George Real Estate Group Radio Broadcast

TIP Volunteers Show Up So Survivors Do Not Face Trauma Alone

18 min · 10 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio TIP Volunteers Show Up So Survivors Do Not Face Trauma Alone

Descripción

The hardest part of a crisis is often what comes right after, when the sirens fade and you are left standing there trying to figure out what to do next. That is why this conversation stopped us in our tracks: Holly Nicholson joins us to explain TIP of WNC, the Trauma Intervention Program of Western North Carolina, and how trained volunteers respond alongside first responders to provide immediate emotional and practical support to survivors, families, and witnesses. TIP is not “therapy later.” It is emotional first aid now, with a simple goal that carries lifelong impact: reduce secondary trauma and help people take the first steady steps toward a healthy recovery. We also celebrate 10 years of the George Real Estate Group on WHKP and share a clear-eyed Henderson County real estate market update. If you have heard that real estate is “slowing down,” we talk through what the numbers actually show and why a balanced market can still mean real momentum for buyers and sellers in Hendersonville and across Western North Carolina. Plus, we give you a can’t-miss weekend open house lineup, including 959 Silver Glen Way, 525 Byers Cove Road, and 100 Elmridge in Kenmuir, with the kind of features people ask for every day here: mountain views, one-level living, and that rare find of a view with a usable flat lot. If this episode moved you, share it with someone who cares about community, and please subscribe and leave a review so more listeners can find the Hometown Hero stories.

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episode TIP Volunteers Show Up So Survivors Do Not Face Trauma Alone artwork

TIP Volunteers Show Up So Survivors Do Not Face Trauma Alone

The hardest part of a crisis is often what comes right after, when the sirens fade and you are left standing there trying to figure out what to do next. That is why this conversation stopped us in our tracks: Holly Nicholson joins us to explain TIP of WNC, the Trauma Intervention Program of Western North Carolina, and how trained volunteers respond alongside first responders to provide immediate emotional and practical support to survivors, families, and witnesses. TIP is not “therapy later.” It is emotional first aid now, with a simple goal that carries lifelong impact: reduce secondary trauma and help people take the first steady steps toward a healthy recovery. We also celebrate 10 years of the George Real Estate Group on WHKP and share a clear-eyed Henderson County real estate market update. If you have heard that real estate is “slowing down,” we talk through what the numbers actually show and why a balanced market can still mean real momentum for buyers and sellers in Hendersonville and across Western North Carolina. Plus, we give you a can’t-miss weekend open house lineup, including 959 Silver Glen Way, 525 Byers Cove Road, and 100 Elmridge in Kenmuir, with the kind of features people ask for every day here: mountain views, one-level living, and that rare find of a view with a usable flat lot. If this episode moved you, share it with someone who cares about community, and please subscribe and leave a review so more listeners can find the Hometown Hero stories.

10 de jul de 202618 min
episode A Saluda Luxury Home Tour Plus Creative Lending Options In Western North Carolina artwork

A Saluda Luxury Home Tour Plus Creative Lending Options In Western North Carolina

A panoramic mountain view might grab your attention, but the story behind a move is what makes real estate meaningful. We talk with Patty Wainwright Hostie about why Saluda, North Carolina keeps pulling people in and what makes a mountain home truly special, including her standout listing at 1072 Corsica Lane with year-round long-range views, privacy, and the rare perk of paved access all the way to the property. If you’ve been browsing Western North Carolina luxury real estate, this is a grounded look at what “livable luxury” actually means. Then we bring the conversation to the money side with Patrick Hunt from United Federal Credit Union, focusing on mortgage lending that goes beyond rate obsession. We get into the practical stuff buyers and sellers need right now: how seller credits can be structured, how portfolio loans can help when standard guidelines don’t fit a self-employed borrower, and what options exist for jumbo loans, construction loans, lot loans, equity lines, and even 100% financing outside the usual USDA or VA box. The goal is simple: match the loan to the person and the plan, not just a headline number. We also share a quick Henderson County real estate market snapshot, then shift to community impact with Lynn Stags from the Storehouse of Henderson County. As demand rises for food, hygiene support, and senior deliveries, their Fourth of July campaign becomes a critical way to keep help available year-round, especially with expanded capacity in their new building and a major Christmas program supporting local families and schoolchildren. If you found this helpful, subscribe for more local Western North Carolina real estate insight, share the show with someone planning a move, and leave a review so more neighbors can find it.

6 de jul de 202634 min
episode Real Estate Perspective That Calms The Noise artwork

Real Estate Perspective That Calms The Noise

The housing market headlines can sound like a constant alarm: high interest rates, stretched budgets, and a “why would anyone move?” narrative. We slow that down and talk like real people who do this every day in Western North Carolina. Real estate still happens because life still happens, and the smartest decisions come from context, not noise. We also put mortgage rates in perspective by comparing today’s environment with longer term history, not just the recent unicorn years. Then we shift from market talk to a tool that helps with everything from home goals to financial planning: The Gap and The Gain. When we measure ourselves against a perfect future, we stay stressed and feel behind. When we measure progress against where we started, we build confidence and momentum, which is exactly what you need when you are deciding whether to buy, sell, or hold. We also dig into what buyers and sellers are running into right now: the median US home is about 44 years old, and that reality changes renovation priorities. We break down which improvements actually build buyer confidence, why buyers often overestimate repair costs, and which updates can deliver surprising return on investment. We cover current design trends, smart home features, and why defined spaces are getting more popular than wide open floor plans. Finally, for investors, we explain the basics of a 1031 exchange, what “investment to investment” really means, and why planning for replacement property can make or break the strategy. If you want clearer next steps for the Hendersonville and Flat Rock real estate market, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more locals can find the show.

2 de jul de 202630 min
episode What Henderson County Numbers Reveal About Home Prices artwork

What Henderson County Numbers Reveal About Home Prices

The real estate headlines can’t agree, but your local market still has to make sense for your life. We zoom in on the one metric that explains most of the noise: inventory. When buyers have more options, sellers compete. When inventory stays tight, prices hold up even when interest rates and the broader economy feel uncertain. That local lens matters in Western North Carolina, where neighborhood, county, and price point can change the outcome fast. We also share a clear snapshot of Henderson County: new listings rise roughly 4% through the end of May while pending sales climb close to 12%, a sign that demand is still draining inventory faster than it’s being replaced. We talk median and average pricing (about $430K median year to date and roughly $501K average when condos and townhomes are included), list-to-sale hovering near 94%, and days on market around 73. If you’re planning a sale, we explain why pricing strategy and honest comps matter more than ever. Then we pivot to a topic every homeowner is feeling: renovations. With the median US home now around 44 years old, more spending goes to unglamorous but value-protecting work like roofs, HVAC, plumbing, and crawl space issues. We dig into buyer psychology, curb appeal, and the surprising ROI list, including garage door and entry door replacements. We also talk trends like defined spaces after work from home and why flipping homes is tougher with today’s rates and material costs. If you’re buying, selling, investing, or planning a renovation in Hendersonville and Western North Carolina, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave us a quick review so more locals can find the show.

29 de jun de 202633 min
episode Hometown Heroes And Local Storytelling artwork

Hometown Heroes And Local Storytelling

Ten years on the radio doesn’t happen by accident, it happens when a show becomes part of the community’s weekly rhythm. We’re celebrating a decade of the George Real Estate Group on WHKP, and we’re pairing that milestone with what we love most: putting real people and real service in the spotlight through the Hometown Hero Award. First, we share a clear-eyed Henderson County real estate market update, including recent sales momentum, current inventory, and why supply and demand still drive so many outcomes even when interest rates and everyday costs feel heavy. If you’re thinking about buying, selling, relocating to Western North Carolina, or making a move with an investment property, inherited land, commercial real estate, or a 1031 exchange, this segment gives you grounded context for smarter decisions. Then we welcome Michael Sundberg of Hendo Today, a local content creator who’s built a meaningful platform by focusing on community-first storytelling. We talk about how his work grew out of supporting the Bounty of Bethlehem, how he approaches nonprofit video and the “hero’s journey,” and what he’s learned about social media marketing, especially the importance of hooking viewers in the first 3 to 6 seconds. Michael also gives us a preview of his upcoming Ecusta Trail documentary, digging into the history, the people who made it happen, and why the trail has become a true Hendersonville gathering place. If this conversation sparks an idea, do us a favor: subscribe to the podcast, share this episode with a friend who loves Henderson County, and leave a quick review so more locals can find these stories.

26 de jun de 202618 min