Blog :: 2021

5th Annual Holiday Coat Drive

alt tag

 

If you know WRP, you know Coat Drives during the holidays are our (holiday) jam!

 

Since 2017, Williams Realty Partners sponsors several coat drives throughout the towns of York, Kittery and Wells. Coats and other winter clothing, new or used, are collected and delivered directly to the good people at York County Community Action Corporation (YCCA) in Kittery. From there, the coats are distributed throughout York County directly to those who are in desperate need of warm clothing. In 2021, the need is greater than ever!

 

Donations of coats can be dropped off at the following locations:

 

November 19th-December 23rd: Donations can be shipped to or dropped off at Williams Realty Partners located at 4 Market Place Drive #2 in York, Maine. We have placed a box in the lobby where no-contact donations will be gratefully accepted, 24/7.

November 26th-November 28th: Homer the Trolley will be visiting the Kittery Outlets outside Osh Kosh B'Gosh.

December 11th and 12th from 8am-12pm: Homer the Trolley will be parked at the Bagel Basket in York.

More locations will be announced soon!

 

>Thank you for joining WRP in the effort to provide warmth for those in our community who need it most!

 

Williams Realty Partners of Keller Williams Coastal and Lakes & Mountains is the #1 KW Team in Maine. We strive to provide an exceptional experience to all our clients, whether they are buying, selling, or investing in real estate. The team can be reached at 1-207-351-8188.

 

Use Your Home To Pay For Your Next Vacation | Ask Troy

Q. Troy, we're not ready to sell our house just yet...is there any way we can take advantage of this hot real estate market anyway?

 

Just like residential real estate on the Seacoast, there’s a lack of inventory when it comes to vacation rentals. But there’s an upside to this for many locals! According to the IRS, if you rent out your [...]

There's Always Room For A Pig At This Animal Sanctuary

momo-the-potbellied-pig

The F.A.R.M. in South Berwick, Maine

 

With the decline in traditional farming, farm animals often find themselves in auctions, sold for whatever purpose the buyer wants.

 

Sometimes their needs are neglected due to the ignorance ofowners of how to care for them properly. Sometimes a family needs to re-home a beloved farm animal due to the [...]

Five Affordable Ways to Maximize Your Curb Appeal

alt tag

 

A Landscape Designer's Top Tips

 

First impressions matter - especially in real estate.

 

Award-winning Maine landscape designer Thomas Lynch outlines five affordable ways to increase your home's curb appeal. This is especially important during the selling process, when you want your house to shine!

 

1. Trim Trees and Shrubs

Removing dead and diseased trees and limbs along with proper trimming and pruning of shrubs instantly improves curb [...]

Kittery Maine Restaurants - Looking Forward to 2021!

 

Williams Realty Partners realtor Halley Smith doesn't just know the Kittery Maine real estate market, she also knows the restaurants in Kittery from an inside vantage point.

 

Halley's husband Jake is the executive chef and co-owner of one of the many outstanding dining choices in the area, The Black Birch, as well as Chapel & Main in [...]

Raised Bed Gardening & Hugelkultur

alt tag

 

Outsmart Those Rocks!

Raised bed gardening is extremely popular right now, particularly in New England, and with very good reason. New England gardeners digging in their yards sometimes feel like they’re not really digging in soil, they’re digging in rocks with a little dirt thrown in to hold it all together. Once built, a raised bed or hugelkultur mound (we’ll get to hugelkultur in a moment) placed on top of all those backbreaking stones turns gardening from work to joy. Raised bed gardening also hugely increases where you can garden. Heck, you can even build a hip-high container, put all terrain wheels on it and pull it wherever you want!

 

But wait, there's more!

Raised beds also have several other advantages. They drain better and the soil is leraised bed imagess compacted, which makes it easier for roots to grow (just don’t walk in your raised bed!). Gardeners aren’t stuck with whatever soil they happen to have in the yard, either. It’s common for gardeners to add topsoil, moisture-retentive compost and other nutrient rich matter to their raised beds, ensuring healthy, high-yielding vegetables or flowers. Need another reason to love raised beds? In the spring, soil in a raised bed warms faster than the cold, thawing ground. With a raised bed and the addition of a landscape cover over your plants, you can begin the spring growing season early by a month or more, and extend it well into the fall.

 

Raised Bed Materials

There is no one-size-fits-all when it comes to raised garden beds. A raised bed can be as practical and homely as a simple heavy-duty black plastic garbage bag filled with soil, or a work of art made out of sculpted cedar that would look right at home at Martha Stewart’s next garden party. They can sit on the ground or be raised up on stilts, which is a godsend to those who love to garden but have some physical limitations. Raised bed kits made of wood, plastic, or metal are easy to find at a local Wal-Mart, Home Depot, Lowe’s or through an online retailer, often under $100. DIY versions include hollowed-out hay bales, pallets, or even a simple mound of soil.

 

Hugel-what?

And that simple mound of soil brings us to hugelkultur. Hugel is “hill” in German, and hugelkultur is the practice of cultivating plants on a hill or mound that is composed of layers of decomposing wood, branches, leaves, grass and plant clippings, topped off with soil. The decomposing wood from the logs and branches at the base attract earthworms and other beneficial soil life, which in turn provide aeration and nutrients to the plants grown on the sides of the mound. Decomposing wood is also wonderful for water retention, meaning less watering. Once a hugelkultur mound is built, plants can be grown in that rich environment for years to come with little further effort. We hope we’ve convinced you to give raised bed gardening or hugelkultur a try, because they certainly make growing your own vegetables and flowers a heck of a lot easier, and the ways you can use these beds is practically endless.

 

For more information about Hugelkultur:

https://extension.umaine.edu/gardening/2019/09/01/maine-home-garden-news-september-2019/#article-1

 

Williams Realty Partners of Keller Williams Coastal and Lakes & Mountains is the #1 KW Team in Maine. We strive to provide an exceptional experience to all our clients, whether they are buying, selling, or investing in real estate. The team can be reached at 1-207-351-8188.

 

Reducing Volatile Organic Compounds

alt tag

A simple way to reduce potential toxin exposure in the home is to choose your paint carefully.

 

Paint is a commonly used product that may contain volatile organic compounds, or VOCs. It’s the VOCs in paint that make it smell like paint.

 

According to the EPA, VOCs are chemicals that are emitted as gases from certain solids or liquids. [...]

1-10 of 11 Posts

Contact Us

Do not fill in this field:

I agree to receive marketing and customer service calls and text messages from Williams Realty Partners. To opt out, you can reply 'stop' at any time or click the unsubscribe link in the emails. Consent is not a condition of purchase. Msg/data rates may apply. Msg frequency varies. Privacy Policy.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Mountain View