Archive for the ‘Travel’ Category

Find a housesitter – for free

Friday, July 15th, 2011

You can go through a traditional agency – or join a new trend, do your own vetting, and access hundreds of housesitters for free

Getting a housesitter to look after your home, garden and pets while you are away is the perfect solution to the worry of leaving your property unoccupied – and it means you can avoid the hassle and expense of uprooting your animals.

The downside is the cost: a housesitter can be pricey, adding significantly to your holiday expenses.

But a new trend in global housesitting services, where homeowners get access to hundreds of sitters willing to do the job for little or nothing in exchange for a change of scene and free accommodation, is making it more affordable.

Traditionally, homeowners have paid a company to vet and supply them with a suitable sitter. The largest national provider is Homesitters, which launched in 1980 and claims to be the pioneer of professional housesitting services in the UK.

Unlike many sitting services, Homesitters is not an agency but a company that directly employs and vets its 1,000 or so sitters, guaranteeing every aspect of the service. When on assignment, for example, sitters must agree not to leave the property for longer than three consecutive hours in daylight or more than an hour after dark.

Its employees undergo detailed inquiries regarding court judgments, criminal convictions and bankruptcy, are fully insured by the company and cannot combine housesitting with any other employment.

“We believe our customers want the reassurance that the buck stops with us, so the contract is between us and the homeowner, and the sitters operate under the company’s direction and with our 24-hour back-up,” says spokeswoman Adele Barclay. “It means, for example, that if a sitter falls ill and cannot complete a booking we will find an immediate replacement. With experience of looking after over 64,000 bookings we are used to providing sitters at very short notice and our sitters can call us for help at any hour, 365 days a year.”

The service, which includes safeguarding the security of the property, keeping the house clean and tidy, grass cutting and light garden maintenance, dealing with phone messages, and callers and care for all pets and livestock according to the client’s instructions, is popular with those who can afford it. More than 70% of new clients re-book within two years.

But it does not come cheap. The basic charge is £37 per 24-hour period, plus £1 per cat or dog plus VAT. The homeowner also has to pay £7 a day for food direct to the sitter and reimburse their travelling expenses at 40p per mile plus VAT. So someone with two pets could pay £772.80 for a two-week caretaking stint. Of this, the sitter will get £10.16 a day for the estimated one and three-quarter hours they will actually be working plus their £7 food money – just over £240 for the fortnight.

However, homeowners worldwide can now find a housesitter for little or no cost using the matchmaking website TrustedHousesitters.com – provided they are prepared to put in the time and effort to choose and vet a suitable sitter themselves.

Launched late last year by a company based in Broadstairs, Kent, the website features detailed profiles of nearly 400 potential sitters and around 100-150 sitting assignments at any one time from homeowners around the world. Property owners and sitters pay a modest subscription to register, from around £10 for a month to £40 for a year’s membership, in US dollars. For this, homeowners can place secure listings and search for sitters, read reviews from other assignments, view references, photos, video profiles and police-check information.

Sitters, who include many retired professionals including police, vets, animal rescue workers and even an ex-FBI special agent, can upload their profiles and search assignments in up to 30 countries.

Current advertised assignments include petsitting in a 16th-century home with pool on the Isle of Wight, and in a mountain property in Galicia, Spain, and housesitting without animals to look after in an ocean-side villa in Mexico, in Byron Bay in New South Wales, Australia, and in a remote beach house in Bahia, Brazil.

Registered sitters and homeowners can contact each other securely via the website if they are interested in a match. It is suggested they then use services such as Skype to communicate futher. Homeowners are advised to double-check their chosen sitter’s references and ask for a copy of their passport and police check. They should also check with their home insurer that their policy will remain valid while the sitter is staying there.

“What we offer is a win-win situation for both parties, which creates a different dynamic than a paid sitter,” says TrustedHousesitters.com founder Andy Peck. “It allows homeowners to personally choose who looks after their home and pets without expensive costs, and it offers sitters a great way to enjoy a low-cost, often luxurious retreat. Our research has found this usually creates lasting friendships and many repeat housesits, and that the trust and friendship factor matters a lot to our members.”

Case study: ‘I love seeing the varied landscape in the UK’


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Can you rent out your home to Olympics visitors and make a fortune?

Friday, July 8th, 2011

With millions of Olympics visitors searching for accommodation in 2012, we look at whether homeowners can make a packet by renting out their properties

For those lucky enough to live anywhere near the Olympic site there’s one big question: can I rent out my home for thousands of pounds and head off on an expensive holiday on the proceeds?

With the opening ceremony just over a year away, and lettings agents reporting the first expressions of serious interest from those looking to rent homes near to the action, Guardian Money has been asking whether there is serious cash to be made. Or are homeowners hoping for a bonanza heading for disappointment?

A whizz around the internet reveals plenty of households hoping to cash in. Owners of some – frankly, very ordinary – homes within walking distance of the Olympic Park in Stratford are asking as much as £5,000 a week. Even one-bedroom flats are being marketed at £1,500 a week.

The big question is whether they are going to get it. Joanna Doniger, who has let Wimbledon homes to tennis players for two decades and is an expert on the short-let market, predicts some homeowners will make some serious money, but others will be out of luck.

The owner of the Chelsea-based agency Accommodate London is offering the same service for 2012, and says it is already getting busy.

“We’ve been taking calls from media organisations and others who are going to be in London for the Games and are looking for homes to rent. There have also been lots of inquiries from people hoping to rent out their homes; however, we won’t be taking them all on.”

She says that to stand a chance of being suitable, a home will have to have certain features. A power shower, Wi-Fi, flatscreen TV and a high standard of decoration are a must – as is proximity to the Stratford site on foot or via public transport.

She predicts early house rentals will mostly go to people working in jobs connected to the Games – TV crews, journalists and the like. Individuals tend to book much later.

“Some groups will want to take a house for as much as four to six weeks. Potential renters will have to ask themselves whether they are prepared to be away for that long.”

She predicts a three-bedroom family house very close to the stadium will rent for around £3,000-£4,000 a week. “We’ve let out a four-bedroom refurbished property near Victoria Park for more than £5,000 a week,” she says.

If Wimbledon is anything to go by, she says, there will be a rush of bookings at the last minute from normal visitors leaving it late to find a bargain.

Those thinking of renting out their homes have two options: pay an agent specialising in short-term lets, or do it yourself. Agents will typically charge a commission of 10%-15% plus VAT. The advantage is that they provide a contract and, crucially, collect the money from the tenant.

Those looking to avoid paying commission tend to put their home on one of the many websites that have sprung up – such as Rentduringthegames.com, londonrentmyhouse.com and 2012homerentals.com. Fees to use the websites typically vary from £25 (to list a property) to £150. Usually you can upload pictures and full details. It is up to the householder, to agree a price, collect the rent and deal with the client.

Most homeowners trying to find customers were this week asking for a 50% deposit upfront and for the balance to be paid prior to the keys being handed over. This looks to be the major hurdle of going down the DIY route. After all, how many people would be prepared to send a £1,000-plus deposit to a stranger in the expectation that they will honour a rental a year later?

Rob Mearns, who set up rentduringthegames.com from his base in Vancouver for the 2010 Winter Olympics, says there are currently 310 properties on his site. The average house is listed at around £3,400, or £900 per bedroom. Flats are typically being offered at around £1,300 per week.

“We are starting to see a much higher demand – website traffic is up over 620% since January, and I suspect the demand will just get much, much higher the closer we get to the Olympic Games,” he claims.

Jo Selby of east London agents Alan Selby & Partners questioned whether those with long-established and happy tenants would want to go to the trouble of finding short-term Olympic lets, unless they just happen to have a vacancy at the time.

Others have questioned whether families have really considered what it entails. Cupboards and wardrobes will have to be emptied and personal possessions removed. The house will have to be spotlessly clean, and there is the cost/aggravation of finding somewhere else to stay.

Lastly, don’t forget the taxman will want his share of the income you generate. Homeowners who decide to let their homes will also need to check with their insurers, as most household policies do not cover commercial rents. And your mortgage provider may have something to say on the matter, and will have to be notified.

During the 2000 Games in Sydney, a late scramble for accommodation drove up rents, especially near the Olympic village, to as much as 10 times normal rates. However, even as the Games started, lots of homes were still available.


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Recession? What recession? Hire a Scottish castle for £60,000 a week

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

The grand house party is alive and well in Scotland, with a range of castles for hire and to buy for those with money to lavish

In pictures: Scottish castles to rent or buy

The recession may be impacting on the lower and middle ends of the holiday market, but jet setters are still visiting Scotland to hire castles and grand houses for high-end house parties at weekly fees that can exceed £60,000.

Andrew Loyd is no stranger to the whims of the super rich: as a former butler he has nine years’ service under his belt. Loyd is one of the co-founders of Loyd & Townsend Rose – a bespoke travel company specialising in elite house parties. But are such people really immune to the current economic circumstances?

Loyd says: “Sadly no one is recession proof, but I think it is fair to say that the wealthy have a ‘cushion’ denied to us mere mortals and for them life goes on.”

The grand house party is quite distinct from a hotel experience. The client takes over a property, fills it with their guests, and treats it like their home.

Roger Tempest bought Aldourie Castle on the southern shores of Loch Ness in 2002 and spent £10m doing it up. He says: “I was brought up in an historic house – Broughton Hall in Yorkshire – and I want everyone to be able to have that experience.”

Given that a week’s hire of this lavishly refurbished 500-acre castle costs from £42,000, it is not quite as accessible as he makes out. But Tempest says: “We can accommodate up to 28 people. If you consider that a week’s all inclusive stay here comes in at around £2,100 a head based on 20 guests, that compares favourably with other types of holiday.”

Attention to luxurious detail is crucial. At Ackergill Tower in Wick, on the north-eastern tip of Scotland, alarm clocks are redundant: guests are awoken by the sound of bagpipes played in the corridor outside their room, while a cup of tea is simultaneously placed by the bedside.

Meals are served either in the grand hall at the 15th-century core of the tower, in a loch-side bothy, or in an enormous tree house in the garden. It costs about £60,500 a week to hire Ackergill for up to a maximum of 48 guests, so expectations are high.

It’s not only historic piles that attract high-end clientele. Corrour Lodge, set deep in the wilds of the central Highlands near Fort William, is an ultra modern monument to grandeur in Portuguese granite, glass and steel. Designed by architect Moshe Safdie, its conical castellated turrets pay homage to the baronial style adopted by Victorian aristocrats and merchants for their Highland shooting lodges.

The lodge sits in a wild garden by the shores of Loch Ossian and is surrounded by 200 sq km of wilderness. Approached by way of an 11-mile private road, this £30m mansion is owned by the Rausing family – Swedish heirs to the Tetra Pak fortune – and is only let for about six weeks a year.

Tariffs start from £30,000 a week. The main house sleeps just 14 people, but a luxury bunk house – designed with children in mind – has room for a further 14.

For those looking for a holiday business with a recession-proof clientele, there are a number of Scottish properties on the market which could lend themselves to the high-end rental sector. Compared with prices down south, you can get quite a lot for your money, including historic interest, extensive gardens and spacious accommodation.

Myres Castle in Fife, which dates back to the 15th century, is on the market for offers in excess of £2.95m. It is set in 45-acre grounds and has 10 bedroom suites and several public rooms, and has previously been let out.

Missy Stuart-Menteth from agent Knight Frank says: “Being so close to St Andrews ensures that Myres Castle will attract global interest, not only due to the wonderful location but due to the outstanding condition of the house.”

Woodside Castle, also in Ayrshire, has five tower bedrooms, five principle bedrooms and a dungeon, plus four reception rooms. The only drawback with this grade A-listed castle, which is on the market for offers in excess of £1.75m with CKD Galbraith, is that not all the bedrooms are en suite.

If that is out of your price range, how about Aiket Castle near Dunlop in East Ayrshire, a reconstructed 15th-century castle set in 95 acres just 19 miles from Glasgow airport. The house has six bedrooms, eight cloakrooms, bathrooms and shower rooms, and a magnificent great hall – but crucially for those accustomed to comfort, it has been restored with very efficient underfloor heating. All this for offers in excess of £1.1m, or in two lots: £700,000 for the house and five acres and a separate lot (only available to the buyer of the first lot) of Aiket Mill plus 89 acres of grazing land, woodland and banking for offers above £400,000.

But if you prefer to go for a cosy rather than imposing style, Dalchonzie near Comrie in Perthshire could fit the bill. Again, most of the seven bedrooms are not en suite, but there are plenty of activities on offer nearby: golf courses at Crieff and Gleneagles, sailing and other watersports at Lock Earn five minutes drive from the house, which also has its own trout and salmon fishing in the river Earn, best known for its late summer and autumn runs. On the market for offers in excess of £885,000.

• This article was amended on 15 June 2011. The original referred to the “Rausling” family. This has been corrected.


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Scottish castles to rent or buy – in pictures

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

For those with seemingly endless pots of cash to splash, a series of castles fit for a grand house party


Hotel group’s collapse leads to sale of 28 stately homes

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

Thornbury Castle and the Royal Crescent among luxury country house hotels to be auctioned by administrators

A grand collection of castles and stately homes is up for auction after their owner, the von Essen Hotels group, collapsed into administration on Wednesday.

Administrators at Ernst & Young are trying to find buyers for von Essen’s 28 luxury country house hotels in the UK and France. They include Cliveden House in Berkshire, Ston Easton Park in Somerset, the Royal Crescent in Bath, Thornbury Castle near Bristol and Amberley Castle in west Sussex, which dates back to 1140.

Thornbury is even older, with the earliest account of the manor in the time of King Athelstan (925-940), the grandson of King Alfred the Great. King Athelstan and William the Conqueror stayed at the castle, as did Henry VIII, Anne Boleyn and Mary Tudor.

Cliveden, once home to Nancy Astor and mired in the Profumo scandal in the 1960s, recently unveiled the world’s most expensive afternoon tea – which carries a price tag of £550 for two people. It includes white truffles, Beluga caviar and a glass of Dom Perignon Rosé.

Queen Victoria, a frequent guest, was not amused in 1893 when the house was bought by William Waldorf Astor, America’s richest citizen. It soon became a social hub, with guests ranging from Charlie Chaplin to Winston Churchill, and President Roosevelt to George Bernard Shaw.

Harold Macmillan, another regular guest, when told that the house was eventually to become a hotel, remarked “My dear boy, it always has been”.

Staying at the Royal Crescent in Bath has been compared to stepping into the pages of a Jane Austen novel. Its architecture has remained unchanged since the 18th century when it was built as part of the Royal Crescent by John Wood the Younger, which included some of the grandest houses in Bath.

Ston Easton Park in Somerset also dates back to the mid-18th century and is set within gardens created by landscape gardener Humphry Repton. They include an ice house, a ruined grotto fountain, a sham castle, a rare 18th century plunge pool and Palladian bridges over the river.

The hotels are not in administration and will continue to trade as usual. Angela Swarbrick, joint administrator at Ernst & Young, said: “It is business as normal for the hotels and customers of von Essen Hotels can continue to enjoy their stay.”

Von Essen Hotels employs 40 people and another 1,000 work at the 28 hotels. The administrators were unable to say whether they would be sold as a package or individually. “The administrators are working closely with the business to develop the appropriate strategy to take the business forward,” said an Ernst & Young spokeswoman.


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Stately homes for sale – pick your property

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

A host of castles and stately homes are up for auction after their owner, the von Essen Hotels group, collapsed into administration on Wednesday night


French holiday homes: is it le recovery?

Saturday, March 26th, 2011

Britons who own a French holiday home have had to weather a much gentler downturn than in Spain – and house prices may now be on the up

The heady days of buying holiday homes abroad using equity from soaring house values in Britain have long gone, yet France remains a favourite for the few still buying overseas.

No authoritative data exists on international holiday home sales but websites such as Primelocation and FindaProperty say listings for classic French cottages and renovation projects receive heavy numbers of hits, despite the economic malaise.

Britons typically buy near airports served by budget airlines, in four main regions – the south west, from Normandy down to the Spanish border; the Mediterranean coast, along the Cote d’Azur and provence and into Languedoc; the Alps; and a smaller number of generally wealthier purchasers look to Paris.

Britons who choose France for a holiday home are typically better off than those who buy in Spain and have had to weather a much gentler downturn. Price falls of 10% to 15% have been common over the past five years but many owners – such as Andrew and Jill Ness, accountants from Birmingham – have easily recouped that by improving their homes.

“We bought a bergerie, a country house about 30 minutes from Bordeaux. It was only €108,000 (then about £73,450) back in 2005 because it needed structural work and rewiring,” says Jill. “The villagers were helpful and welcoming and recommended workmen. The hard part was supervising and controlling costs.

“It sounds contradictory but the rate of work would slow, yet the scope of the project would expand, because we weren’t there, day to day, to see what was happening,” says Jill.

The couple spent €55,000 but have now had the home valued at €240,000, giving them a profit of well over £80,000. But other British buyers, hoping to fund their purchase with lucrative rental income, have been less successful.

Richard Dale, a Briton who moved to run an estate agency in western France in 2003, writes about his own gîtes rental business on blog.rhf-international.com.

He says: “In 1998 in Charente-Maritime there were just a handful of complexes — three or more gîtes on a single site, typically sharing a pool. Now there are literally dozens, with seemingly yet another opening each month. Some complexes have 20 or more. The number of tourists has risen, but nothing like as quick as the amount of accommodation.”

Lanisha Butterfield of travel website HolidayLettings.co.uk, which advertises more than 5,500 French holiday homes, says: “If there are 20 gîtes in an area an owner needs to make theirs stand out. It can be very tough.”

Rental income is modest even for those who do find takers. Butterfield says many owners have been running discounted offers for summer 2011 since the autumn, and tourists can easily find that hiring a cottage for a week in France in high season can be cheaper – even including ferry costs – than a comparable property in Cornwall.

As a result of the vast over-supply of holiday homes, Britons looking to buy are more discerning. Graham Downie, who runs Cognac Property in western France, says: “In the area around Cognac I’ve seen a move away from the seemingly obligatory gîte complex. Most of my searches now are either for family homes in good condition, with views over the vineyards, priced between €250,000 (£217,418) and €400,000 (£347,767), or for townhouses with a small garden or courtyard between €200,000 (£173,883) and €300,000 (£260,825).”

The biggest victims of the French downturn, however, may be those who bought new-build. Figures from estate agency Humbert show that prices of some in Champagne-Ardenne fell by more than 20% in 2009 and have not yet recovered from that slump. “Even in the prime locations, asking prices [for new homes] have fallen back by between 10% and 20% since pre-recession levels,” says a report from the agency.

Few buyers have had to cut their losses, however. Estate agents say there has been no discernible rise in “distressed sales”. Instead, some believe canny Britons, who bought when sterling was strong, are waiting to see if the exchange rate shifts further in favour of the euro – in which case a quick sale could see them net a good profit.

Signs of le recovery

After years of gentle decline and sometimes sharp falls, the French housing market appears to be picking up.

“Interest from international buyers dropped substantially at the end of 2008 but transaction numbers are rising once more,” says Graham Downie.

The Fédération National de l’immobilier, the French estate agents’ body, says average prices of all homes rose 6% in 2010 and property purchases exceeded 700,000 – a 15% rise on 2009. “Prices, after having fallen quite significantly – approximately 10% if we look at the end of 2009 – have regained a certain strength,” says FNAIM president René Pallincourt.

The average price of a home in Burgundy is now €148,400 (£129,000), while in Languedoc the figure is €208,800 (£182,000) rising to €384,200 (£334,000) in Provence. The federation and lenders, such as Credit Agricole, predict rises of about 3% this year, with larger increases in cities.

It is a hard slog for British purchasers. “The days when homeowners released equity from their UK properties to pay for a dream house in Provence are a distant memory,” says John Busby of Athena Mortgages. He says more Britons who cannot afford to buy outright are seeking French mortgages, which require deposits of between 10% and 30%. Borrowing in euros avoids exchange rate complications and may be cheaper to pay off if sterling eventually rallies. But Busby warns there is a possible hitch. “French mortgages work on the basis that the total of all [payments on] mortgages and loans held by the borrower do not exceed one-third of their income. This means monthly repayments on a UK mortgage will be taken into consideration.”


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