Monday, November 30, 2009
Monday, November 16, 2009
Tips to go Green

I found this list of going green tips on www.frontdoor.com
I know sometimes reading these lists can make you think ‘good ideas, too much effort’. The fact of the matter is investing your time in green is an investment back in your pocket. <--Not inspirational enough, then let me know specifically what you want help doing in your home and CD Realtors will be happy to assist you!
1. Reduce water waste. Replace pre-1994 toilets, showerheads and sinks to instantly save water. Federal standards now require that these fixtures use less water. An upgrade to a low-flow toilet can also trim about $90 a year off your water bill.
2. Go for a gas fireplace. Gas fireplaces provide heating with less indoor and outdoor pollution than the traditional word-burning style. The most efficient option is a direct-vent model, which vents without a chimney. Increase the efficiency of a traditional fireplace by installing a wood stove or using natural gas or pellet inserts.
3. Get a cooler roof. A roof that reflects heat instead of absorbing it allows you to keep your home cool with less energy. Metal provides a cool roofing option that lasts for decades and can mimic the look of materials like wood, tile and stone.
4. Save on heating costs. While it's pricey to purchase, a solar water heater will save you money in the long run by reducing hot water bills up to 80 percent. For best results, install the heater where there's an unobstructed southern exposure.
5. Be counter intuitive. Granite is great, but explore other eco-friendly countertop options, including counters made from recycled paper or hemp. These durable surfaces are easy to clean, but color selection can be limited.
6. Encourage recycling. Make recycling convenient for you, your family and your guests by having a designated spot for recycling in the kitchen.
7. Explore green flooring. Hardwood floors make for a great home investment, but you can get the look and feel of hardwood with sustainable wood options. Cork flooring, made from leftovers at bottle-stopping factories, is one eco-friendly option. It's durable, warm and resistant to spills, making it an especially sensible option for homes with kids or pets.
8. Choose natural wallpaper. Conventional wallpaper options often contain harmful chemicals and synthetic materials, but natural alternatives exist. Consider wallpaper made of sea grass, an abundant, sustainable resource found in saltwater marshes. Sea-grass wallpaper gives walls a natural, textured look.
9. Reject a traditional deck. As an alternative to a hardwood deck, try composite decking made from wood waste and recycled plastic. In addition to being eco-friendly, composite decking outperforms ordinary wood decking; it lasts longer, requires less maintenance and won't warp, crack, splinter or rot.
10. Try recycled mulch. Recycled from scrap tires, rubber mulch serves as an eco-friendly substitute for wood mulch, especially useful as a playground safety surface. The mulch also hinders weed growth in gardens without rotting or blowing away. However, some gardeners are reluctant to use it because the rubber can contain zinc and other heavy metals harmful to plants.
A Day at the Zoo

On November 8th my brother and I went to the National Zoo in Washington D.C. I felt like I had stumbled upon some great secret: hundreds of amazing animals at a free zoo.
I saw five pandas; I don’t believe I ever saw any of their eyes as they were all sleeping in elaborate, surely uncomfortable positions. Orangutans climbed ropes overhead, three Golden Lion Tamarinds engaged in a high risk wrestling match (these animals looked up to some evil deed), and an armadillo curled up so statically it might as well have been a rock.
There was also a lion, a terrifying and beautiful creature. I stood particularly entranced by our first stop in zoo. Eventually, I lost interest moved on to the adjacent tiger, then the rest of the zoo.
BUT GET THIS! Apparently 15 minutes after we left the lion, maybe 6 minutes after the Tiger, a deer, a live, wild, foolish deer, jumped into the ‘lion’s den’, literally.
Watch the video:
Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Hello and Welcome to my Blog!
My name is Saied Abbasi and I am heading Carter-Devlin Realtors’ social media campaign. That being said please check us out on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, this blog, and of course our website: http://www.cdrealtors.com/.
The real estate industry is undergoing profound transitions. The average buyer/seller is more tech. savvy than ever and is tapping the copious amounts of information provided online, a process that has marginalized the need for a traditional real estate agency.
Carter-Devlin Realtors is championing you by ceaselessly delving through internet resources to provide our clients with knowledge. The fact of the matter is the average person buying or selling a home is making the most significant financial decision of their lives.
It is with this understanding that CD Realtors has formulated its business model: To create a transparent network of resources. Allowing the consumer to accelerate their knowledge of the market, with the hope that the buyer/seller will feel confident in their transaction and form a trusting relationship with our real estate agency.
To encourage the relationship between CD Realtors and our clients this blog is designed to provide:
1. A forum for our clients to discuss their experience with CD Realtors with one another, let us know what you would like to see from our firm, ask general questions, etc.
2. Information every client should know from articles, government policy, tips, informational videos, etc.
3. Encourage everyone to undergo green renovations from our Green Audit service to simply walking you through DIY Green modifications
4. Give you more direct access to CD Realtors team