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How to Stop a Foreclosure: The Real Estate Investor’s Guide

How to Stop a Foreclosure: The Real Estate Investor's GuideA foreclosure can be a nerve-wracking prospect for investors. Apart from potentially losing your investment property, it would also have a significant negative impact on your credit score. Having missed…
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Why It’s Better to Buy and Hold Real Estate and Rent It Out

Why It's Better to Buy and Hold Real Estate and Rent It OutOne of the things that makes real estate very appealing is the diversity of investments. Just take a look at all of the different real estate investment strategies. That being…
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How to Make a Rental Property More Desirable to Prospective Tenants

How to Make a Rental Property More Desirable to Prospective TenantsIf you have a rental property and you want to make it more desirable to tenants, you have to do a few tweaks on the interior and exterior of the…
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Stock Prices 2020 | What Drives Stock Prices Up?

Stock Prices 2020 | What Drives Stock Prices Up?

Daily Stock Prices Stock market volatility is by no means over, as we enter the end of the imposed economic shutdown. This week’s corporate earnings reports weren’t as bad as many anticipated. And don’t feel bad if your portfolio sunk recently. Warren Buffet also took a bath and he has all the stock loss evasion…

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Coronavirus Update – May 2: Cases top 28k; Thunderbirds, Blue Angels fly over; APD reports six with virus

The Thunderbirds and Blue Angels streak over Downtown to salute the frontline healthcare workers. (Photo by Jacob Nguyen)

The Georgia Department of Public Health reports that the number of confirmed coronavirus infections in the state has increased to 28,332 on Saturday, while the death toll stands at 1,174.

U.S. Navy’s Blue Angels and the U.S. Air Force’s Thunderbirds performed a Downtown fly over this afternoon to honor COVID-19 frontline healthcare workers. The aerial display brought city residents to their balconies, rooftops, and to Piedmont Park, where large crowds gathered for the event. Social media was abuzz with concerns about the lack of social distancing and masks at the park and on the Atlanta BeltLine trails, while #PIedmontPark was trending on Twitter after videos were posted of large, unmasked crowds in the park and on the sidewalks.

The Atlanta Police Department currently has five officers and one civilian employee out sick with COVID-19, according to a weekly APD update. Eight other officers who previously tested positive for the disease recovered and are back at work, according to the report. APD said that property crime and violent crime continue to trend downward during the pandemic. However, domestic violence reports have increased. For March and April, APD received 334 domestic violence cases, up from 227 during the same months in 2019.

The post Coronavirus Update – May 2: Cases top 28k; Thunderbirds, Blue Angels fly over; APD reports six with virus appeared first on Atlanta INtown Paper.

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Rural Homes: Good Real Estate Investment Opportunities in 2020?

Rural Homes: Good Real Estate Investment Opportunities in 2020?Much has been written about rural America’s decline in the last decade. Rural homes were mainly left behind in the recovery after the 2008 Great Recession. As rural income stagnated,…
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3 Tools for Long Distance Real Estate Investing

X Tools for Long Distance Real Estate InvestingLong distance real estate investing is becoming more and more popular. As advanced real estate tools become more sophisticated, buying an out of state rental property is becoming easier than…
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How to Find Multi Family Homes for Sale in Florida

How to Find Multi Family Homes for Sale in FloridaAs part of our US housing market predictions for 2020, Mashvisor put together a list of the best multi family markets. What we noticed when looking at the real estate…
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Above the Waterline: Finding solace in nature

Cabin Creek

It’s been a year since I began to regularly walk the Cabin Creek trail through the woods to the Chattahoochee River: an experience that has never failed to provide me with peace, inspiration and new discoveries through the seasons. With the closure of the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area in March, due to the coronavirus, these walks have come to an end, at least for the foreseeable future. Sadly, I have missed seeing spring unfold in the ravine of the talking creek, under the greening forest canopy, and beside the constantly flowing river.

Memories of past walks, augmented by my journal and photographs, help my mind’s eye recall many of the sights, sounds and smells from these life-affirming rambles. I am also comforted by the certainty and the rhythm of nature: the knowledge that spring will come again to Cabin Creek (and again and again) – and that I will be able to return to the ravine and the river “to lose my mind and find my soul,” as America’s most famous conservationist John Muir once said. A few selections from my journal may help your mind’s eye recall similar experiences in nature.

May 29, 2019:  It is dusk, when I start down the Cabin Creek trail on this day in late May. The walk through the woods to the river is different this time: quiet, but for the squirrels racing up and down trees. I walk quickly in the darkening forest tunnel. The Chattahoochee is very low, drifting slowly downstream, around dozens of exposed rocks; the river’s geology – its bones – are on full display. The early evening light on the water is glorious, triggering all my senses. I walk into the river, jumping across the rocks that jut up from the water at angles like frozen waves: an example of foliation, the repetitive layering of metamorphic rock, I learn later. With the work-day over, many boaters float past me; I perch on my sitting rock and watch the flowing tableau.

October 23, 2019: A hiker shouts: “Look!” We turn our attention to the Chattahoochee, where a river otter cavorts in the fast-moving water at the bottom of Devil’s Racecourse Shoals. He dives into the water and comes up a short distance downstream with what appears to be a fish in his mouth. Underwater again, and then he emerges back upstream – splashing and flipping his long body, while propelling himself with his powerful tail. The joyful performance repeats itself over and over again to our great pleasure – and clearly his. I realize, in a moment of startling clarity, that this river – the life-sustaining flow of water that I’ve long thought of as being “my” river – belongs, in truth, to this otter, his kin and all the wildlife who depend on it. A memorable passage from The Edge of the Sea by Rachel Carson comes to mind. Observing a small ghost crab on a night beach, she wrote: “Suddenly I was filled with the odd sensation that for the first time I knew the creature in its own world – that I understood, as never before, the essence of its being. In that moment time was suspended; the world to which I belonged did not exist and I might have been an onlooker from outer space.”

Halberd leaf Violet

March 15, 2020:  Spring is beginning to show itself along the Cabin Creek trail with glimpses of hepatica, purple toadshade trillium, and halberd-leaved yellow violets. It’s been ten months since I began my walks on this trail to the river, yet I’m still making new discoveries. The previous week, my eyes finally focused on a fallen beech tree with young trees emerging from its prone trunk. I had passed this family grouping dozens of times, yet never noticed it. Three sprouts that had grown from latent buds in the trunk of the fallen tree grow a few feet apart, ramrod-straight, reaching for the sun. Sustained by their mother’s decaying body in their early years, they now have their own roots that reach around her trunk in an embrace before entering the rich organic material in the bottom of the creek’s ravine. A friend accompanies me today, to take a look at my finding; fortunately, he always carries a tape measure, among other tools, and we determine the circumference of the fallen mother tree and the largest of the three tree sprouts. Based on later research on these slow-growing trees, I calculate that the mother beech began growing sometime in the 1880s, during the decade when my grandparents were born, and that she fell in the late 1950s, just a few years after my family moved to Georgia; the largest sprout is now more than 60 years old.

These connections to nature, even in the city, are fascinating and they are comforting; they make us feel secure. Life is affirmed for me by the barred owl that never fails to surprise, when he hoots from the top of a tree near my home in the city. In this period of waiting, I find that I am more attentive, allowing myself the time to explore: leaf veins, tree bark, light and shadows. In “Wild Geese”, poet Mary Oliver eloquently describes the powerful bonds between all living things.

You do not have to be good.

You do not have to walk on your knees

for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting.

You only have to let the soft animal of your body

     love what it loves.

Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.

Meanwhile the world goes on.

Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain

are moving across the landscapes,

over the prairies and the deep trees,

the mountains and the rivers.

Meanwhile, the geese, high in the clean blue air,

are heading home again.

Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,

the world offers itself to your imagination,

calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting –

over and over announcing your place

in the family of things. 

 

Sally Bethea

Sally Bethea is the retired executive director of Chattahoochee Riverkeeper and an environmental and sustainability advocate. Her award-winning Above the Waterline column appears monthly in INtown. 

 

 

This story originally appeared in our special May online-only edition. Click the image to read the entire issue.

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Coronavirus Update – May 1: Cases near 27.5k; Blue Angels and Thunderbirds fly over set; feeding hospitality workers

The Georgia Department of Public Health reports this evening that 33 more Georgians have died from COVID-19 in the last 24 hours bringing the death toll to 1,165. The number of confirmed cases is now 27,492.

The U.S. Navy’s Blue Angels and the U.S. Air Force’s Thunderbirds will perform a Downtown fly over to honor COVID-19 frontline healthcare workers on Saturday, May 1, at 1:35 p.m. The event will last about 25 minutes as the planes zoom from Marietta to Newnan with a loop around Downtown. The pilots will do similar flyovers in Baltimore and Washington D.C. on Saturday.

#ATLFAMILYMEAL, the nonprofit initiative to feed and support hospitality workers in the city, has delivered more than 15,000 meals to workers who are experiencing joblessness and facing hunger as a result of the COVID-19 crisis. Hospitality workers in need from over 200 restaurants, breweries, and hospitality businesses – with more joining each week – are part of #ATLFAMILYMEAL’s meal delivery network and include staff from Atlanta Marriott Gateway, Banshee, Butcher & Brew, C. Ellet’s, Cafe Intermezzo, Eugene Kitchen, Farm Burger, Holeman & Finch, Lyla Lila, Monday Night Brewing, Wild Heaven Beer, Wrecking Bar Brew Pub, Empire State South, Sweet Auburn BBQ, Minero, and many more.

The post Coronavirus Update – May 1: Cases near 27.5k; Blue Angels and Thunderbirds fly over set; feeding hospitality workers appeared first on Atlanta INtown Paper.