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Welcome to Heather Vandermyde's Real Estate Blog......

I hope you enjoy the weekly real estate updates. They will come in the form of videos,statistics,pictures, and text. Please check back weekly to find out the latest! Thanks for stopping by! If you know anyone interested in buying or selling real estate on the outer banks please let me know.

Saturday, November 29, 2014

See below, I found this article on OBX Connect website by Daily Mail Reporter -Thomas Wallace

Is THIS the lost Roanoke Colony? New radar imagery finds evidence of buildings near island in North Carolina where 120 British settlers disappeared 

  • A satellite survey of area around Albemarle Sound has identified key areas of interest 
  • Scientists are searching these areas using ground penetrating radar (GPR)
  • GPR measures the depth that signals travel before hitting a hidden object
  • So far, they have found a previously 'undetected pattern' that they claim may indicate a former colonial presence in the area

New radar images have shown that British colonists may have settled in a remote part of what is now North Carolina more than 400 years ago - potentially solving a centuries-old mystery.
It was never fully known where a group of 120 settlers from England ended up after they left Europe and headed to the 'New World'. Historians have debated the fate of the so-called 'Lost Colony' for years - having been left with no more evidence than the word 'Croatoan' carved into a tree near the abandoned settlement.
Researchers may have now taken a large step towards settling the debate after enlisting the help of magnetometers and ground-penetrating radar (GPR).
And, in the stuff of a schoolboy's dreams, the researchers have backed up the glittering technology's findings with 'secret' evidence from a 400-year-old map drawn by one of the settlement's founders. 
Location, location, location: Roanoke Island is located just off what is now the state of North Carolina (seen in this 16th century map in red). The area of recent interest is the section at the left centre of the map where the two rivers meet
Location, location, location: Roanoke Island is located just off what is now the state of North Carolina (seen in this 16th century map in red). The area of recent interest is the section at the left centre of the map where the two rivers meet
Modern version: A satellite map of the Albemarle Sound area of Noprth Carolina shows how accurate White's map is. The area of interest is just above Swan Bay in Bertie County
Modern version: A satellite map of the Albemarle Sound area of Noprth Carolina shows how accurate White's map is. The area of interest is just above Swan Bay in Bertie County
Last year the map - drawn in 1585 by John White, an artist and friend of famed explorer Sir Walter Raleigh - rekindled interest in the fate of the lost colonists. 
Tests found a hidden section of the map, drawn in a style of invisible ink and covered with paper, which provided a tantalising hint at the possible location of what may have been intended as the colony's capital near Roanoke Island.
Around 70 miles away from the island, at the end of Albemarle Sound, the covered section of the map disguises what appears to be diamond-shaped drawing that was often used to mark a defensive postion of fort.
The latest images are far from the handsome maps of yore, however, as the GPR photos are difficult for the untrained eye to decipher. They display magnetomer-produced images that show anomalies in the ground distribution in the area. 
Markings: The black spots on this image show ditches that are thought to have been created around the time the settlers would have arrived
Sub-surface disturbances: The image at the left shows the 'curved' markings attributed to Native American residents while the 'straight' images indicate that Colonists were in the area as well
Markings: Experts say the black spots on the image above show ditches that are distinctly different from Native American design. The image above right is a ground penetrating radar (GPR) image of the same area
Tanya Basu from National Geographic reports that Malcolm LeCompte, a research associate at Elizabeth City State University in North Carolina, came up with the idea to use GPR alongside White's map.
Analysts believe the differences in surface structure could indicate the creation of ditches that are different from those created by Native Americans.
A green and brown imagery photo examines the varying levels of sub-surface features. Curved anomaly patterns are considered to be the work of Native Americans, while straight-line patterns are thought to be made be colonial settlers.
The location of the colonial ground patterns in the modern images is the same as White's hidden fort on the 1585 map. It is a classic 'X-marks-the-spot' map that could yet lead to historical treasure.
The map by John White in which scientists have found the possible location of Sir Walter Raleigh's 'lost colony'
The map illuminated from below which shows the hidden location
Riddle in invisible ink: The map (left) of Roanoke Island in North America drawn by John White during an attempt to create England's first colony reveals a hidden possible location for the settlement when it was illuminated from underneath (right) in recent tests. The colony disappeared in mysterious circumstances in the 1580s
Shedding new light: In this close-up of the patch at the centre of the map, a lozenge, the symbol for a fort, can clearly be seen. The symbol was drawn in invisible ink and further concealed with a piece of paper glued on top
Shedding new light: In this close-up of the patch at the centre of the map, a diamond or 'lozenge', the symbol for a fort, can clearly be seen. The symbol was drawn in invisible ink and further concealed with a piece of paper glued on top
The 'invisible ink' - a likely combination of milk, citrus juice or urine - was a common feature of maps at the time, often hiding places of strategic or military importance. For added security, the fort symbol was covered by another piece of paper glued over the top.
Researchers undertook a satellite survey of the site and looked for similarities between the old map and the current geography of the area.
They are currently identifying where the spots on the map match today's landscape, before systematically searching the site with their GPR.
Journey back in time: A modern-day map of the colony's location on the north-east coast of North America
Step back in time: A graphic of the North Carolina coast shows the possible location of the 'Lost Colony' in relation to Roanoke Island, where British settlers established a colony in the 1580s
Hunting for historical answers: Clay Swindell uses the magnetometer at left while
Hunting for historical answers: Clay Swindell uses the magnetometer at left while Malcolm le Compte teaches student Patrina Bly how the GPR machine measures and backdates disturbances underground
Hunting for historical answers: Clay Swindell uses the magnetometer at left while Malcolm le Compte at right teaches student Patrina Bly how the GPR machine measures and backdates disturbances underground

TIMELINE: WHAT WE KNOW SO FAR

1584: Sir Walter Raleigh's men first land on Roanoke Island and find it suitable for settlement.
1585: 108 soldiers come to Roanoke to establish first colony.
1586: Colonists and Native Americans at 'war', and colony abandoned.
1587: Second group of 117 colonists come to Roanoke
1590: Captain White returns to Roanoke to find the colony gone.
1602: Raleigh makes another attempt to locate the colony.
1940s: Professional archaeology begins at Roanoke.
2012: Experts identify a tantalising clue hidden in a map drawn by settlement founder John White.
2013 - Researchers study the site with the help of magnetometers and GPR.
GPR works by sending a tiny pulse of energy into a material via an antenna. A computer then records the strength and time required for the return of any reflected signals.
Sub-surface variations from objects - such as wooden structures, iron cannons or coffins - will create reflections that are picked up by the system.
Using this technique, Professor LeCompte and his colleagues found a previously undetected pattern that they claim may indicate the presence of one or more wooden structures under about a metre of soil.
Researchers claim the presence of the buried structure may indicate that there was some sort of colonial presence in the area.
The Museum of the Albemarle suggested the use of a proton magnetometer to enable the researchers to double-check their GPR findings, which can find objects buried about 13ft (four metres) underground.
Researchers are hopeful that it will only be a matter of time before they stumble on further clues to help explain what happened to the Roanoke Colony.

WHAT MAY HAVE HAPPENED TO THE FOLK AT ROANOKE?

Seeing an opportunity: Queen Elizabeth wanted to use a colony in the 'New World' to launch raids against the Spanish
Seeing an opportunity: Queen Elizabeth wanted to use a colony in the 'New World' to launch raids against the Spanish
The Roanoke Colony was an attempt by Queen Elizabeth I to establish a permanent British presence in the New World, and comprises two unsuccessful attempts at settlement.
Elizabeth's intention was to exlpoit the natural riches of the enexplored country, as well as using the colony as a base from which to launch privateering raids on Spanish ships. 
The enterprise was originally financed and planned by Sir Humphrey Gilbert, but was later headed by Sir Humphrey's half brother Sir Walter Raleigh.
An exploration mission led by Philip Amadas and Arthur Barlowe landed at Roanoke Island on July 4, 1584, and established good relations with the Secotan and Croatan tribes. Barlowe returned to England with members of the tribes, who told Sir Walter about the local customs and geography.
Sir Walter ordered another mission in 1585, led by his distant cousin Sir Richard Grenville. The expedition also included Sir Walter's artist friend John White, who was to provide invaluable coastal mapping of the region.
Sir Richard left 107 men to establish a fort and settlement on Roanoke Island, but within a year the colonists had managed to anger the local tribes, leading to open hostilities.
When Sir Francis Drake stopped there in 1586, after a successful raiding expedition to the Caribbean, he offered to provide passage for anyone who wanted to return to England. Everyone accepted. 
When Sir Richard returned with supplies to find the settlement abandoned, he left a small group to retain and English presence.
Sir Walter sent another expedition of 150 people in 1587, let by White. The only evidence they found of the small group left behind was a single skeleton. Relations with the tribes had not improved and, after a settler was killed in Albemarle Sound, White returned to England to ask for help and reinforcements.
'Croatoan': The return of John White in 1590 found none of the 117 settlers of Roanoke Island. The name of a local tribe was carved into a nearby tree - and there is no other evidence of where they went, or why.
'Croatoan': The return of John White in 1590 found none of the 117 settlers of Roanoke Island. The name of a local tribe was carved into a nearby tree - and there is no other evidence of where they went, or why.
Before he could return, England was plunged into the Anglo-Spanish War and all vessels were comandeered to repel the coming Spanish Armada. White was not able to return until 1590. His men could not find any trace of the 90 men, 17 women, and 11 children of the colony, nor was there any sign of a struggle or battle.
Before he left for England, White had arranged a code with the colonists. If they were under attack or forced to flee - a sensible arrangement considering relations with the locals - the colonists were to carve a Maltese cross into a tree.
There was no evidence of such a carved cross, but White's men found two trees. One was carved with the word 'Croatoan' and the other simply with 'Cro'. 
Whether this was a reference to the settlement's assailants, or a indicator that the colonists had gone to live with the Croatans on nearby Hatteras Island, remains unclear. Poor weather and his shipmates' desire to leave Roanoke forced White to abandon his search for the colonists. He never returned.
A voyage by Sir Walter Raleigh 12 years later in 1602 also ended when bad weather forced the expedition to return to England. Sir Walter's arrest for treason prevented him from making any other expeditions.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2521140/Is-THIS-lost-Roanoke-Colony-New-radar-imagery-finds-evidence-buildings-near-island-North-Carolina-120-British-settlers-disappeared.html#ixzz3KStIokFG
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Monday, November 17, 2014

Nags Head Realty was shut down after $460,000 in rental revenue vansished

N.C. real estate firm closed after money vanishes

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A Nags Head real estate firm has been shut down after $460,000 in vacation home rental revenue vanished.
Dozens of jilted Outer Banks homeowners are looking for ways to get their money, and many of next season’s reservations may be in jeopardy.
The North Carolina Real Estate Commission agreed Wednesday to revoke the licenses of Nags Head Realty and its owner, Cheryl Wilkins, said Charlie Moody, assistant director of regulatory affairs for the commission.
In recent weeks, property owners reported not receiving rental income checks from Nags Head Realty. Wilkins acknowledged to the commission last month that she could not account for $460,000 in a trust fund for rental properties, according to an email from the commission’s legal counsel, Janet Thoren, to Dalton and Carol Williford, clients of Wilkins’.
“It will be necessary for you to manage your property yourself or to engage another licensed broker to assist you,” Thoren said in the email.
The couple lost $4,800 in rental income, Carol Williford said.
“There are a lot of people who have paid deposits for next year’s rental,” she said. “They’re not going to see that at all. She’s nowhere to be found.”
Wilkins may have managed more than 100 vacation homes, according to Williford, who said she and her husband had not had serious issues with her before.
The commission is trying to contact Wilkins’ clients. Stan White Realty had planned to buy the firm before the money disappeared, Thoren said in the email. She said Wilkins gave keys to the properties she managed to Stan White Realty, where homeowners can pick them up.
Thoren recommended that property owners change the locks on their homes. Maintenance and cleaning crews also might have keys, she said.
Commission staff are assisting District Attorney Andrew Womble with the investigation.
“We follow the evidence,” Womble said. “If it leads to criminal wrongdoing, then we step in and get the justice we can for the victims.”
The investigation could be finished by early January, he said.
Wilkins did not return a call to her cellphone.
Jeff Hampton, 252-338-0159 or jeff.hampton@pilotonline.com  

The Outer Banks Voice - Plan calls for Waterfront Shops in Duck to expand southward

Plan calls for Waterfront Shops in Duck to expand southward

By  on November 16, 2014
shoppes
Four shops would be added on the south side. (Dare County GIS)
A plan to expand the Waterfront Shops in Duck has received the blessing of town planners and will next go before Town Council.
The popular downtown shopping center along the Currituck Sound is home to the Blue Point restaurant and more than a dozen shops, including North Beach Outfitters and Donna Designs.
Owner Jim Braithwaite of Allis Holdings LLC is proposing three modest shops and one smaller one to be constructed along the western side of the pond on the southern portion of the complex.
If approved, the 3,840 square feet of elevated retail space will be erected on about one-third of an acre of wetlands slated to be filled under a Coastal Area Management Act permit.
Duck Planning Director Joe Heard said that a new access drive off of Duck Road along with a 24-space parking lot would be built to the south of Stan White Realty to accommodate the additional retail shops.
Meanwhile, the existing access drive on the Stan White Realty property will be eliminated, according to the plans. The new access drive will be about 90 feet to the south.
An elevated wooden walkway would extend from the proposed buildings across the pond and to Duck’s Cottage Coffee & Books, as well as to the existing shopping center to the west. Developers also propose a pergola on the walkway near the center of the pond.
First constructed in 1986, the Waterfront Shops now include quaint stores along the boardwalk on the Currituck Sound. Along with the upscale Blue Point, it is also home to Coastal Cantina, Barr-ee Station and Sea Dragon Gallery.
The 6 acres of land wrap around the Stan White Realty property as well as three sides of Tommy’s Market farther to the north. It falls in the town’s Village Commercial zone.
To the south, it abuts the Dare County water tower.
Heard said the town’s Planning Board was pleased with the design during Wednesday’s meeting. The next step, he said, is for public hearing will be set at council’s Dec. 3 meeting.

Sunday, November 9, 2014

The Red Drumb are Running






Call from sons wasn't new; fishing in a kayak was


Larry Lusk has enough respect for his sons' fishing knowledge to come running when the pair tells him to.
A call last week had him on the road south to the northern Outer Banks to team up with his boys for some red drum action.
But when he saw that they were taking him drumming on kayaks, he was a little apprehensive.
"My kayak experience is pretty limited," said the 55-year-old Rudee Inlet resident. "Only one other time basically. It's amazing how much that side of fishing has grown. When I moved to the inlet 12 years ago there wasn't but a few people doing it. The last couple of years there have been more than ever.
"It's pretty exciting and I'd do it again."
It didn't hurt his confidence that his sons - Matt and David - had put him in the middle of a school of very cooperative big red rum.
Fishing about a half-mile off the beach, the trio caught and released nearly 10 in a short time frame.
"It was pretty easy pickings to tell you the truth," Lusk said. "When they are balled up and working bait they make it easy on you."
The guys were throwing bucktails with no plastics that resulted in jarring strikes and the experience of being towed through the water by fish that averaged "about 35 to 40 pounds."
"They'd tow us around about 35, 40... maybe 50 yards," Lusk said. "It's definitely a thrill when you get hooked up."
David Lusk is a good reason the trip turned out so well. He's an inshore and light-tackle guide on the Outer Banks - saltminded.com- and in the fall he drives the beach looking for birds working over a school of bait. When he finds a flock, he parks the truck several hundred yards south of the action, employs the kayak and works his way to the fish.
"He usually can stay with them for a while," Dad said. "But if they move too far away from the anglers, he paddles back to the beach, puts the kayaks back in the truck and drives after them.
"It's a pretty neat way to stay with the school."
Matt Lusk, a professional photographer - mattluskphotography.com - usually is on hand to document the action.
"Yeah, I caught some nice drum, but they deserve all the credit," Dad said. "I just drove down and jumped on a kayak and made a few casts.
"The boys made it really easy for me."
Things definitely are easier for Lusk these days. After nearly 38 years as general manager of J. Henry Holland, a Virginia Beach company that makes crane cables and wire rope assemblies, he has struck a deal to work part time so he can return to fishing endeavors that once dominated his life.
"I'm gonna go get my captain's license and start doing a few seasonal charters out of Rudee," he said. "And I want to get back into the (largemouth) bass tournament scene.
I'm really looking forward to that."
That and another phone call from his boys about the next big bite.
Lee Tolliver, 757-222-5844, lee.tolliver@pilotonline.com
Twitter @LeeTolliver

Posted toOff the Hook Outdoors Sports

Monday, October 13, 2014

Latest Reviews on Trulia from happy Sellers and Buyers



    • Annegrier reviewed Heather Vandermyde
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    • 10/13/2014
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    • Helped me sell a home
    Heather helped me sell my house in Kitty Hawk in an unfavorable market and I am delighted to
     recommend her with great enthusiasm. Her creative marketing strategies really did the trick in
     terms of getting my house shown in its best light. She was always responsive to my questions
     and requests, is clearly well respected by her peers in the community and was a delight to
    work with.In an endeavor that is often highly charged and emotional, Heather always acted in a
    professional manner and with my best interests in heart.
    • mcole62 reviewed Heather Vandermyde
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    • 10/13/2014
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    • Helped me buy a home
    We would like to thank you for the countless hours you and the Vandermyde Team
     put into finding a house for us. We sincerely appreciate it. I think these things are
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    We could not be more excited to continue enjoying all Kill Devil Hills and the
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    • DARTAGNAN4 reviewed Heather Vandermyde
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    PROFESSIONAL, SUPER COMMUNICATION REMAINED THROUGHOUT THE PROCESS,
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  • Wednesday, October 1, 2014

    Outer Banks Seafood Festival is 10/18 and Sharon Peele Kennedy will Present a Cooking Demo

    Featured Story by The Outer Banks Voice-

    Sharon Peele Kennedy: Art of cooking Outer Banks Catch

    By  on September 30, 2014
    Sharon-Peele-Kennedy
    By Susan West
    Sharon Peele Kennedy will tell you that she grew up with a spatula, not a baby rattle, in her hand.
    Kennedy was born into a family with a rich culinary heritage that combined her father’s traditional Hatteras Island–style cooking with her mother’s readiness to add the unexpected.
    “My father could stew a nickel and make it taste good,” the Buxton resident says. Her father used only basic ingredients — potatoes, onions, salt pork, flour, salt, pepper — in dishes like stewed shrimp with piebread dumplings.
    Her mother cooked with a variety of spices and herbs, like the ones found in New York City where she lived as a child until the Great Depression set in and her father brought the family to Hatteras Island.
    Kennedy’s favorite childhood meal was her mother’s baked fish, usually a large red drum or bluefish, layered with potatoes and onions. Other favorites were clam chowder, fried spot, roasted oysters, and shad roe with scrambled eggs.
    She wasn’t introduced to the flavors of offshore species until she began her restaurant career.
    “Fish like grouper and triggerfish taste very good, but the offshore species don’t have the distinctive depth of flavor like the inshore species that I still prefer to this day,” Kennedy says.
    Her restaurant career started with a job bussing tables at a Hatteras village restaurant when she was 12 years old. Later she waitressed, but it wasn’t until she tried her hand in the kitchen that she knew she had found her food-service niche.
    “The kitchen was where I wanted to be,” she says. “It was the place where I felt I could create art.”
    Kennedy credits her culinary education to the women she worked with in Hatteras Island kitchens in the 1960s and 1970s, before pre-prepared foods became popular.
    “I was blessed to have learned from the best,” she says. “Those women were all self-taught and knew how to make the most out of every ingredient.”
    Kennedy continues to cook in a local restaurant and also hosts a local radio program on Beach 104.1 called “What’s for Supper with Sharon Peele Kennedy,” which features easy-to-prepare seafood recipes. Now in its sixth year, the program developed after a chance conversation about the flavor of soft-shell sand fleas with a radio station employee.
    “The program is about as cornbread and country-fed as you can get because that’s how I am,” Kennedy says with a laugh.
    Kennedy cautions consumers to avoid over-cooking and over-seasoning seafood.
    “Seafood should be done simply,” she advises. “Don’t mask the flavor of premium seafood with sauces. Kick up your sides instead.”
    No one type of fish is her favorite, but Pamlico Sound bay scallops clearly hold special status with Kennedy.
    “The taste is very sweet and salty, especially when eaten raw,” she says.

    Kennedy serves on the boards of Outer Banks Catch and N.C. Catch, two consumer education initiatives that promote local seafood, and she often presents seafood-cooking demonstrations in locations from the Outer Banks to Raleigh.
    She will present a seafood-cooking demonstration in the Outer Banks Catch tent at the Outer Banks Seafood Festival on Oct. 18.