[gatortalk] Re: FW: [SUN]: Famed orange-and-blue house hits real estate market (Crabbe)

2008-12-05 Thread Gatornet Admin
You want one? I'm quite handy with PC generated documents! ;-)

Randy

  - Original Message - 
  From: Oliver Barry 
  To: Gatortalk@googlegroups.com 
  Sent: Friday, December 05, 2008 10:55 AM
  Subject: [gatortalk] FW: [SUN]: Famed orange-and-blue house hits real estate 
market (Crabbe)


   

  I wish I had a Georgia brokers license!!!



  Oliver Barry, CRS, GRI

  Real Estate Broker

  Halo Realty, LLC

  700 E. Main St.

  Hendersonville TN 37075

  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

  office: 615-822-3509

  fax: 615-822-7741

  mobile: 615-972-4239


--

  From: Shane Ford [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Friday, December 05, 2008 7:20 AM
  To: Gatortalk
  Subject: [SUN]: Famed orange-and-blue house hits real estate market (Crabbe)

   

  Famed orange-and-blue house hits real estate market



  Doug Engle/Star-Banner 

  Daryl Cook painted his house orange and blue in 2005 and painted the roof in 
the scheme of a football field in protest of his home owners association 
denying him the right to tear down his home and build two homes on the lot. He 
has since lost the fight in multiple law suites in Dunwoody, Ga.

   

  By Nathan Crabbe
  Gainesville Sun Staff Writer

  Published: Friday, December 5, 2008 at 6:01 a.m. 
  Last Modified: Thursday, December 4, 2008 at 8:32 p.m. 

   

  FOR SALE: Orange and blue home with replica of Florida Field on the roof. 
Must be willing to tolerate the occasional Georgia fan repainting the 
University of Florida mailbox and smashing the alligator statues.

  - - -

  ATLANTA - Daryl Cook fought City Hall and lost. Now he's put his 
orange-and-blue symbol of protest on the real estate market.

  I'm so tired. I'm done with it, he said.

  About three years ago, Cook painted his Atlanta-area home in Gator colors to 
protest government agencies that prevented him from subdividing the property. 
Last week, a local court rejected his lawsuit over the rulings.

  So now he plans to sell the house, which is currently being rented out.

  It's not as much fun as it used to be, he said.

  Cook is a civil engineer who graduated from UF in 1985. He dubbed the house 
the Swamp of Dunwoody for obvious reasons.

  The roof is painted with yard lines and end zones that say FLORIDA on one 
side and GATORS on the other. Search for Dunwoody Club Drive on Google 
Earth and the whole thing is clearly visible.

  The home is located among McMansions that start in the $500,000 price range. 
Mark Lipton, who currently rents the place, said he's grown used to sightseers 
and vandals making regular appearances on the property. You get some people 
that destroy things, and you get some people that want to take pictures, he 
said. It's a mixed crowd.

  Cook's protest started after he proposed to tear down the house and replace 
it with two large, new ones. His neighbors opposed the required zoning change 
and won, so he was stuck with the house on land zoned for agriculture.

  He responded by bringing some farm animals onto the property to match the 
zoning designation and surrounding the house with alligator statues. He did 
most of the paint job in one night with a few buckets from a home improvement 
store and a sixpack of beer.

  It was me being a bad boy and showing my displeasure, he said.

  He named some of the animals after his favorite Gators: Spurrier the rooster 
and three goats named Donovan and the Gatorettes.

  Effectively, what I ended up with is a petting zoo, he said.

  The animals brought more drama, such as foxes invading the property to feast. 
His pigs escaped into neighboring properties. About two years ago, he ditched 
the animals, rented the property and moved away.

  It became too much work, he said.

  Lipton is a Syracuse fan but rented the place because he was going through a 
divorce and needed a home near his boy's school. He hopes Cook changes his mind 
about selling.

  But Cook is ready to move on. He's selling the property as is, with the 
thought that the buyer will demolish it and build a fancy home to match the 
neighborhood.

  It's always been a knockdown property, he said.

  But that doesn't mean Cook is ditching his passion for the Gators. He owns a 
Ford F-150 truck customized with Gator seats, hubcaps and about everything else 
Gator.

  Recently, he removed the hood and hauled it to a meeting of the Atlanta Gator 
Club for Urban Meyer to sign it.

  I put my money where my mouth is, he said. I put my passion where my mouth 
is.

   


  

--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
1996 National Football Champions   |   2006 National Basketball Champions
2006 National Football Champions   |   2007 National Basketball Champions
Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996),
Tim Tebow (2007) - Visit our website at www.gatornet.us

FW: [gatortalk] Re: FW: [SUN]: Famed orange-and-blue house hits real estate market (Crabbe)

2008-12-05 Thread Oliver Barry
Actually, I heard you could get them 2 for a dollar at the Valdosta Walmart.  
They're right next to the Georgia law licenses!
Oliver 

-Original Message-
From: Gatornet Admin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, December 05, 2008 12:08 PM
To: Gatortalk@googlegroups.com Gatortalk@googlegroups.com
Subject: [gatortalk] Re: FW: [SUN]:  Famed orange-and-blue house hits real 
estate market  (Crabbe)

You want one? I'm quite handy with PC generated documents! ;-)

Randy

  - Original Message - 
  From: Oliver Barry 
  To: Gatortalk@googlegroups.com 
  Sent: Friday, December 05, 2008 10:55 AM
  Subject: [gatortalk] FW: [SUN]: Famed orange-and-blue house hits real estate 
market (Crabbe)


   

  I wish I had a Georgia brokers license!!!



  Oliver Barry, CRS, GRI

  Real Estate Broker

  Halo Realty, LLC

  700 E. Main St.

  Hendersonville TN 37075

  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

  office: 615-822-3509

  fax: 615-822-7741

  mobile: 615-972-4239


--

  From: Shane Ford [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Friday, December 05, 2008 7:20 AM
  To: Gatortalk
  Subject: [SUN]: Famed orange-and-blue house hits real estate market (Crabbe)

   

  Famed orange-and-blue house hits real estate market



  Doug Engle/Star-Banner 

  Daryl Cook painted his house orange and blue in 2005 and painted the roof in 
the scheme of a football field in protest of his home owners association 
denying him the right to tear down his home and build two homes on the lot. He 
has since lost the fight in multiple law suites in Dunwoody, Ga.

   

  By Nathan Crabbe
  Gainesville Sun Staff Writer

  Published: Friday, December 5, 2008 at 6:01 a.m. 
  Last Modified: Thursday, December 4, 2008 at 8:32 p.m. 

   

  FOR SALE: Orange and blue home with replica of Florida Field on the roof. 
Must be willing to tolerate the occasional Georgia fan repainting the 
University of Florida mailbox and smashing the alligator statues.

  - - -

  ATLANTA - Daryl Cook fought City Hall and lost. Now he's put his 
orange-and-blue symbol of protest on the real estate market.

  I'm so tired. I'm done with it, he said.

  About three years ago, Cook painted his Atlanta-area home in Gator colors to 
protest government agencies that prevented him from subdividing the property. 
Last week, a local court rejected his lawsuit over the rulings.

  So now he plans to sell the house, which is currently being rented out.

  It's not as much fun as it used to be, he said.

  Cook is a civil engineer who graduated from UF in 1985. He dubbed the house 
the Swamp of Dunwoody for obvious reasons.

  The roof is painted with yard lines and end zones that say FLORIDA on one 
side and GATORS on the other. Search for Dunwoody Club Drive on Google 
Earth and the whole thing is clearly visible.

  The home is located among McMansions that start in the $500,000 price range. 
Mark Lipton, who currently rents the place, said he's grown used to sightseers 
and vandals making regular appearances on the property. You get some people 
that destroy things, and you get some people that want to take pictures, he 
said. It's a mixed crowd.

  Cook's protest started after he proposed to tear down the house and replace 
it with two large, new ones. His neighbors opposed the required zoning change 
and won, so he was stuck with the house on land zoned for agriculture.

  He responded by bringing some farm animals onto the property to match the 
zoning designation and surrounding the house with alligator statues. He did 
most of the paint job in one night with a few buckets from a home improvement 
store and a sixpack of beer.

  It was me being a bad boy and showing my displeasure, he said.

  He named some of the animals after his favorite Gators: Spurrier the rooster 
and three goats named Donovan and the Gatorettes.

  Effectively, what I ended up with is a petting zoo, he said.

  The animals brought more drama, such as foxes invading the property to feast. 
His pigs escaped into neighboring properties. About two years ago, he ditched 
the animals, rented the property and moved away.

  It became too much work, he said.

  Lipton is a Syracuse fan but rented the place because he was going through a 
divorce and needed a home near his boy's school. He hopes Cook changes his mind 
about selling.

  But Cook is ready to move on. He's selling the property as is, with the 
thought that the buyer will demolish it and build a fancy home to match the 
neighborhood.

  It's always been a knockdown property, he said.

  But that doesn't mean Cook is ditching his passion for the Gators. He owns a 
Ford F-150 truck customized with Gator seats, hubcaps and about everything else 
Gator.

  Recently, he removed the hood and hauled it to a meeting of the Atlanta Gator 
Club for Urban Meyer to sign it.

  I put my money where my mouth is, he said. I put my passion where my mouth

[gatortalk] Re: FW: [SUN]: Famed orange-and-blue house hits real estate market (Crabbe)

2008-12-05 Thread Gatornet Admin
FW: [gatortalk] Re: FW: [SUN]: Famed orange-and-blue house hits real estate 
market (Crabbe)Yeah, that's pretty much the going price. I was hoping you 
hadn't heard that, 'cuz I was going to charge you $0.75. ;-)

Randy

  - Original Message - 
  From: Oliver Barry 
  To: Gatortalk 
  Sent: Friday, December 05, 2008 1:19 PM
  Subject: FW: [gatortalk] Re: FW: [SUN]: Famed orange-and-blue house hits real 
estate market (Crabbe)


  Actually, I heard you could get them 2 for a dollar at the Valdosta Walmart.  
They're right next to the Georgia law licenses!
  Oliver

  -Original Message-
  From: Gatornet Admin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Sent: Friday, December 05, 2008 12:08 PM
  To: Gatortalk@googlegroups.com Gatortalk@googlegroups.com
  Subject: [gatortalk] Re: FW: [SUN]:  Famed orange-and-blue house hits real 
estate market  (Crabbe)

  You want one? I'm quite handy with PC generated documents! ;-)

  Randy

- Original Message -
From: Oliver Barry
To: Gatortalk@googlegroups.com
Sent: Friday, December 05, 2008 10:55 AM
Subject: [gatortalk] FW: [SUN]: Famed orange-and-blue house hits real 
estate market (Crabbe)




I wish I had a Georgia brokers license!!!



Oliver Barry, CRS, GRI

Real Estate Broker

Halo Realty, LLC

700 E. Main St.

Hendersonville TN 37075

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

office: 615-822-3509

fax: 615-822-7741

mobile: 615-972-4239


  --

From: Shane Ford [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, December 05, 2008 7:20 AM
To: Gatortalk
Subject: [SUN]: Famed orange-and-blue house hits real estate market (Crabbe)



Famed orange-and-blue house hits real estate market



Doug Engle/Star-Banner

Daryl Cook painted his house orange and blue in 2005 and painted the roof 
in the scheme of a football field in protest of his home owners association 
denying him the right to tear down his home and build two homes on the lot. He 
has since lost the fight in multiple law suites in Dunwoody, Ga.



By Nathan Crabbe
Gainesville Sun Staff Writer

Published: Friday, December 5, 2008 at 6:01 a.m.
Last Modified: Thursday, December 4, 2008 at 8:32 p.m.



FOR SALE: Orange and blue home with replica of Florida Field on the roof. 
Must be willing to tolerate the occasional Georgia fan repainting the 
University of Florida mailbox and smashing the alligator statues.

- - -

ATLANTA - Daryl Cook fought City Hall and lost. Now he's put his 
orange-and-blue symbol of protest on the real estate market.

I'm so tired. I'm done with it, he said.

About three years ago, Cook painted his Atlanta-area home in Gator colors 
to protest government agencies that prevented him from subdividing the 
property. Last week, a local court rejected his lawsuit over the rulings.

So now he plans to sell the house, which is currently being rented out.

It's not as much fun as it used to be, he said.

Cook is a civil engineer who graduated from UF in 1985. He dubbed the house 
the Swamp of Dunwoody for obvious reasons.

The roof is painted with yard lines and end zones that say FLORIDA on one 
side and GATORS on the other. Search for Dunwoody Club Drive on Google 
Earth and the whole thing is clearly visible.

The home is located among McMansions that start in the $500,000 price 
range. Mark Lipton, who currently rents the place, said he's grown used to 
sightseers and vandals making regular appearances on the property. You get 
some people that destroy things, and you get some people that want to take 
pictures, he said. It's a mixed crowd.

Cook's protest started after he proposed to tear down the house and replace 
it with two large, new ones. His neighbors opposed the required zoning change 
and won, so he was stuck with the house on land zoned for agriculture.

He responded by bringing some farm animals onto the property to match the 
zoning designation and surrounding the house with alligator statues. He did 
most of the paint job in one night with a few buckets from a home improvement 
store and a sixpack of beer.

It was me being a bad boy and showing my displeasure, he said.

He named some of the animals after his favorite Gators: Spurrier the 
rooster and three goats named Donovan and the Gatorettes.

Effectively, what I ended up with is a petting zoo, he said.

The animals brought more drama, such as foxes invading the property to 
feast. His pigs escaped into neighboring properties. About two years ago, he 
ditched the animals, rented the property and moved away.

It became too much work, he said.

Lipton is a Syracuse fan but rented the place because he was going through 
a divorce and needed a home near his boy's school. He hopes Cook changes his 
mind about selling.

But Cook is ready to move on. He's selling the property as is, with the 
thought