Catskills - Sullivan County - Ulster County Real Estate -- Catskill Farms Journal

Old School Real estate blog in the Catskills. Journeys, trial, tribulations, observations and projects of Catskill Farms Founder Chuck Petersheim. Since 2002, Catskill Farms has designed, built, and sold over 250 homes in the Hills, investing over $100m and introducing thousands to the areas we serve. Farms, Barns, Moderns, Cottages and Minis - a design portfolio which has something for everyone.

Thursday, August 5, 2021

The Year of Disruption

There are few things we try to do these days that doesn't entail a nasty negative surprise, an unavailable product, a delayed shipment, a harried vendor. It started with pressure treated decking and wood last spring, spread quickly into appliances, hot water heaters, basement floor stain, electrical conduit or machine parts to repair equipment. What wasn't in short supply was engorged in price - with some framing materials up 800%.

We were busy as all get out, and were building right into the teeth of this angry inflationary and shortage sea serpent. I basically just closed my eyes and forged ahead hoping the increased volume and increased sales prices would offset the increased prices. So far, that has been the case, but it has been shocking at times, and actually quite hard to track.

I've spent my last 2 weeks - besides building 25 homes, leading a new marketing campaign, managing 12 employees and host of other issues - trying to get a washing machine repaired at one of my rentals in Phoenixville Pennsylvania. I'm 24 calls, 4 site visits, 87 texts into it, and still no final solution or resolution. It's a microcosm of what we've been dealing with. Just hard to look good right now, regardless of your tan or fitness level.

My son and I are engaged in completing the construction of a 2500 piece Land Rover lego set. It's taken us months or more since he's only with me every other week, and he has a short attention span and it's a bit tedious at times, and it's a lot of pieces. But it's cool, and I can't say it went that smoothly from a father and son perspective, but we powered through the anger, frustration, impatience etc... and reached the end with a well-built machine that seems to be put together more or less as designed. 800 pages of design instructions. There's something to be said and learned from that, however indirectly and unintended.

Been taking down some books as of late - Band of Brothers, Beyond Band of Brothers, News Junkie. Just finished No Ordinary Time, a 30+ hour audible book about the Roosevelts by the historian who wrote the Lincoln biography Team of Rivals.

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Monday, July 26, 2021

Production, Sales, and what have you-

Like I said in a previous blog post, I always to the hardest job - I look for what can't be delegated, scanning all nether regions for problems that need my intervention. The latest in our inability to keep up with our painting needs. The problem with constantly fixing the production bottlenecks- was siding, tile, hvac, framing, - now those have been remedied with hard fought additions to our team - but solving some but not all only creates a bigger bottleneck where the remaining ones reside.

For years it has been painting, aggravated by the fact that everything we build needs to be touched by a paint brush. All siding, porches, interiors - It's complicated, and quality matters. And weather makes it harder.

There is nothing that bothers me more - no spur in my saddle, no bunch in my underpants, no poop on my shoe - than a house under construction sitting still not moving forward in some manner and fashion. So, today, I gathered my team and we painted a house. Sprayed it. Worked out good. Methodical, good quality, lots of progress. Hot as hell in my spray suit.

On the sales front, we have a few closings coming up - a ranch up in Saugerties, a rental property I've owned for a bit in Barryville. Did 2 deals in Olivebridge on some new homes.

Been getting a lot of use out of my pool. Why I chose to embark on this very complicated construction project when we were so busy is beyond me, but it's mostly done and mostly awesome. Of course my blog has a photo size limit that constantly blocks my best attempts at creative blogging. Been warm, and one day I did the rookie mistake of trying to tan some untanned regions, and I went to far, now I'm burned and can barely get my underwear on over my burnt upper thighs and buttocks.

Saturday, July 17, 2021

Another One Sold in the Catskills

A pretty house for sure, on 9 acres in Cochecton NY. I owned this land since 2004, and it just sat there as I worked my way through expansions in Ulster and Dutchess counties. Then we circled back, and built 2 homes on 20 acres, in central Sullivan County.

When I first started out in 2003, this neck of the woods - central Sullivan County in towns such as Jeffersonville, Callicoon, North Branch - were our focus, but then it migrated south to Barryville area, and west to Narrowsburg area, then north to Ulster county towns like Woodstock, Saugerties, Stone Ridge and Kerhonkson.

This particular design is special to me because it is the very first design I ever built, back in 2003, in Narrowsburg. I was driving down the road to Fremont NY to a farmhouse renovation I was doing and kept passing this abandoned but cute hundred year old farmhouse along the way, and eventually I adapted with the help of an architect into the very first new old home of Catskill Farms. That's 20 years and nearly 300 homes ago.

Farm 60 is quite striking, with nearly 2000 sq ft but an additional 1000 sq ft walk out basement. This was sold/contracted early in the pandemic, and is one of our last homes sold before prices really rose. So we left some money on the table and the homeowners got a good deal, which is fine. I think we offer/offered a lot of value over the years.

More pics of Farm 60

The difference between now and then couldn't be vaster, but as far as I know, those early homes held up pretty well. Back then, as well as now, a part of my job has always remained the same and that is sourcing and staffing to building end - back then the challenge was to source one, and now it's to staff 25 at a time, but in the end, I was able to find a path to growing the team, and improving our homes. And let's be honest, after 20 years and hundreds of homes where there is a true dedication to making each one better, the homes end up being pretty awesome.

Went on vacation at last a few weeks back to Turks and Caicos with my son, sister and a friend of my sons, and a good time by all was had. Tough to turn off after 14 months of endless focus and work, but even worse, was reentering the 24/7 stress-arama when I returned. The endless problem solving and work had become so integral to my life during covid, it was a like a frog in boiling water - just happened, stage by stage. So to leave it, then reenter it, was a shock to the system, as well as healthy awareness of the mental toll that type of workload can take on a person. All in all, all good, but all work and no play can make jack a very dull boy.

The Shining poster  Art Print All Work and No Play movie image 0

Rugby team we fell in with.

turks and caicos rugby team
Friday, July 16, 2021

CHUCK CHATS! See what's new at Catskill Farms!

Chuck chats about the latest offerings from Catskill Farms, including homes for sale in Kerhonkson, Olivebridge, Saugerties, Narrowsburg and Cochecton.

CHECK IT OUT!!!

CHECK OUT FULL LISTINGS HERE!!!

Charles Petersheim, Catskill Farms (Catskill Home Builder)
At Farmhouse 35
A Tour of 28 Dawson Lane
Location
Rock & Roll
The Transaction
The Process
Under the Hood
Big Barn
Columbia County Home
Catskill Farms History
New Homes in the Olivebridge Area
Mid Century Ranch Series
Chuck waxes poetic...
Catskill Farms Barn Series
Catskill Farms Cottage Series
Catskill Farms Farmhouse Series
Interviews at the Farm ft. Gary
Interviews at the Farm ft. Amanda
Biceps & Building
Catskill Farms Greatest Hits
Construction Photos
Planned It
Black 'n White
Home Accents at Catskill Farms, Part 2
Home Accents at Catskill Farms, Part 1