Hawai’i Sharwil Avocados are Shockingly Addictive
Where have I been that I have not eaten a Sharwil avocado? Oh, right, in Sacramento, with my nose to the grindstone selling Sacramento real estate. OMG, the Sharwil avocado is a most delicious avocado, sweet, firm and filling. From the first taste, I was absolutely hooked.
A friend gave me a Sharwil avocado that she received from another friend in Kona who harvests a number of Sharwil avocado trees in her yard. Guess they were dropping left and right so she gathered up the avocados and dropped them off at friends’ houses. Unlike the dreaded summer zucchini harvest in Sacramento, when neighbors drop bags of zucchini on your front step, ring the door bell and run, these are a sought-after delicacy.
Sharwil avocados grow well in slightly higher elevations in Hawaii where it is not so hot. My friend and I immediately volunteered to pick avocados for free. Just say when and where and we’ll be there with bells on.
After I consumed my first half of avocado, I called my friend to find out the name of this avocado. Turns out it is sold at the Kona Safeway on Henry Street under the name of “local avocado.” Also, up until last month, Hawaii was prohibited from shipping the Sharwil avocado to the Mainland due to fruit fly concerns. This ban was in place for 26 years and just lifted last month!
Unfortunately, you still cannot yet buy a Sharwil avocado in California. New laws allow the shipment to 32 states and Washington, D.C., but not yet California. The closest is probably Seattle, but I’m telling ya it’s worth a trip to Seattle to get Sharwil avocados.
The Sharwil avocados are a cross between a Guatemala and Mexico avocado, originating from Australia / New Zealand. They are bigger than the typical haas avocados we get in California and deliver 22 essential vitamins and minerals. Avocados often get a bad rap because the ratio of fat content is high but it is monounsaturated fats, the good kind.
Low sugar, less than 1 gram. Which makes it a great fruit for people concerned about limiting their sugar intake. Compared to a papaya. Much as I love papayas, a large papaya contains up to 64 grams of sugar. The USDA recommends women consume no more than 25 grams of sugar a day. They also contain a decent amount of protein and fiber.
Maybe you will just need to come to Hawaii to experience a Sharwil avocado?
Do Not Buy the Table Before the Chairs
My friend, let’s call her Sally, decided to buy a table before the chairs. Was she looking for a new table at the time? We were not friends then, so I don’t know if it was an intentional purchase or a spur-of-the-moment decision. You see, Sally already owned a perfectly good dining room table. Rattan construction, 3/4-inch glass top, carved pineapple motif, engraved chair legs with pretty floral upholstery. Unknown to me, and although she lives in Hawaii, she does not particularly like Tommy Bahama! In fact, she did not know before I mentioned it that her inherited furniture was Tommy Bahama.
Sally is also a creative and artistic type. The kind of gifted individual who would watch hours of You Tube videos about how to make a Fairy House. And then proceed to create such a production herself. She introduced me to The Great British Baking Show (which I can’t stop watching now) and to the intriguing concept of powder-blue kitchen cabinets. She also studied how to make exquisite desserts at Le Cordon Bleu in Paris and is a professional ballroom dancer. Whereas, all I know how to do is sell Sacramento real estate and write dark humor shit. You can see why I like hanging out with her.
Now, when I first viewed the table in question, it was situated in a corner in her den because no space existed in the dining room as she had not yet sold her existing set. Her previous seller had left all of the furniture in the house when Sally bought it, which is common in Hawaii house buying. She decided to buy the table before the chairs because she had a specific type of chair in mind. Out with Hawaiian decor and in with soft blue suede.
The table itself is a special type of wood, seemingly cut from a wide tree trunk about 5 feet across in the shape of the Mainland. Maybe mango wood, definitely not eucalyptus, like I first suspected. It features a bit of blue and green, most likely injected, and the artist who created this piece does a lot of work with wood on the Big Island.
All of this story leads us to the fact that within days Sally developed a dislike for the table legs. Not all of the legs, really, mainly just one that seemed off kilter. So she asked the artist to take the table back and reduce the size of the legs to a more visually appealing shape. Supposedly, it was finished shortly thereafter, but the artist dinged around for 6 months before returning the table.
I was often with Sally when the artist called to say, for example, she would deliver the table at 3 PM and then not show up. Next day, the artist would promise 3 PM again and not show. Different days, different types of unfilled promises for delivery. This went on for 3 to 4 weeks, maybe longer. At one point she promised to show up at 6 PM as soon as her husband got home, and then never called.
That’s because he went to the bar, I suggested, and perhaps he never came home.
Sally began to think that maybe she would never see the table again and should ask for her money back. It wasn’t cheap, this table. In fact, she found another table that she liked even better, but a sale was a sale. She begged and begged the artist to deliver her table.
Further, Sally also had a bit of a problem selling all of the furniture in her house. At one point, she had an inflatable mattress in the living room as her only piece of furniture. The last person asked for a lower price and Sally refused. Finally, since this is an island and there is no place else to go, the customer returned to Sally and paid her price. Sally is a tough negotiator and should go into real estate, except I doubt she wants to work that hard. I don’t blame her.
Then one day, as luck would have it, Sally and I were hanging out on my lanai when she received a text from the artist. The artist, husband and another male friend were at Sally’s house. They had brought the table. OMG. We immediately dashed down the street to discover the artist had let herself into Sally’s house by going through an unlocked back door and had already set up the table in Sally’s dining room. Which was kinda weird. Who walks into somebody else’s house? Not pono.
Those are the logs found inside the ohi’a tree, said the artist, about 30 million times, pointing to the new table legs. She explained the ohi’a trees are hollow except for these logs in the interior. We had no idea what she was talking about, and there was a language barrier as well. She claimed the wood was ancient, “at least 50 years” old.
The following day, Sally seemed very unhappy with her table. While it is true she did buy the table before the chairs, by now she had purchased two dining room chairs covered in a beautiful soft blue suede material. The first problem Sally noticed was the creatively shaped table legs had been replaced with four pillars that looked exactly like telephone poles. Maybe they are telephone poles. Big vertical cracks, and stained in a color that resembles shit. Of course, I did not share my assessment nor add fuel to the fire because Sally managed to do enough for the two of us.
Which brings us to the questions. Do you send the table back once again to ask for yet another set of new legs and take the chances of waiting another 6 months? Do you ask for your money back and return the table to get that dining set you truly love? Throw it out? Sell it on the open market?
This table was a love affair at first blush, apparently. I could see why Sally loved the table so much. However, when she tried to push her new dining room chairs under the table edge, she discovered the “apron” around the table prevented her. Not only would the chairs not slide under it, she obviously could not guide her knees under the table, either.
Rendering its purpose as a dining room table useless.
Meekly, I offered a viable solution: after removing the apron and legs, she could hang the table top on the wall, above her television. It is a beautiful piece of art all by itself.
I leave you to draw your own life lessons from this story.
Photo: Hemingway’s dining room in Cuba, by Elizabeth Weintraub
Why Realtors Need to Be Found in the Top 10 Google Results
Way back when I moved to Sacramento to sell real estate, I was not found in the top 10 Google results. At that time, Google had only been around for a few years and still competed with Yahoo and other search engines. The internet was moving out of its infancy into main stream. Also, unlike many Realtors, I got my first dial-up baud modem in 1991, so that world was not frightening to me.
However, when I received an opportunity to write real estate articles for a well known internet company 13 years ago, I jumped at the chance. Didn’t matter that I had moved to Sacramento in 2002 and was starting from scratch again to build a real estate business. My real estate business ate up almost 100% of my time, but I still managed to set aside time to write 3 to 5 articles a week about home buying and home selling.
The company I worked for, About.com, was owned by The New York Times, and had been in the SEO business for years under several different names. Today it is Dot Dash and the homebuying vertical is under The Balance. They taught me how to do my own SEO, such as limiting the character length of meta titles, repeating keywords 2 to 3 times, how to write meta descriptions, how to capture the benefits of crosslinking, in short, how to be found in the top 10 Google results.
We are not talking about linking farms or anything nefarious. Just solid content about real estate, entertaining and informative articles, tweaked with a bit of search engine optimization. Google was the future. Regardless, I knew this: if your business wasn’t easily found on Google, it doesn’t exist in the online world.
I recall several incidents in my office that happened right after the second market crash in 2008. In one case, an agent accosted me in the hallway and demanded to know why in the world would I ever work on short sales when they were so awful. Um, because that’s where the business was? Another agent in the office asked me to show her how I am found in the top 10 Google results.
Easy, I brought up Google in Internet Explorer. Typed in a common search term like “East Sacramento real estate agent.” There was my name and website link in the top 10 results. The agent spun around in her chair and angrily cried out, “But that’s not fair! I’ve worked in East Sacramento all of my life.”
Because life isn’t fair, Corrine. There are no rewards for sheer existence.
Few agents wanted to hear that they needed their own website or to blog. Some agents said they did not want to work with any persons who found them online because the clients were not properly referred by an individual they knew. Others simply scoffed at the notion that buyers and sellers would search for a Sacramento Realtor online.
Hard to believe that was 13 years ago. Seems like a lifetime.
Today, I am found all over the internet. Cannot think of any real estate website where you won’t find my profile. My articles on The Balance bring me a lot of business. As a result, my personal real estate business doubled and doubled, which then brought even more recognition. I still write a blog every day. And I am a wizard at generating easily found long tail search terms.
Fortunately, I also possess the experience, skills and knowledge to back up my web presence. Not every agent does. If you’d like to hire a Sacramento Realtor with over 40 years of experience and the ability to take your home buying or selling experience to the next level, call Elizabeth Weintraub at 916.233.6759.
That pink hibiscus is a rare bloom on our pale yellow hibiscus tree, which is 28 years old, at our vacation home in Hawaii.
No HBO Go App for my LG OLED Smart TV
If somebody had told me I could not get the HBO Go app on my LG OLED Smart TV, I would have figured they were wrong. Blows my mind. The TV is only a year or so old. It was pretty expensive, as far as Smart TVs go. But the HBO Go app is definitely not offered in the premium apps in my LG Content tab. A search for it specifically turned up nothing.
Wouldn’t have even mattered but I found a movie I want to watch from reading the story about Laura Dern in Vanity Fair. Reminds me of when I was at the Apple store in Honolulu over New Year’s. It took so long to transfer my data from my old iPhone to my new iPhone XR that I had plenty of time to play with all the gizmos in the store.
Believe it or not, I did not know what Apple TV was until I saw it in the store. The Apple guy said I could play whatever videos I had on my iPad or iPhone on TV. Would I ever do that? No, I said no. But now that is exactly what I want to do. I want to play my HBO Go app on my LG OLED Smart TV, and I can’t do it. I could do it if I had Apple TV, though. Since it’s only this one movie I want to watch, I think it is better to spend $8 on Amazon Prime than it is to pay $100 for Apple TV.
And at least I have HBO Go on my iPad now. Theoretically, if I wasn’t in first class, I could watch movies on my iPad on a plane as long as I downloaded them first. Actually, I don’t know if I will ever watch HBO Go on my iPad.
As I pondered this situation, I then realized I could call LG TV and get a customer service rep to walk me through this situation. The woman on the other end of the phone helped me to search for: videos and tv for LG Smart TV cast. Found an app and downloaded it to both my LG OLED Smart TV and my iPad. Connected it. Voila.
However, I needed the URL for the HBO Go app video, and when I clicked on HBO Go, I became disconnected. The cast works by sharing your screen. Except there was some step missing, and this was beyond the pay grade of the person on the phone at LG.
Hey, you know what? This is not the only TV in the house. I bought another TV for $300 that I’m using as a monitor to run my Sacramento real estate business. I plugged in that TV, downloaded the HBO Go app and it works like a charm. Of course, it’s a 32-inch screen. Who can watch TV on a 32-inch screen when I have a TV twice that size?
Of course, there is the problem that I cannot download the HBO Go app on my LG OLED Smart TV.
Amazon Prime it is.
Climate Change in Sacramento by 2080
Obviously, this photo is not climate change in Sacramento by 2080, but it is a photo of the ocean as viewed from Kona Haven Coffee on the island of Hawaii, where I happen to be at the moment. Waves have been seriously pounding the wall at Kailua Village over the past few days. Winds are atrocious. Sudden 25 mph gusts. Not a good time to hang capiz windchime shells on the lanai. The wind was so strong yesterday that I worried it would blow my laptop off my table outside.
And then I read this AP story. A study published in the journal Nature Communications says children today may still be alive to witness the dramatic effects of climate change. The climate change in Sacramento by 2080 could mean we will see temperatures like those in Southern California. The lead author, Matt Fitzpatrick, says the climate in 540 cities on average will move 528 miles to the south if we don’t take action today.
I know what some of you are thinking, Orange County or even San Diego is not so bad. But it won’t be coastal weather. It will be inland, desert-like and HOT. What can you eat that grows in the desert? How about cactus?
If we do take action and the world decides to cut back on carbon dioxide emissions, we can reduce that distance down to maybe 319 miles by 2040. Still, climate change in Sacramento by 2080 is worrisome. All over the world extreme things are happening with our weather. What used to be normal is not normal anymore.
You can read more at this link, but be forewarned, it is very heavy with traffic. Check out http://shiny.al.umces.edu:3838/futCitiesApp/cityApp/.