
"What’s in store for me in the direction I don’t take?" - Jack Kerouac
People  with good intentions tell me that I should not dwell on decisions I  made in the past.  You can't change what you did, so leave it alone -  they say.  I wish it was that easy.  I ended up not having a couple of  relationships that I wish I have given the chance to succeed. And I had  other relationships that, had they not occurred, had I not done that one  thing, my entire life story would have been written differently.  The  regrets of choices made and directions not taken is not limited to love  or romance, or jobs, but also involves decisions on investments made or  not made and years of regrets over how I let little things screw up big  dreams and plans for the future.
That's a lot of rambling prose.   But maybe you get my point.  And while today's blog starts off with me  talking about my regrets it is actually about readers who do the same  dumb things and end up not getting what they want.
"What do you  want?" That is one of the first questions I always ask potential new  buyers.  What kind of place do you want?  Do you want a house or a  condo? How many bedrooms/baths? Do you require a pool or off street  parking? Where do you want to live? What is your price range.   I get a  litany of responses but most end up being very similar: two bedrooms,  two baths, Old Town, pool, parking, willing to do a little work and  priced under $500,000.  And, by the way, we'd like to rent it to help  pay for the property. That makes finding the potential buyer a place so  much easier. Except there are so very few places like that.
The  fact is that the core area of Old Town is very small and most of the  houses priced under $500,000 have "issues" either in size, location, or  condition that make them unappealing to most buyers.  If a place is  priced right, it may need remodeling and that means more money will need  to be spent. When buyers see how much work may be necessary they  contemplate hiring a contractor.  They may decide to engage an  architect. All of a sudden the cost of a buying an affordable dream  house becomes exasperating.
I hosted an open house a while back  at a very nice Old Town location. Lots of lookers came in to see what  sat behind the white picket fence.  Many were pleasantly surprised by  the pool area and how large the house was. A long time ago a local told  me that I had no idea how nice some houses are on the inside based on  what I see from the front. (It works that way with people, too.)
The  majority of lookers at my open house commented about how much it would  cost to redo the place. The house has been lived in for over a hundred  years. It was updated maybe 30 years ago. Sure it could use a fresh coat  of paint, but the electricity and plumbing all work. I sometimes think  we over-complicate houses. If we accepted them like we accept people  that have faults, we would have less to worry about.
I use the  example of the open house to illustrate what happens with many real life  showings.  Buyers view a property and then start to pick the place  apart. Instead of falling in love with a potentially wonderful Key West  cottage or big Conch house, they create all kinds of reasons why the  place would not work for them.  There is a cure for places like this -  look at different houses that are in better locations, in better  condition, and that most likely cost more money. But even that is  starting to get difficult because the supply of really nice houses in  good locations is dwindling.  Even some of the very highly priced houses  that have been on the market for a very long time are now under  contract.
I understand buyers that say they must buy within their  budget.  I do understand that lenders no longer lend more money than  buyers can afford to repay.  It makes no sense to try to sell a property  that a buyer cannot finance.
There are other buyers that have  have the cash or borrowing capacity to buy a property at a higher price  point but who refuse to pay the amount necessary to seal the deal.   Sometimes sellers and buyers get into price or term negotiations that  make getting "to win" nearly impossible. They take hard line positions  and refuse to budge.  I have found that huge price reductions often lead  to buyers and sellers arguing over just a few thousand dollars. Sellers  complain they have conceded enough and buyers demand more.  Lines are  drawn in the sand.
In 1982 I made a cash offer on a beautiful  house on Crestmore Drive in Denver.  I offered a lot less than the  seller wanted. He refused to respond to my offer. I went around my  Realtor and called the seller up myself.  I said I would pay full price.  He told me he would never sell to 
me.   He had a beautiful home that I really, really wanted. I had pissed him  off so bad that I could never buy it. I had made an enemy for life by  being a jerk.  He sold the house to somebody else who was not a jerk. I  learned not to insult a seller by making a ridiculous offer.
I  used to be an attorney.  Over the years before I actually bought a place  in Key West, I made  offers on a few places that included  conditions,  representations and warranties that no sane seller would sign.  I didn't  get any of those places either.  I learned that sometimes you need to  evaluate a property and accept it for what it is or else decide not to  buy it.
After losing many potential buys I suggested to my  Realtor that maybe I should look for something smaller in scale and  cheaper in price. I said I might buy one of those $100,000 cigar maker  cottages.  She said "Gary, they're gone."  The places that were bargain  priced in the 1980s got priced much higher as I dilly-dallied.  I  remember one such place on Southard Street that I looked at and turned  my nose up at. It sold a few years back ago just under a million  dollars. It is still owned by the same person.  He knew the value of Key  West charm and an excellent location. I learned that if you wait too  long you will get priced out of the market.
I eventually bought a  bank foreclosure which was the old Eaton Lodge guesthouse located at  511 Eaton Street. It had been boarded shut for two years. I bought it at  a public auction. Plywood was removed from enough windows and doors so  that potential buyers could actually get inside for the first time in  two years. Lots of locals were present. I arrived in Key West the day  before the auction, but only saw the inside during an hour preview  before the auction. Bidding started and my stomach was in turmoil. I was  bidding against many buyers at first but the number  reduced to maybe  three or four locals. The early bids were all low and insincere. Bidding  got more aggressive. One of the auctioneer's men came up to me and  asked if I really wanted the place. I said "Yes!" He said to go in and  bid aggressive and my bid would scare the competition because they would  see I was not going to walk away without the property.  I worked. That  was the end of the bidding. I got the prize.  The next day my Realtor  (same lady that told me all the $100,000 cigar maker cottages were gone)  called me to say she got a phone call from a bidder at the auction. He  offered either $50,000 or $100,000 to assign my contract to him. No  thanks, I said. I knew I finally got a great property at a great price. I  could screw with the offer because the seller made the rule: take it as  is or don't screw with it. Pretty simple rule.
Some sellers do  dumb things too. I recall a seller who turned down a near full price  cash offer on his quintessential Key West cottage which was offered  furnished with a few exceptions. A cash buyer wanted a particular piece  of furniture that was not offered in the listing.  The seller refused to  include the piece of furniture and the house did not sell. Three years  later the place is still for sale but now it is listed for $150,000 less  than the cash buyer offered. That piece of furniture must be something  very special.
A different seller turned down an all cash offer on  a very nice Old Town home because the seller wanted to keep a  particular light fixture.  It took nearly a year for the seller to sell  her house at a much lower price. I don't know if the light was included  in the sale or not. It really makes no difference. What friggin light  fixture could be worth a $100,000 reduction in sales price?
Too  many potential buyers and sellers do the same dumb things I did.  They  set themselves up for failure by making buying or selling a place too  complicated.  If you want  a house or a particular location, you buy it.  You negotiate the best deal you can. Don't make getting the best deal  make it impossible to get a good deal.  I see people do this all the  time.
You can't look back and change what you did in the past.  But you can take positive steps to make current life choices work for  you.  Buying a place in Key West is supposed to be a fun event. Don't  make it into something that is so complicated that you take the fun and  joy out of it.
If you are looking to take your life in a different direction by buying a place in Key West, please consider working with me, 
Gary Thomas, 
305-76-2642 or contact me by email at 
kw1101v@aol.com. I am a buyer's agent and a full time Realtor at 
Preferred Properties Coastal Realty, Inc. The only regret I have about moving to Key West is that it took me so long to do it.