Monday, July 5, 2010

The Journey Gets Real Again

On July 9, 2010 we finally did it! We closed on the loan to build our home on Canyon Lake. It has been exactly six years since we purchased our lot in Ensenada Shores. Since it had been four years since we put things on hold, we took a fresh look at the builders. We even looked at other properties given the impact of the recession and the effect on the housing market. But after a thorough review of our options, we were back at Mahoney's front door.

Laurie Mahoney has been great. Just as she had told us, she was ready to help us pick up where we left off four years earlier. We did have some changes we wanted to make to the floor plan (I managed to get a small victory in convincing Winnie we really didn't need a 3,500 square foot house, so now we are down to 2,880). But we have a REALLY BIG PANTRY! Laurie completely re-drew our floor plan to accommodate the changes.

I can't complain too loudly, because I have a passion for making the windows viewing out on to the lake a signature feature for our home. We will have two living room windows (9'x6') tempered, fixed, Low E 366 Argon glass in an aluminum thermal break frame. This was the best picture I could find on the internet of what they might look like. Just think big picture!






After we closed on the loan, we went out to the lot. It had already been "shredded" and Mahoney's sign put up. We decided on the placement of the foundation and which trees would have to be taken out.

The next few months are going to be busy, but a whole lot of fun!

Friday, July 2, 2010

The Journey Continues, Sort of

Now that we were Texas Hill Country property owners, we left no opportunity unseized to visit our lot. Our daughter Kelly attending Texas State and our son Tim living in San Marcos gave us ample opportunities to drop by our lot for a visit. Not to mention the vacations when we rented homes on the Guadeloupe River for a week. In fact we visited it so often, Kelly would give us a hard time, asking what exactly we were expecting to see that we hadn't seen the previous five hundred times we were out there. I guess it's hard to explain, but when you have the vision in mind, it's just hard to stay away.

We began to meet neighbors who had already started building their dream homes as well as builders who were anxious to get our business. Model homes started to spring up, and we got many opportunities to see the different builders' homes in various stages of construction. As we listened to the war stories from neighbors about their experiences, we realized how big a decision selecting a builder was going to be.

As it turned out, we did have a stroke of good fortune. One of the builders we talked to was Mahoney Custom Homes. When we mentioned that fact to Winnie's cousin Tom who has a fabulous home in Taylor Lake Village), he thought that name sounded familiar. He thought that his builder had been in partnership years before with a guy named Mahoney building custom homes in the Houston area. He talked to his builder and it was indeed the same Mahoney. Tom's builder spoke highly of him.

Armed with this information, we decided to take the discussion with the Mahoneys a step further. Sometime in 2006, we met them at their office in Startzville (they live in the area). Brian is the builder, and Laurie, his wife, is the home designer. Laurie does the up-front work with potential customers, and became our primary contact.

Laurie took us on a tour of homes they had built. We even got to tour a completed home they had initially built for themselves in Ensenada Shores, but ended up selling it to a retired General and his wife. Laurie was great at pointing out reasons for why space was used in a certain way and doors placed in certain locations and many other considerations made in the design of the house. We really liked what we saw.

The next step for us was to go and visit model homes back in Houston to get as many ideas as we could of what we liked and what we didn't. We visited model homes until we couldn't stand to look at them anymore. Then being the geek I am, I created a spreadsheet with all the features we had seen that we liked and those we didn't. We sent that, along with some other general information on square footage, rooms we wanted and a few other things to Laurie and let her go to work.

On our next visit, Laurie had prepared a hand-drawn floor plan of the house as well as a preliminary estimate to build it. She had paid very close attention to the details we had provided. We really liked the plan (except the price tag, of course), but were considering going ahead with building the house. We discussed sending the drawing off to the CAD guy to draw up, but we decided to think about it over the weekend and get back to Laurie the following week.

Well, after a lot of soul searching over the weekend, we decided we weren't ready in 2006 to start maintaining two households one hundred and seventy miles apart. We called Laurie the next week and let her know what we had decided. She was very gracious, and let us know they weren't going anywhere and to give her a call when we were ready.

The journey had pulled in at a rest stop.

How the Journey Began

I have always wanted to retire on a lake in the Texas Hill Country. Well, at least since Winnie told me we weren't going to retire to a cabin in the mountains in Colorado. No more snow, I was told. We had been looking at lots on Texas Hill Country lakes since the late 1990's. Every time we would travel out to the Hill Country, we would look at lots, see something we liked, and get cold feet about plunking down the money. We even made an annual trek to Mystic Shores on Canyon Lake, until there really weren't any remaining lots that we wanted.




On our last trip to Mystic Shores, we saw a billboard we had not seen before for Ensenada Shores on Canyon Lake. We decided to give it a visit. It's on the south side of the lake, just down the road on FM 2673 past the booming town of Startzville, TX (don't blink). You will know it's a booming Texas town because it has a Dairy Queen.


We pulled into the parking lot where the development company (Warner Group) had set up shop in a trailer. We were shortly greeted by Riley P. Galloway, a graduate of Southwest Texas University (now Texas State) not too many years earlier. No roads were cut into the property yet, so Riley piled us into his four-wheel drive truck and we got the (somewhat bumpy)grand tour of Ensenada Shores, circa 2004.

The land had previously belonged to a cattle rancher who passed away, and his heirs sold off the property. It was pretty rough looking back then, but when we were standing on lot 50 on what would later become 120 Ladera Vista, we got the bug. As nervous as we were, we signed the contract and in July, 2004 we became property owners in Ensenada Shores. The journey had begun.