 and let's hang out with my friend and Blues Legend Otis Taylor as he takes you through his past few months and shreds the banjo for you in his backyard in Boulder, Colorado. You’re going to love this one. Otis, for your time, I am grateful!

In the meantime, remember to thank the essential workers in your life and find ways to support local businesses that are feeling the burn of being closed or dealing with limited service.

Be well and thank you,
HATCH

FROM THE TRAIL #44, with Otis Taylor

FROM THE TRAIL #44, with Otis Taylor

Boulder, Colorado resident and blues musician Otis Taylor grew up in Denver, but like the old blues song said, he was born in Chicago in 1948. According to Taylor his parents were both jazz fans. "My dad worked for the railroad and knew a lot of jazz people. He was a socialist and real bebopper." His mother loved everything from Etta James to Pat Boone. The first instrument Taylor learned to play was the banjo, but he soon rejected the banjo for its association with the racist American South. Taylor would eventually return to the banjo upon discovering its African roots...

Boulder County Buzz - June 2020

Boulder County Buzz - June 2020

"From high above we're all the same down here
Without a map the lines all disappear
We're so tired of our senseless fight
The one thing we can all do right
Is come together, come together, come together.”


-Anastasio/Nicholson/Greenberg


It's clear that emotions are running high right now. We have been completely shaken by the impact of this pandemic. We’ve lost jobs and loved ones. There is deep political discord. It feels like we are now more divided than ever. Racial tensions are elevated. And so it’s easy to feel discouraged, to harbor anger and fear and to be discouraged. But change is on the way and I say stop watching the news and go out and take a hike and breathe the air and touch the trees or the grass out there. Be the change by being happy and alive. Do what you love. Find something, or better yet, find someone to celebrate. Consider holding those who have lost something. It’s time for us to rise up and come together!

And what better way to rise up, than to get down; like with our friends in the Acoustic Ambush band who played live at Chautauqua Park. What a celebration!

For me and my real estate business, I couldn't be busier today. The market is returning to some normal behavior after weeks of the covid19 chaos. It’s not all the way normal but it is more vibrant than we maybe expected. Thank you as always for finding me and for referring business. Pease stay tuned for a new featured listing in the Lower Chautauqua neighborhood in Boulder coming later this week. This home at 2132 Bluebell Avenue is a 2-story, 4bd/4ba, 4,300sqft Craftsman-style home with a double lot in the best neighborhood in Boulder below Chautauqua Park. A deep lot on this lush and wooded property designed by nature especially for your tree-climbing adventurer. Priced at $1,985,000. You will want to check back in on this one soon for gorgeous virtual tours!

Thank you all for being you and for staying positive!

HATCH

FROM THE TRAIL, #43 - with ACOUSTIC AMBUSH

FROM THE TRAIL, #43 - with ACOUSTIC AMBUSH

When the friends we know put smiles on our faces in a time when life is weird, it’s liberating, it’s observing the silver linings and for some, it’s just downright awful and sad. Thank you to Acoustic Ambush; Chris Alaimo, Russ Grabski, Dave Haynes and Jeff Lyons for lighting up our Chautauqua Sunday with amazing beats and ridiculous jamz and bringing in special guest Lily Fangz. She killz it! #acousticambush #LILYFANGZ