• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

PICTURE POST II!

That is a big house from someone who's been all over the US.

It does have the perfect look to go complete Griswold on for next Christmas...
 
^It is, and it looks positively ginormous seen with eyes from another culture :rommie:

It's ginormous to me and I live in the same state!

+ The front lawn is the size of a minor city-park here... makes me wonder about the size of the back garden!!! :eek:

The whole lot size is 1 acre of land. It's a lot larger then I'm accustom to, however most of it is wooded and I plan on keeping that way. In fact I'm looking to add additional trees.

The house is a good size for our family. It's me and the wife, our three kids and my mother-in-law. We also plan on being in the house for a long time.
 
We're almost home, got the final approval for our Mortage tonight. What a difference a few years makes, when we bought our last house it was a cake walk to get the Mortage. This time we had to jump through hoops, provide way more documentation then before and it seamed to take forever. Now just the count down until we close on the new house, sometime around March 1st. Syracuse here we come!

The new house.
E9E9D2A4-DE18-403A-8A57-61AA618FEA93-9148-000002D71053ECEC.jpg

Good tree. Nice house.
 
Very nice house, and reasonable for six people. What drives me crazy are the couples -- or even singles -- without children who live in McMansions. Such a waste! (BTW, I'm not calling your place a McMansion, TomHendricks. It's much too tasteful! :lol:)
 
Very nice house, and reasonable for six people. What drives me crazy are the couples -- or even singles -- without children who live in McMansions. Such a waste! (BTW, I'm not calling your place a McMansion, TomHendricks. It's much too tasteful! :lol:)

We really did try to strike a balance between a house big enough for us to grow with but not so large that its a waste of space.
 
Well done, Tom. :techman:

I really like the layout of the property. I have a thing against long walks perpendicular to the street up to the front door. There's something so great about the large undivided front lawn that you get with a laterally placed walk for the front door. The only thing missing are a set of tall hedges at the edge of the road. ;)
 
Well done, Tom. :techman:

I really like the layout of the property. I have a thing against long walks perpendicular to the street up to the front door. There's something so great about the large undivided front lawn that you get with a laterally placed walk for the front door. The only thing missing are a set of tall hedges at the edge of the road. ;)

I agree, I dislike it when a walkway bisects a lawn. I prefer a meandering path that follows the house. I have big plans for both the front and back of the house. We're not allowed to put up a fence, against the covenants of the home owners association. Well you could ask for a waiver from the association but there has never been one granted since its inception. So there will be hedges and trees to try and rein in the kids.
 
The lake my mother lives on, I took this while I was visiting at Chrismtas -- it's the view from her driveway. I grew up in Seattle, but she moved to this little lake community about an hour from the city last February. Being that it is Northwest Washington, and this was only my third visit to the house (once when I helped her find and purchase it, once for a week last summer, and then this past Christmas) I didn't know that the mountains were visible because they were never out. That is just the foothills, if you drive around the lake there's a nice view of the Cascades too:
542121_10200249296097883_445726876_n.jpg


When it is snowy:
150898_10200306613810790_968023948_n.jpg


1576_10200288583880053_1222913330_n.jpg


Her little cabin in the woods, decorated for Christmas and being buried in snow:
548699_10200143469412282_486691029_n.jpg


There are things like chickens in the road there. It's a culture shock for me, a born and bred city girl, but it's absolutely lovely, and she's really happy there!
165077_10200249292097783_547653435_n.jpg
 
The line about the chickens sounds like something a battle hardened soldier would say.

"Lieutenant, you wouldn't believe it...there are things...like chickens...in the road there! We're lucky to be alive!" :D
 
Wow very nice digs for your Mom, TSQ. The Pacific Northwest has some absolutely fantastic places to hang you hat as far as scenery.
 
Lovin' the shots, tsq. I don't know if I could put up with the constant rain in the Pacific Northwest but the scenery is almost unmatched in America except for probably Alaska.
 
It is gorgeous, and Seattle's not really as rainy as people think. It usually drizzles a bit in the morning and clears up in the afternoons, and summer is generally dry and sunny.
 
I'm going to be visiting Seattle in a few months. I'm open to suggestions as to what else I should see other than the space needle and you-know-what. :)
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top