Constitution Park Tennis Courts Temporarily Closing for Re-Surfacing
Per The City of Deerfield Beach Parks & Recreation Department, the tennis courts at Constitution Park, 2841 W Hillsboro Blvd, will be temporarily closing for re-surfacing, from June 29th to July 20th.
For more information, please call Constitution Park at 954.480.4494.
Food Truck Invasion TONIGHT!
Food Truck Invasion is finally heading to Deerfield Beach on the first Thursday of the month. From 5:00pm to-9:00pm at Quiet Waters Park
This is a huge outdoor picnic where food trucks of different origins, cuisine and menus prepare food that is cooked to order. Bring your folding chairs or blankets to picnic at the park’s grass surroundings.
Here is a list of which food trucks are attending tonight:
90 Miles to Go
Around the Table
BC Tacos
Boba Station
Crazydilla
Da Burger Shack
Dolce Gourmet Cupcakes
Don Mofongo
Food Junkies
Jersey Dawg
La Nostra Pizza
Las Gorditas
Main Stop Grill
Mobile Culinary Kitchen
Mobstah Lobstah
The Rolling Stove
Sidecar Kitchen
Taco Fresh
Voolavoo
Zombie Ice
Summer Memberships at Deer Creek Golf Club
Did you know that Deer Creek Golf Club offers summer memberships? See information below from Deer Creek Golf Club’s website:
(Effective May 1, 2015 – October 31, 2015)
SUMMER MEMBERSHIP OPTIONS:
Deer Creek Resident Membership : $395.00 + 6% Florida sales tax. Unlimited Golf Monday- Friday & after 11:30 on Saturday and Sunday
Unlimited: $995.00 + 6% Florida sales tax. Allows play anytime Monday- Sunday
Junior: (17 & under): $275.00 + 6% Florida sales tax
ALL SUMMER MEMBERSHIPS INCLUDE:
- $23.58 + tax Cart Fee per round for the months of May 1-14 & October 16-31
- $20.00 + tax Cart Fee per round for the months of May 15- October 15
- 10% Discount on Clubhouse Food
- 10% Discount on Regularly Priced Pro Shop Merchandise
- Discount on Practice Balls
- Six Day advanced Tee Times
- Bag Storage and Locker ($75.00 each or $125.00 for both)
- Handicap Service
- Special Guest Fees
- Optional Walking….($25.00 fee per round including tax)
Membership office: (954) 429-0006 ext. 113
8 Tips for Adding Curb Appeal and Value to Your Home
Here are eight ways to help your home put its best face forward.
Homes with high curb appeal command higher prices and take less time to sell. We’re not talking about replacing vinyl siding with redwood siding; we’re talking about maintenance and beautifying tasks you’d like to live with anyway.
The way your house looks from the street — attractively landscaped and well-maintained — can add thousands to its value and cut the time it takes to sell. But which projects pump up curb appeal most? Some spit and polish goes a long way, and so does a dose of color.
Tip #1: Wash Your House’s Face
Before you scrape any paint or plant more azaleas, wash the dirt, mildew, and general grunge off the outside of your house. REALTORS® say washing a house can add $10,000 to $15,000 to the sale prices of some houses.
A bucket of soapy water and a long-handled, soft-bristled brush can remove the dust and dirt that have splashed onto your wood, vinyl, metal, stucco, brick, and fiber cement siding. Power washers (rental: $75 per day) can reveal the true color of your flagstone walkways.
Wash your windows inside and out, swipe cobwebs from eaves, and hose down downspouts. Don’t forget your garage door, which was once bright white. If you can’t spray off the dirt, scrub it off with a solution of 1/2 cup trisodium phosphate — TSP, available at grocery stores, hardware stores, and home improvement centers — dissolved in 1 gallon of water.
You and a friend can make your house sparkle in a few weekends. A professional cleaning crew will cost hundreds — depending on the size of the house and number of windows — but will finish in a couple of days.
Tip #2: Freshen the Paint Job
The most commonly offered curb appeal advice from real estate pros and appraisers is to give the exterior of your home a good paint job. Buyers will instantly notice it, and appraisers will value it. Of course, painting is an expensive and time-consuming facelift. To paint a 3,000-square-foot home, figure on spending $375 to $600 on paint; $1,500 to $3,000 on labor.
Your best bet is to match the paint you already have: Scrape off a little and ask your local paint store to match it. Resist the urge to make a statement with color. An appraiser will mark down the value of a house that’s painted a wildly different color from its competition.
Tip #3: Regard the Roof
The condition of your roof is one of the first things buyers notice and appraisers assess. Missing, curled, or faded shingles add nothing to the look or value of your house. If your neighbors have maintained or replaced their roofs, yours will look especially shabby.
You can pay for roof repairs now, or pay for them later in a lower appraisal; appraisers will mark down the value by the cost of the repair. According to “Remodeling” magazine’s 2015 “Cost vs. Value Report,” the average cost of a new asphalt shingle roof is about $19,500.
Some tired roofs look a lot better after you remove 25 years of dirt, moss, lichens, and algae. Don’t try cleaning your roof yourself: call a professional with the right tools and technique to clean it without damaging it. A 2,000-square-foot roof will take a day and $400 to $600 to clean professionally.
Tip #4: Neaten the Yard
A well-manicured lawn, fresh mulch, and pruned shrubs boost the curb appeal of any home.
Replace overgrown bushes with leafy plants and colorful annuals. Surround bushes and trees with dark or reddish-brown bark mulch, which gives a rich feel to the yard. Put a crisp edge on garden beds, pull weeds and invasive vines, and plant a few geraniums in pots.
Green up your grass with lawn food and water. Cover bare spots with seeds and sod, get rid of crab grass, and mow regularly.
Tip #5: Add a Color Splash
Even a little color attracts and pleases the eye of would-be buyers.
Plant a tulip border in the fall that will bloom in the spring. Dig a flowerbed by the mailbox and plant some pansies. Place a brightly colored bench or Adirondack chair on the front porch. Get a little daring, and paint the front door red or blue.
These colorful touches won’t add to the value of our house: Appraisers don’t give you extra points for a blue bench. But beautiful colors enhance curb appeal and help your house to sell faster.
Tip #6: Glam Your Mailbox
An upscale mailbox, architectural house numbers, or address plaques can make your house stand out.
High-style die cast aluminum mailboxes range from $100 to $350. You can pick up a handsome, hand-painted mailbox for about $50. If you don’t buy new, at least give your old mailbox a facelift with paint and new house numbers.
These days, your local home improvement center or hardware stores has an impressive selection of decorative numbers. Architectural address plaques, which you tack to the house or plant in the yard, typically range from $80 to $200. Brass house numbers range from $3 to $11 each, depending on size and style.
Tip #7: Fence Yourself In
A picket fence with a garden gate to frame the yard is an asset. Not only does it add visual punch to your property, appraisers will give extra value to a fence in good condition, although it has more impact in a family-oriented neighborhood than an upscale retirement community.
Expect to pay $2,000 to $3,500 for a professionally installed gated picket fence 3 feet high and 100 feet long.
If you already have a fence, make sure it’s clean and in good condition. Replace broken gates and tighten loose latches.
Tip #8: Maintenance is a Must
Nothing looks worse from the curb — and sets off subconscious alarms — like hanging gutters, missing bricks from the front steps, or peeling paint. Not only can these deferred maintenance items damage your home, but they can decrease the value of your house by 10%.
Here are some maintenance chores that will dramatically help the look of your house:
- Refasten sagging gutters.
- Repoint bricks that have lost their mortar.
- Reseal cracked asphalt.
- Straighten shutters.
- Replace cracked windows.
SOURCE: National Association of Realtors/Pat Curry
The Hollows
The Hollows of Deer Creek has agreed on a new exterior color scheme! Neighbors are excited about the fresh, “more neutral” colors. Painting is set to begin in early April.
We can’t wait!
Next Household Hazardous Waste Collection – Sunday, March 15th
The next household hazardous waste collection for Deerfield Beach has been scheduled for Sunday March 15th from 9 am until noon.
You are encouraged to drop off auto & boat fluids, batteries, electronics, fire extinguishers, fluorescent lamps, harsh cleaners, lawn chemicals, pesticides, fuels, lighter fluids, mercury, paint supplies, photo chemicals, pool chemicals, propane tanks, solvents, stains and strippers.
Location: Central City Campus, 401 SW 4th Street
Be sure to bring an ID with your address or a copy of your utility bill!
OPEN HOUSE GALA!!
On Sunday March 8th, Deer Creek Real Estate will be hosting a gala of Open Houses – stop by the Deer Creek Real Estate office at the entrance to Deer Creek (Hillsboro Blvd & Deer Creek Blvd) and pick up a map and stop by each of our open houses!
- 2238 Lob Lolly Lane
- 2490 Emerald Way
- 2921 Via Napoli
- 2674 Kelly Brooke Lane
We hope to see you there!
Imag_ne Deerfield Beach
If you have been to the beach recently you have probably noticed this piece of art along the beach across from the Main Beach Parking Lot, 149 SE 21st Ave. The City of Deerfield Beach Parks and Recreation Department brought the art piece Imag_ne by Emma Anna of Australia, to Deerfield Beach.
Per the City, “The unique piece made its debut in Australia as part of Sculpture by the Sea Bondi in late 2008 and has traveled to Denmark, Melbourne, Perth, Brisbane and to multiple local government communities in the Sydney region.”
Imag_ne will showcase along our beach until the end of February so if you havent seen it yet, get down to the beach this week and snap some photos with the piece. (And then share them with us!!! ))
Villas on the Green Annual Meeting
Villas on the Green’s annual meeting will be held at the Lakes Clubhouse, Monday, February 2nd at 8:00pm.
(Early sign-in and refreshments will begin at 7:15)