Saturday, November 10, 2012

On the move again


It was about this time last year that my daughter put to me the proposition that we share a house, a three generation house. It could be a win/win for us all, she persuaded. It takes a while to come to a full appreciation of the magnitude of such a decision. It had been an 'annus horibilis' for each of us, but moreso for her. Much moreso for her. I am fixated on being 'useful' and not a typical 'mother-in-law'. I also did not want to take more than I gave. So within that range, we jockeyed for a while and reached general consensus about Christmas 2011. And we started scouring the real-estate sites nearly immediately.


By the end of January, we knew we were not going to find what we were looking for on the southside of the harbour. We looked: both virtually, and in reality. But the bang for yer buck was not there. By then, you see, we had established our criteria:
A downstairs wing for Ma - sitting room, bathroom, and bedroom, outside access
An upstairs for the family with at least 3 bedrooms and a bathroom
A large grassed, relatively flat garden
No pool
Space for two cars
Cul-de-sac
250 or less to public transport
an area with 'buzz' which was defined as cosmopolitan
close to bush-walks
And then Darren accepted a new job in Lane Cove, which obviously focussed our attention on that municipality. As we tossed the possibilities back and forth, our tastes and requirements modified, and also became more obvious to each other.

Since the beginning of August, I have Ma-sat on Saturdays, whilst Kirsten and Darren went on their shopping-list rounds.

View Larger Map

Then at the end of October, Kirsten found something she really liked. Darren and I had poo-pooed it from the listing. Too fussy. Twee. However, she persevered and put it on her list. It took one viewing, and they both said they liked it. IN FRONT OF THE AGENT! Three days later, Kirsten's father and I saw it. We both liked it. There were two interested bidders. The public auction was cancelled, and replaced by a blind auction. How nerve wracking. Once chance. You nominate what you are prepared to offer. Neither side knew the details of the other. Kirsten was prepared to release 5% of the deposity immediately, plus offer a 90 day settlement. Within 30 minutes of the close of bids, it was hers - by $4,000.

And it is not in Lane Cove municipality at all but in Willoughby Municipality in the small suburb of Castlecrag, which is on one of the spurs into Middle Harbour. It is 5km to Darren's work, and 9km to work for Kirsten in the CBD. It is 100m from an express bus route to the city for me, or a slower 15 minute journey to the Chatswood shops. But you know that is not my sort of thing. It is a cul-de-sac, and a walking track - behind the rear fence - follows Sugarloaf Creek down to the harbour. The back yard is tiered to make it flat but has two good playing surfaces. There are 3 large deciduous trees, so I shall need a good compost. Kirsten has said that I can have a vegie patch in the front yard, but I suspect that may be retracted when I submit my concept plan! I am downstairs on the left with the front-porch. The main entry is from the side near the car port. The garage is actually a men's shed. The only room that I have included is the upstairs family room. It is massive. The front faces north.

Settlement date is 29th January.

8 comments:

MargaretP said...

Congratulations, I know how time consuming it can be to find something you are happy with, hope the move goes well.
It will be wonderful for you to have so much time with Alannah.

Julie said...

I think the time I have with her, without her parents present, is at its highest now, Margaret. As she heads for 3 years old, she will spend more time in pre-schools. So my play with her will change into helping with household chores and the like. Still play, but totally different.

Joan Elizabeth said...

I saw the house on Kirsten's blog so have been meaning to ask you about out. mmm a vege patch in that neat front yard might be interesting.

We've got veges growing out at Clandulla this year. The lettuce are coming along nicely but the pumpkins seem to be going nowhere and the cucumbers died from lack of water ... we are still trying to figure out the drip irrigation.

You are going to be in a very different part of the city ... the nature of your photographs is going to change dramatically.

Julie said...

The 'content' of my photography will most certainly change, and the nature of it, may change. But I bet I still search for the personal in the detail, I bet I still search for the humanity behind the makeup, behind the coiffure. I was wondering though: should I close down Sydney Eye, and start up The Crags of the Castle?

diane b said...

How exciting. It looks like it fills the criteria nicely. The walking path at the back sounds like it will get some attention. Hope it works out for you all. I agree with Joan. Your photo content will probably change but not your technique.

freefalling said...

It sounds and looks absolutely fabulous!
I hope you all make some wonderful memories in your new home.

Kay L. Davies said...

That was a long time to be looking, but it seems you've all come out well, Julie. The front and back yards are both lovely and that room is huge indeed!
Looking forward to more news.
Luv, K

Julie said...

Indeed, the ideas are storming through our collective heads: and they all swirl around sustainability.

Compost bins. Worm farms. Vegie gardens. Rainwater tanks. Solar panels.

You get the idea.