Showing posts with label real estate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label real estate. Show all posts

Monday, March 25, 2013

Analysts Calling Rise in Home Sales a Full-Blown Recovery

Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate CEO Sherry Chris weighs in on the state and future of the housing market.

Watch Video:  Analysts Calling Rise in Home Sales a Full-Blown Recovery  

IT"S A SELLERS MARKET! What is Your Home Worth?

Request a FREE No-obligation Market Evaluation from Mike Ginn today.


Contact:

Michael D. Ginn
Real Estate Broker
Michael@GinnRealty.com  (email)
GinnRealty.com  (site)
San Diego, CA

Friday, February 8, 2013

FOR SALE: 6642 Belle Glade Ave San Diego, CA 92119

BACK ON THE MARKET! 

FOR SALE:  Beautiful TURN KEY home in highly sought after area of San Carlos. This home features custom flooring throughout, brand new kitchen with granite countertops, breakfast bar, etc... 
Asking: $549k - $569k 

Buyers & Sellers, to setup a private showing and receive additional information, I can be reached at email: Michael@GinnRealty.com 


Click here to watch Virtual Tour:  6642 Belle Glade Ave San Diego, CA 92119





Ready to Buy or Sell your Home?

CONTACT:
Michael D. Ginn
Real Estate Broker

Successfully Selling San Diego since 2003!

"We built our brand knowing that today's consumer is the most informed we've ever seen."

Friday, August 31, 2012

RBD Ventures Inc. acquires 9628 Cypress St, Lakeside, CA - San Diego Real Estate

San Diego's premier redevelopment experts, Michael Ginn & RBD Ventures Inc. acquires another investment opportunity in Lakeside, CA. The project broke ground first thing Monday morning and is scheduled for completion within thirty days.


home under construction

Coming Soon…

Lakeside Home for Sale at Cypress St., Lakeside 92040

Coming soon another RBD Ventures Outstanding Renovation to Lakeside.


ADDITIONAL PROPERTY DETAILS:
Location: Lakeside
Address: Cypress Street
City: Lakeside
Zip: 92040
Year Built: 1977

Bedrooms: 3
Bathrooms: 2.5
Lot Size: 20,000 sq ft
Square Feet: 1,533
Property Type: Single Family Residence



CONTACT:
Michael Ginn
San Diego Real Estate Broker
mdginn@gmail.com (email)


Saturday, December 24, 2011

Christmas Eve Cowles Mountain San Diego

... more on lifestyle, climate and prime time real estate!

Cell phone photos taken by Mike Ginn

Perfect weather!

Coronado Islands & Lake Murray

Trail head, Cowles Mtn in the distance

Friday, December 2, 2011

San Diego is Prime Time REAL ESTATE...

... for year-round, outdoor fitness and adventure!

Why?  CLIMATE


La Jolla, CA - Weather




This message has been approved by San Diego's Personal Trainer / Bootcamp Instructor, Mike Ginn.


Artist Unknown

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

San Diego is Perfect for Sport


San Diego celebrates sport, an active lifestyle and the great outdoors - from kitesurfing to cycling, golf to American Football.


Torrey Pines Golf Course,  San Diego


Early morning “shore side” skating, swimming, cycling, kitesurfing, running or walking are part of the San Diegan psyche. 

But the true passion in San Diego is surfing. Almost everyone has learnt or – at the very least – tried it. The wild Pacific waves that crash against the Southern Californian coast attract devotees from all over the state and beyond. “Waves before your day” is an oft-repeated phrase here – and perfectly encapsulates how residents make use of the city’s natural gifts.

But if San Diegans aren’t outdoors playing sport, you can be certain they’ll be watching it.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

healthy active billionaire!!! The Billionaire Who Is Planning His 125th Birthday

... before reading, The Billionaire Who Is Planning His 125th Birthday, here is a snapshot of who David Murdock is. Incredible man... enjoy!



Artist: Slim Aarons

- Forbes ranks him as the 130th-richest person in the "Forbes 400" list and 376th in the "World's Billionaires" list, with a net worth of US$3 billion as of March 2001.
- turned Dole into the world's largest producer of fruits and vegetables.
- Murdock's father was a travelling salesman, while his mother took up laundry and scrubbed floors to make ends meet. Murdock is the middle child of three, he had two sisters. He was particularly close to his mother, who died at 42 from cancer.
- dropped out of high school in the 9th grade.
- He was drafted by the U.S. Army in 1943 during World War II.
- after the war, Murdock was homeless and destitute.
- got a $1,200 loan to buy a closing diner, flipping it for a $700 profit ten months later.
- he acquired control of International Mining. In early 1980s, he became the largest shareholder in Occidental Petroleum by selling the company his 18 percent interest in Iowa Beef.
- After the death of his third wife, Gabriele, Murdock has been deeply committed to finding a cure for cancer, advancing nutrition, and life extension.


The Billionaire Who Is Planning His 125th Birthday


Jeff Riedel for The New York Times

One morning in early January, David Murdock awoke to an unsettling sensation. At first he didn’t recognize it and then he couldn’t believe it, because for years — decades, really — he maintained what was, in his immodest estimation, perfect health. But now there was this undeniable imperfection, a scratchiness and swollenness familiar only from the distant past. Incredibly, infuriatingly, he had a sore throat.

“I never have anything go wrong,” he said later. “Never have a backache. Never have a headache. Never have anything else.” This would make him a lucky man no matter his age. Because he is 87, it makes him an unusually robust specimen, which is what he must be if he is to defy the odds (and maybe even the gods) and live as long as he intends to. He wants to reach 125, and sees no reason he can’t, provided that he continues eating the way he has for the last quarter century: with a methodical, messianic correctness that he believes can, and will, ward off major disease and minor ailment alike.
So that sore throat wasn’t just an irritant. It was a challenge to the whole gut-centered worldview on which his bid for extreme longevity rests. “I went back in my mind: what am I not eating enough of?” he told me. Definitely not fruits and vegetables: he crams as many as 20 of them, including pulverized banana peels and the ground-up rinds of oranges, into the smoothies he drinks two to three times a day, to keep his body brimming with fiber and vitamins. Probably not protein: he eats plenty of seafood, egg whites, beans and nuts to compensate for his avoidance of dairy, red meat and poultry, which are consigned to a list of forbidden foods that also includes alcohol, sugar and salt.
“I couldn’t figure it out,” he said. So he made a frustrated peace with his malady, which was gone in 36 hours and, he stressed, not all that bad. “I wasn’t really struggling with it,” he said. “But my voice changed a little bit. I always have a powerful voice.” Indeed, he speaks so loudly at times, and in such a declamatory manner, that it cows people, who sometimes assume they’ve angered him. “When I open my mouth,” he noted, “the room rings.”
The room ringing just then was the vast, stately common area of his vast, stately North Carolina lodge, which sits on more than 500 acres of woods and meadows where a flock of rare black Welsh sheep — which he keeps as pets, certainly not as chops and cheese in the making — roam under the protection of four Great Pyrenees dogs. He got the dogs after a donkey and two llamas entrusted with guarding the flock from predators failed at the task. The donkey and llamas still hang out with their fleecy charges, but they are purely ornamental.
Murdock loves to collect things: animals, orchids, Chippendale mirrors, Czechoslovakian chandeliers. He keeps yet another black Welsh flock at one of his two homes in Southern California, a 2,200-acre ranch whose zoological bounty extends to a herd of longhorn cattle, about 800 koi in a manmade lake and 16 horses — down from a population of more than 550, most of them Arabians, 35 years ago — with their own exercise pool. He has five homes in all, one on the small Hawaiian island of Lanai, which he owns almost in its entirety. He shuttles among them in a private jet. Forbes magazine’s most recent list of the 400 richest Americans put him at No. 130, with an estimated net worth of $2.7 billion, thanks to real estate development and majority stakes in an array of companies, most notably Dole. Five years earlier the estimate was $4.2 billion, but the recession took its toll.