Greenbook: A Local Guide to Chesapeake Living - Issue 3 | Page 12

GREENBOOK | SEPTEMBER - OCTOBER 2014 the right questions, and designing (finding) the right fit for the client. In simpler terms, this is empathy – the ability to put oneself in another’s shoes. It’s difficult touring an area that one is not familiar with to begin with, but then factor in the limited time and expense for a client to visit the area for a day or weekend specifically to find a property, I would recommend working with a REALTOR® who not only knows the area and inventory, but who has experienced your circumstances, or at least can seek to understand your specific circumstances. 12 At the time of writing this, it’s summer in a beach town. I’m sitting at an outdoor beach café in drenching humidity with the Crepe Myrtle blossoms falling on my keyboard, seagulls fussing around me for crumbs of my pastry, the scent of sunscreen and the ocean, and the hustle and bustle sounds of beachgoers. (Andy, stop, it’s fall for us now!) I buy and sell beach real estate. That’s what I do for a living here at the beach. During hot summer months, the beach real estate market slows from its peak times of fall and spring. Property owners are enjoying and benefiting from their beach ownership. As you see this column, it’s already fall. Summer is now a memory of accumulated moments. There are new photographs in the frames on desks back at the office and on the kitchen refrigerator. Our clients are back at their jobs and lives in the cities. And, true to this modern, connected age, some of our clients have returned back to their lives in areas continents away. While my daily life currently is consumed with summer heat, humidity, beach traffic, and the rush to get into air conditioning, my mind is very much on the fall. Fail to plan, plan to fail, right? Fall is a very important time at the beach. It’s the first of our two busier periods for real estate. The state tourism officials refer to (what us Realtors refer to as our ‘busy periods’) as the, “Shoulder Season.” This is the time of year when the heavy summer tourist traffic has waned, the fall special events calendar is in full swing with harvest festivals, locals crawl back out of hiding from beach traffic, the weather is still gorgeous, the ocean is the warmest of the entire year, and the humidity has packed up and left town - or so I’m told; I’m busy working, helping others see what I get to see daily! The second peak time is spring. Fall and spring are the times in beach real estate when most listings hit the market and most transactions get done. Conveniently for clients, they’re also the times when great deals are advertised in local hotels, restaurants, and stores. Additionally, since weekly tenants have left, it can be easier to list and show beach properties. That’s why when I was fortunate enough to be asked to contribute my perspective on beach real estate to the Green Book, I was thrilled when I realized it would be for the fall issue.