Real Estate in New Jersey
Real Estate in New Jersey
is a very valuable commodity.
Whether you are referring to North
NJ, Central NJ or South
NJ; real estate in New Jersey has a tremendous amount of value.
This is if you are interested in selling or buying.
This is from a recent article from
Philly.com
The buzz at Jersey Shore: Silence
A solution for biting flies is being noticed.
By Jacqueline L. Urgo
Inquirer Staff Writer
HOLGATE, N.J. - Long Beach Township Commissioner
Robert A. Palmer remembers the Fourth of July weekend four years ago, when
it seemed there were more biting greenhead flies than tourists.
"People were calling up crying from getting bit. Businesses were
losing money. It was crazy - all because of the greenheads," Palmer
said. "That's when we knew we had to do something fast."
Every western breeze sent a ravenous air force of Tabanus nigrovittatus
from the salt marshes to the humans vacationing on this narrow patch of
sand near Long Beach
Island's southern
tip. Anybody here that awful summer of 2002 has a greenhead story.
Palmer remembers talk of forming a greenhead support group.
The tipping point, he said, came when residents stopped complaining and
started demanding something be done.
But what?
The answer came in a box. Holgate's efforts have been so successful,
people are noticing. Since biting greenheads are a problem elsewhere in the
region, lawmakers in Trenton are considering
legislation that would provide $250,000 to build anti-greenhead boxes in
Ocean, Atlantic, Cape May and Cumberland
Counties.
Intrepid female greenheads, bent on fulfilling a mission to reproduce,
don't respond to conventional pesticides. And experts say the common method
of eradicating coastal mosquito populations - cutting canals through the
salt-marsh shallows where they breed - may expand greenhead breeding areas.
"Finally, someone came up to me who had been up in Cape Cod and saw these boxes and suggested we try
them," Palmer said. "We really had nothing to lose, people were
so fed up."
Even four summers later - when there is nary a buzzing greenhead even on
a breezy day at what is the start of peak greenhead season on Long Beach Island - people remember.
Heather Reynolds, 14, down for the summer from Glen Ridge, Essex County,
laughed when she recalled how everybody would get covered in clothing from
head to toe before going outside.
"It was totally ridiculous," she said.
Mary Marchionne, a former teacher from Fort Washington
who rents a house in Holgate every summer, shook her head in disbelief when
she talked about having to cancel a doctor's appointment because so many
greenheads had covered her black Saab that she refused to risk a fly bite
while getting into it.
"I took one look at the car and said forget about it,"
Marchionne said. "I think they thought I was crazy when I gave them
the reason I was canceling the appointment."
Some people canceled their vacation reservations at motels or rental
homes.
Desk clerks at the Jolly Roger Motel remember the summer with such
disdain they won't even entertain a conversation about it.
"It got to the point where you just couldn't go outside," said
Maria Kelly, who has owned a duplex in Holgate for 14 years and rents out
the half not occupied by her family. "You just stayed in. My
grandchildren refused to come for the Fourth of July that year. My renters
canceled left and right. It was horrible."
Greenheads - and mosquitoes - have long been among the most pervasive
pests from the salt marshes of southeastern New England down the East Coast
to the Mississippi River.
Before scientists developed methods to deal with the bloodsuckers,
coastal areas were veritable wastelands where few people were willing to
spend time, said Wayne J. Crans, associate research professor of entomology
at Rutgers University.
Over the years, research and development of pesticides and eradication
practices have helped turn a biting New
Jersey wasteland into some of the most expensive
real estate on earth, Crans said.
But the number of biting insects like greenheads and mosquitoes found in
populated areas very close to marshlands - areas such as Holgate in Ocean County,
the back bays of Atlantic County near Brigantine, and along the rivers that
meander into rural Cumberland
County - is still an
issue.
Prime greenhead breeding season in New Jersey - usually early June to
mid-September, with the peak in July - coincides with prime Shore vacation
season.
Biologists say female greenheads are blood-seeking creatures, craving
the protein in human or animal blood to help them lay their eggs.
Male greenheads, by contrast, feed on flower nectar.
So taking the cue from other areas along the East Coast with notorious
greenhead populations - namely Cape Cod - Palmer, who is also the director
of public works for the 51/2-square-mile township, came up with a plan to
build dozens of plywood boxes to trap and kill the female greenheads that
attack their prey with a ferocious scissor-like mouth that tears the skin
and leaves large, itchy welts.
At a cost of about $50 each, the township built the boxes that proved
the bunkerbusters of the war on greenheads. They're a simple, tablelike
design, with a screen on the top and an angled bottom that lures the
greenheads inside and traps and kills them there.
Rutgers University biologists have noted
that traps like this have collected as many as 1,000 greenheads per hour.
Palmer said the town's early boxes were replicas of the Cape Cod design
- even copying the sapphire-blue color that attracts female greenheads in New England.
But apparently the Jersey greenheads
have a style all their own, preferring a sleeker design and a stylish
matte-black color.
So Holgate's newer boxes, Palmer said, reflect the local greenheads'
taste.
Township workers, who place as many as 120 of the boxes throughout
Holgate each summer, have been instructed to add a dose of octenol, a
chemical that attracts biting insects, for good measure, according to
Palmer.
"We really don't have problems with them anywhere else on the
island - just here because it's such a narrow stretch that when you get a
west wind, it blows them out of the marshes where they breed and onto
whoever is on the beach or walking around outside," said Bob Muroff,
who owns a small trailer park nearby. "A few years back, it was like
something out of a horror movie here. People were leaving and swearing to
never come back to Long Beach
Island."
Muroff said people were "thrilled" when the saw the dead bugs
in the boxes.
The boxes seem to be doing the job - except for one weak link in the
chain: the state Department of Environmental Protection still refuses to
allow Long Beach
Township workers to
place the boxes inside the Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge,
which is adjacent to the town. The DEP says the boxes could disturb nesting
populations of the threatened piping plover.
Tip #23
Home Buying Tip, Big Ticket Items:
Before you buy a home
you should avoid buying any big ticket items. When this is found out during the
credit process or reporting it can make mortgage banks nervous.
Even if you will be able to get a loan, you might not be able to get
the best available interest rate.
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Tip #24
Home Selling Tip, Listing Right:
A common mistake when people list their house (especially in a
buyers’ market) is list the house at a high price that they
don’t anticipate to sell it at.
They figure that if they get it then GREAT but if not they can
always lower the price.
This is not a good practice because what mostly happens is it will
stay on the market for a while and make potential home buyers nervous because
it’s been on the market so long.
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