Showing posts sorted by relevance for query North Central Line. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query North Central Line. Sort by date Show all posts

Saturday, December 23, 2017

The High Point Enterprise from High Point, North Carolina on July 11, 1976 · Page 63

Read article : The High Point Enterprise from High Point, North Carolina on July 11, 1976 · Page 63

12D High Point Enterprise, Sunday, July 11, 1976 CEDARWOOD HOME Just waiting for your family, it's brick, has 7 rooms. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 1.900 sq. ft., plus 2-car carport, large grassed and well landscaped lot 127x239. Yep, you are right - the den has a fireplace and there are many other extras in this home at 214 Cedarwood Drive, all for the price of $53.500. FORESTDALE - 403 FORESTDALE DR. This home overlooks the lake and is a truly lovely home. You really can't see the whole picture until you see the beautiful, tastefully decorated large rooms on the inside. At your convenience, we will be glad to attempt to set up an appointment for you to see this top located excellent home and let you take a restful look at the sjnooth waters from the concrete patio on the rear of the house. $85,000 1110 CAMPBELL This 8 room. l"z story frame home on a duplex zoned lot, 100 x 150, has much to offer a large family, including partial fenced yard, a frame workshop building, a one-car garage, good garden area, and all kinds of shrubs, trees and flowers, close 10 schools and all for the price of only $17.500. FOR SALE OR RENT With option to buy -1116 Sharon St. at the corner of Lake. Four rooms, concrete basement area could be developed into 2nd apt. We'll work a real deal on this one. NO DOWN PAYMENT. SPECIAL-C-4 ZONING Corner of Oakwood Newton. Just north of English Rd., a vacant lot just perfect for small office or a few apts. 2HOMESITESOR1 Wooded, on the south side of Crestview Drive. Over 220' frontage. AFTER HOURS CALL- Lucille Monroe K85-G653 » Bill Hyllun ~ 454-1062 u REALTOR 1 - The Match Makers -- RS'2-0131 OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 THE BLUE HOUSE - DOGWOOD CT. 3 Bedrooms, formal dining, 2 full baths, lireplace. central air. full basement-with easy potential for fourth bedroom and den. $45,900. NEW LISTINGS HILLTOP DR. - CRESTVIEW 3 bedroom brick. 2 full ceramic baths, fireplace, utility room, dining room with sliding glass doors to patio, carport, metal storage building, fenced real- lot. AIR CONDITIONED. S32.90D. KYNWOOD SUB. Flint Hill Rd to Mt Vernon Church, Kynwood on left. 4 bedrooms. 2'z baths, kitchen with all buill-ins, large utility room, living room and large den with old brick rustic fireplace, sundeck, carport, paved drive If you h u n y you can pick the carpet. New $42.900 220 STRATFORD ROAD Archdale. 5 room frame with aluminum siding, 2 bedrooms, dining room, utility room and living room, hardwood floors $14.000. 8 " 2 ROOMS CENTRAL AIR 2" z BATHS PRICED TO SELL BEAUTIFUL LANDSCAPED LOT LARGE DEN W/FIREPLACE 4 BEDROOMS SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT WHY PAY RENT - WHEN YOU CAN BUY Brick and frame bungalow on nice shady lot One block from bus line, and willnn walking distance of Kirkman Park School Partially floored attic for convenient storage This home has gas heat, and connectons for washer and dryer. Cun you believe all this at a price of only $15,500 Call today for an appointment to s,ee 808 Wiloubar Terrace. NICELY WOODED LOT for sale in Oakview Estates If vou lire planning to build a split level or a home with a basement sou should consider this location 110 Ft. frontage on paved road. Call today' R E S I D E N T I A L C O M M E R C I A L R E A L ESTATE 312 OLD WINSTON KI). 869-6113 AFTER HOURS 888-4692 OR 869-4919 E ? 11 NEED LOTS OF ROOM? --Z'.j ACRES TO 60 ACRES-Then indulge yourself in luxury living at this magnificent suburban estate on Kersey Road just off Highway 62 Five bedrooms, sewing room, study, family room, 3V 2 baths, terrific utility room, convenient kitchen with 30 feet of cabinets and all built-ins, three fireplaces, three porches, double garage and single carport Talk to us today about this beautifully decorated, well kept home. There's so much more to tell than we can write about. Buy this home with 2Vj Acres or up to as many as 60 Acres. We can Uulor-make this to fit your needs and desires. DOWNTOWN BUSINESS PROPERTY Formerly Cecil Drug Store. 121 North Main Street. Frontage on N. Mam St. Hayden Place. 3,700 sq. ft. -- 1st floor. 2.900 sq. ft. -- 2nd floor. New heat and air cond. units. Lot size -- 25 ft. x 200 ft. Price $49,500. ' ~ *er******-. OWNER WILL FINANCE With good credit you can have a home of your own without going through the hassel of securing a loan. 327 I'ICKETT PLACE is a five room frame dwelling in good condition This home can have either 2 or 3 bedrooms, depending on your needs. We'll show you this anytime -- jus,t give a call Can be purchased with a small down payment FOREST HILLS, THOMASVILLE 11 rooms. 4 or 5 bedrooms. 4 baths. 2 kitchens (1 up and 1 down) 2 patios and 1 deck. 46 x 16 Rec. room. Double carport and single garage Over 5.500 square feel living space. Large lot with 450 feet street frontage *K49^^^-t^U0-9*^M^Il?L0V^x4 BEAUTIFUL EMERYWOOD FOREST TWO CHOICE , BUILDING SITES , Fronting Wickliff Avenue with a frontage of 284 feet and go- f ing .ill the way through the block to Sweetbnar Court. Ihis * wooded homesile is one of the few choice locations left in , [northwest High Point Call todai for further information 2 : ! Sites for the price ol 1 S17.500.' ' READ THE ENTERPRISE CLASSFIED ADS JAMESTOWN ·Our 22nd Year* %^ ^ OPEN HOUSE TODAY 2 - 5 301 SIIADOWLAWN DR. FORESTDALE NORTH This t r u e l y u n i q u e c o n t e m p o r a r y design features 4 bedrooms, larpc living room and dining room, den with fireplace and woodbox, sliding glass door to wooden deck, built-in shelves and desk, modern kitchen, thermo-pane windows, big double garage You must come see this home soon $70.500. HO Church-Phones: 887-1250 or 887-1958 Chde Vaughn 887-1040 Nat Harrison 882-3453 Boyd Jaeger 889-3187 g? n-6 Runnine mil o/4(nrnflf sparr." 'ivll irlle iti-n,.i fn.i u-ith n linr- runt C/n»«i/iV"' - I d ! ft ft\ OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 W511 DOGWOOD COURT CAPE COD *T 3 Bedrooms and studio, 2 full baths, fireplace in living room, formal dining, a 'c. kitchen has stove, d/w and disposal Hurry' $43,500 REDUCED. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 NEW ENGLAND SALTBOX 3 Bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal dining. fireplace, a/c Studio could be used for 4th bedroom. You'll love it. 512 Dogwood Ct. $43.500. REDUCED. C K D V K LODGE ONE ACRE THOMASVILLE Tlu.s bc;iu'ilul «ell kept brick home was custom buill by Clifl I '.\ orhart loi tlu present owners The 22 x 20 master bedroom le.iluies .1 dressing room w i t h lull length mirrors built-in \ . i n i l \ The bnck p,melsd den is 2V; ft \ \ i t h fireplace 20x40 (·.irpoli'd p;uu :M\25 qaiage Baseboard hoi waier heat ,\.C Jt)7 500 00 OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 \\ OOOLEIGH CT. - FOREST!) ALE EAST A contemporary home \vith 4 or 5 bedrooms. 3 1 : baths, living mom. loriul dining room, kitchen win built in appliances, n nici- pn\.ilo dining patio leading off dining ronm For a uni- due homo \ou should sec ilii* one 4(M) CRESTVIEW-THOMASVILLE 3 Bedrooms. l'-a baths, carport, sunken living room cathedral ceilings, built-in stove dishwasher 22 000 BIT: air conditioner, utility room. S29 750 Good loan assumption Beautiful Lot. % 222 MOORE ST. THOMASVILLE ·j: An immaculate 3 bedroom brick home with :i: fireplace, formal dining room, carpeted throughout :·· Sliding glass doors to new patio with railing. Double :,-; garage paved drive large lot. Below replacement x cost. $26,500. % 303 WEST GLILFORD THOMASVILLE 'f 3 Bedrooms, 2 full baths, formal dining den with :': fireplace separate garage, large lot. $2,000 and :· assume loan. You'll have to move fast to get this one. :·' LOT: Gray Oaks Trinity. 100 x 200. $2,500. 'f 2 LOTS: Southtfale Estates. 100 x 200 Each. $2,800. ? INVESTMENT-COMMERCIAL !: PROPERTY , i Corner Ball Park Rd. Natl. Hwy. Station Buildinp '· Lot. Now Renting $225.00 Mo. Plus Owner's Car Lot : In Rear. $25,000.00. HARVEY L. WILBORNE BROKER .S PH: 475-8330 305 W. MAIN ST. EMi-6 ·:· PH: 454-40JO:;:' 220 SIIADOWLAWN DR. FORESTDALE NORTH Tliis lovely contemporary split -- foyer home has 5 bedrooms and 3 full baths. This home is situated on a beautifully landscaped lot. It has 2600 sq. ft and has central air conditioning, big double garage. Come see this excellent home today Price $74,500. SPECIAL - NEW LISTING 102 RAGSDALE COURT FORESTDALE NORTH 10 Rooms plus -- 3601) sq. ft. living area All thcrmo-pane glass, gas heat, central air. heated double garage, central vacuum, big den and largo family room -- each with fireplace, large wooded lot One of Jamestown's finest. Call us today for an appointment. $86.500. KACIA COURT--WILEY PARK Contemporary style, 4 Bedroom home, 2Vz baths. 1800 sq. ft. of living area, double garage, air conditioned. 2''2 years old Jamestown School district Low County taxes. Come see today' $38,900 BUCKEYE DRIVE -- CEDARWOOD Fantastic Contemporary home on a beautiful wooded acre. Approx. 3200 sq. ft living area, large den with broken tile floor and fireplace, big rec room with Teak floor and fireplace, air conditioning, double carport. All the extras you expect for luxurious living Make an appointment today. SJ02.000 WATERFORD DRIVE-COLONY PARK This lovely two-story home is 1 year old - with 4 bedrooms and 3 full baths, 2380 sq. ft., central air, big den with fireplace, modern kitchen, Jamestown schools. Come see this new listing today S52.300 501 THORNWOOD DRIVE-CEDARWOOD This custom-built colonial ranch home sits on a lovely acre wooded lot. It has 2500 sq. ft., 3 bedrooms, 2'2 baths, all large room. Crab Orchard stone in den and kitchen, central air, sliding glass doors to big patio. This home has too many special features to list You must see it for yourself. Don't hesitate -- this home will go quick!! 205 WOODMONT DRIVE - CEDARWOOD NEW LISTING This lovely brick home is situated on a big wooded lot 3 Bedrooms. 2 baths. 1765 sq. ft. mam level. 800 sq ft basement, oil heat, central air, paneled den with fireplace, storm windows, double garage Many extras. 557.500 COME SEE THESE OTHER FINE HOMES! TRAILWOOD DRIVE -- New 5 bedrooms. 3 baths, family room with fireplace, double garage, approx 3100 sq. ft. Wooded lot. By appointment only. 202 NUTWOOD DRIVE - Cedarwood Brick and cedar shakes. 2200+Sq. Ft., 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, wooded lot. fantastic den. $58,000. TUMBLEWEED DRIVE - Hidden Valley. Bfsck home. 1800 sq. ft. plus full basement, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, wooded lot. $55,000. BOW STAFFORD AGENCY, INC. Jamestown, N.C. OFFICE 454-1121 E7 "* Ed Stafford 454-4581 Bob Lackey 454-2704 Bow Stafford 454-1272 Mil Office Phone 88.1-1940 883-1049 After Hours AFTER HOURS CALL: CARL PARADICE 869-3876 BOB VAUGHN ...882-1256 When We SELL Your Property 1 We pay advertising. 2 We qualify prospects. 3. We make appointments with more prospects 4. We "show" the house even when you are gone. 5 We work at it all day long. 6 We know many prospects to call 7 We are professionals. 8 Our contracts cover every point. 9 We will sell potential buyers thai many would miss. 10. Other Realtors help sell our properties OWNER BEING TRANSFERED This lovely 8 room home only 3'/z years old 3 or 4 bedrooms 2'z baths, large family room with fireplace, spacious living room, separate dining room, kitchen with dishwasher, range, oven, fan and plenty of cabinet space, luxurious carpet, central air, located on beautiful landscaped comer lot. Call today to see 1631 Bolingbroke. Priced at $39.900 with easy financing available FINE BRICK HOME OAKVIEVV ESTATE 7 room hnck home. 2 full b a t h ? c a r p o r t , b u i l t - i n kitchen, laundry room, large beautifully landscaped lot, and all the extras found in a finer home Located just cut of the ciiv limits yet all services found in citv available. All tvpes linancmg available and owner would consider trade for small home 520 Impala Dr L A R G E HOME For GREAT family living in this Old Emery-wood. 2 story house It has 4 bedrooms, living room, den, dining room, kitchen (with plenty of cabinet space) and a full basement. There's a garage, and many extras too Just minutes from the public schools $39,500 Located at 309 Colonial Dr Call todav. GOOD LOCATION NEW LISTING 5 room home in new like condition 3 b e d r o o m s a s forced air heal Goca' V j storage building j^ f\\ ; by and see mb'lSVJ !L M. today it could be ,\1- nome you've been looking for. 1108 ENGLISH ROAD ZONED BUSINESS Large older home in real good condition. 2 bedroom apartment up stairs and a one bedroom apartment down stairs. Live in one and rent the other or you can operate some type of business This home has had the roof replaced and new paint last year. If you are looking for a real bargain the price is only $12,900 ATTENTION VETERANS S350 TOTAL CASH Toward paying the closing cost is all the money you will need to buy 516 James Road that has already been 100 per cent VA Appraised for $10.500. Consisting of 2-bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, enclosed back porch large metal storage building on good foundation, this home is located on large lot 60090 in the Oakview area. Why not call today? Your payments will be less than rent RESTRICTED BUILDING LOTS Viking Village, joining Reeceland S/D. Lot No 12 Corner on hard surface street consisting of a little over one acre Priced at $6 500 Loi .No. 13 on hard surfaced sireet also over one acre in size. Priced at 55.000. Hunter Wood Sub Division off Waterview Road. Lot No 1 - consisting of well over one acre $3,400. Lot No. 5 - Beautiful SOLD over an acre $5,850. The above lots can be purchased for only 10% down and up to live years to pay. ACREAGE FOR SALE (wooded) A little over 7 acres of beautiful land with 600 foot road frontage. Some large timber, can be divided into six or more building sites. Located in Davidson County on old Hwy. 109-12 miles south of Thomasville, Priced at $18,500. Directions from Thomasville go new 109 to Hwy. 64 or Silver Valley School Road, turn right, go past Silver Valley School to paved road (Girt 109 turn left see our sign about 200 yards on left from school ITU U 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 8 H i III i M II 8 Ml IT! 1 1 1 »Tt B Our Sales At Bob Vaughn Realty have been Extremely Good! We have buyers wailing. Should you be considering The Sale of your home -We'd Appreciate A Call!! K 7 1 1 6 THIS VALUABLE 2 STORY DUPLEX With 4 TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS AT AUCTION (WIND SONG) SATURDAY, JULY 17th--2:00 P.M. LOCATED - DEIMAR BEACH, SURF CITY, N.C. ON THE CORNER OF RENDER AVENUE AND TOPSAIL DRIVE ONE BIOCK OFF WATER FRONT These opartmenu ai« in Ihe belt of condition Eath apariment is individually wired, and has its' own service meters, hot woler healers, electric heot, and complete balh, tub and shower. This is a real investment for investors, speculators, semi-retired fishermen, etc. TERMS - EASY -- ANNOUNCED SALE DAY FOK /NFORMATION SEE OR CALL: RED MENDENHALL (Auctioneer) 19-70 Lie. No. 41 High Point, N.C. 27263 Phone: (919) 475-2229 phone: (919) 886-7812 J.W. WOODARD REALTY 406 National Hwy. Thomasville, N.C. 27360 READ THE ENTERPRISE CLASSIFIED ADS * OPEN HOUSE *2:00 P. M. Til 5:00 P. M, "OPEN FOR INSPECTION" Executive home located on nature's perfect setting provides all the beauty, comfort, and privacy one could ask for! See for yourse'lf the combination of quality craftsmanship and pride of ownership. Four large bedrooms (walkin closets), three full ceramic tile baths, paneled den, living room, formal dining room, modern kitchen, family room with fireplace, and laundry room are all included in this 2.800+ sq ft home with double carport. We know that you will tall in love with the professionally landscaped acre lot. It's exciting come and see us at OPEN HOUSE today at 3817 Langdale Drive in the Reeceland Subdivision DIRECTIONS. Johnson Street Extension North and take a left at Old Mill Road, take right ofl Old Mill Road on Langdale and see our sign. Gloria Adderton will be your hostess. "A SHADY DEAL!?!" That's right -- lots of shade trees on this beautifully landscaped 100 x 200 lot located in Oak View at 520 Shadybrook Drive This is truely a home that you will slow down to admire, but wait til you see the inside. 7 large rooms. 2 full ceramic tile baths; all ideally arranged for relaxed living. 1,875 sq. ft. of heated and air conditioned living area Call us to see this "SHADY DEAL". "ONE "L" (OF A) SHAPE" Just listed this well maintained "L" shaped home moderately priced at $25.900. This 1,240 sq. ft. home offers three bedrooms, living room, kitchen with built-in appliances, and paneled den For your summertime enjoyment there is a 14.6 x 22 6 concrete patio surrounded by a privacy fence and equipped with a gas grill. Ideal garden space is provided. "SIMPLICITY THAT SPARKLES" With tender loving care! This seven year old home needs nothing, it is immaculate and the beautiful landscaped lot and split rail fence will leave you breathless 3 bedrooms, 1V Z baths, modern kitchen, and a warm cozy den. Price $26,900 1,700 sq. ft. Central Air 4'/2 Years New Convenient Location "HOUSE IMMACULATE" * 7 Rooms - 2 Baths * Laundrv Room * Decorated To A "T" * $36.900.00 ' "GO TO THE COUNTRY YOUNG MAN" Perfect for the young family looking for a home in the country convenient to the city! 3 Bedroom ranch containing 1.300 sq. ft., carport, and a 100 x 200 fenced in lot "BUILDING LOTS" 1 Beverly Hills Dr. 128 x 233. $5,000. 2. Kelton'Place. 100 x 204. 55,900. 3. Inglesdie Dr. Approx. I'/i Acres. $8,500. 4. Huntington Dr 100 x 200. $9,500 * OPEN HOUSE . 2:00 P. M. Til 5:00 P. M. ^ "A HOME FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY" Four year old brick with full basement and garage. Featured in this 2,760 sq. ft. home are eight large rooms, two full baths and a fireplace in the den and also rec room. You will have to go a long way to find a more attractive home or one that is more functional. Come to our OPEN HOUSE in English Woods located at 1617 Bohngbroke, Mary Poff will be there to welcome you. DIRECTIONS. Go North on Guyer and take right on Bolingbroke and see our sign. "SOUND FISHY" Cause it's a whale of a buy! Located in Emery wood Forest is this 2,800 sq. ft. brick colonial just under two years old. This lovely home offers nine large room, 2'/z baths, two car garage and basement. A whale of a buy for just $57,900.00. "HEY LOOK ME OVER" And you'll want to move right in! Livability and comfort will be yours in this 5 year old split level. Eight good size bedrooms containing over 1,700 sq. ft. of heated and air conditioned living area. Hey, look me over today. ^869-6717 GLORIA ADDERTON 869-6725 MARY POFF 869-4574 MARY STEWART 869-4883 DICK MORE 883-9273

Tuesday, October 10, 2017

Northgate Crossing apartments await the expanding suburb of Wheeling

Read article : Northgate Crossing apartments await the expanding suburb of Wheeling

The long-anticipated Wheeling Town Center, a mixed-use activity hub on the south side of Dundee Road, is expected to break ground this fall. When completed a movie theater, restaurants and retailers will neighbor the 100-acre Heritage Park and aquatic center as well as a Metra train station.

Within walking distance on the north side of the road is Northgate Crossing apartments. The new 288-unit, low-rise rental community will be wrapping up its construction about the time the town center gets started.

"Wheeling isn't an area people think of right away, but it's up-and-coming," said Northgate Business Manager Jillion Volz. "We're just a little earlier than everything is popping up."

Northgate Crossing is being developed by Reva Development Partners and built by Kinzie Builders. Lincoln Property Residential is managing the community.

The residents, who began arriving late December, tend to be either young professionals or empty nesters. They are drawn to the corporate offices in the area, nearby North Shore attractions and easy access to highways and the train route.

The younger residents often are establishing themselves in careers before they buy a home while the older ones may have sold theirs, said Matt Nix, principal at Reva.

"We provide kind of a transitional housing option to or from a single-family home while people make their next housing decision," he said.

"Our price point is a little lower than that of the surrounding communities," Volz said.

Surrounded by a mature landscape, Northgate Crossing is set back from the traffic on Dundee Road. Nine three-story elevator buildings are interspersed amid a clubhouse and retention pond. Each building is entered via a secure foyer.

Six floor plans are offered: four with one bedroom and one bath, and two with two bedrooms and two baths. One of the one-bedroom plans also has a den.

Residents have a choice of two color combinations: white cabinetry with dark counters and flooring or espresso cabinets and medium-hued counters and flooring. Stainless steel appliances, granite countertops, in-unit clothes washers and dryers, window blinds, closet shelving systems and lever door handles are standard. Vinyl plank flooring and cream-colored carpeting is per plan. Bathrooms have white subway tile surrounds and ceramic tile floors. All units have either a patio or balcony.

The largest two-bedroom apartment is the 1,212-square-foot Edison. A second-floor model opens to a foyer with a built-in art niche on one side and a laundry closet on the other. A great room has spaces allocated for sitting, formal dining and food preparation. The U-shaped kitchen has breakfast seating along one counter. An alcove with upper and lower cabinets can serve as a dry bar or buffet and hutch combo.

The two bedrooms and baths are at opposite sides of the apartment. The master suite has walk-in and linen closets and a bath with oversized shower and comfort-height dual vanities. The second bath, which is adjacent to the guest bedroom, has an extra-deep tub.

A circular drive fronts the clubhouse, where lounge seating, flat-screen television, pool table, two-way fireplace and full kitchen invite residents to spend their leisure hours. A business center provides computers and printer. The 24-hour fitness center has cardio and weight-training equipment. The media room has an extra-large flat-screen TV and theater-style lounge chairs; it can be rented for private viewings. Wi-Fi is complimentary in the clubhouse and pool area.

Outdoor amenities include swimming pool and sun deck, locker rooms with showers, bocce ball court, grilling station, fire pit and dog park.

Northgate Crossing is pet-friendly, although restrictions apply. Three buildings are pet-free.

Pamela Dittmer McKuen is a freelance writer.

Northgate Crossing

250 Northgate Parkway, Wheeling; ,847-947-2717 andwww.northgatewheeling.com

Apartments: Prices based on availability and subject to change. One-bedroom, 696 to 873 square feet, from $1,475; one-bedroom with den, 883 square feet, from $1,675; two-bedroom, 1190 to 1212 square feet, from $1,965.

Lease terms: 12- and 15-month leases. Application fee $50; administration fee $450; no security deposit.

Renter's insurance: $50,000 liability required minimum.

Utilities: Resident pays all utilities.

Parking: Open parking is free. Private garages available for $125 to $170 a month.

Pets: Two pets per apartment. Size and breed restrictions apply. Pet fees are $250 one-time and $20 monthly per pet. Three buildings are pet-free.

Smoking policy: Smoke-free.

Amenities: Resident clubhouse with lounge seating, flat-screen television, fire place, full kitchen, pool table, business center, fitness center and theater room. Outdoor swimming pool with sundeck, grilling station, bocce ball court and fire pit. Complimentary Wi-Fi in clubhouse and pool area. Dog park. Open parking, although private garages with inside access are available at additional cost. Apartments are furnished with vinyl plank flooring and carpeting per plan, in-unit clothes washer and dryer, stainless steel appliances, granite counters, walk-in closets, window blinds and key fob access. Patios and balconies are per plan.

Close to municipal services, Interstate 294 and Route 53. Metra train station across Dundee Road offers weekday-only service on the North Central Line.

Friday, June 2, 2017

Dispossessed in the Land of Dreams

Read article : Dispossessed in the Land of Dreams


Sometime in July 2012, Suzan Russaw and her husband, James, received a letter from their landlord asking them to vacate their $800-a-month one-bedroom apartment in Palo Alto, California. He gave them 60 days to leave. The “no-fault” eviction is a common way to clear out low-paying tenants without a legal hassle and bring in people willing to pay thousands more in rent. James was 83 at the time and suffering from the constellation of illnesses that affect the old: He had high blood pressure and was undergoing dialysis for kidney failure and experiencing the early stages of dementia.

Their rent was actually a couple of hundred dollars more than James’s monthly Social Security benefits, but he made up the rest by piecing together odd jobs. They looked for a new apartment for two months and didn’t find anything close to their price range. Their landlord gave them a six-week extension, but it yielded nothing. When mid-October came, Suzan and James had no choice but to leave. With hurried help from neighbors, they packed most of their belongings into two storage units and a ramshackle 1994 Ford Explorer which they called “the van.” They didn’t know where they were going.

A majority of the homeless population in Palo Alto—93 percent—ends up sleeping outside or in their cars. In part, that’s because Palo Alto, a technology boomtown that boasts a per capita income well over twice the average for California, has almost no shelter space: For the city’s homeless population, estimated to be at least 157, there are just 15 beds that rotate among city churches through a shelter program called Hotel de Zink; a charity organizes a loose network of 130 spare rooms, regular people motivated to offer up their homes only by neighborly goodwill. The lack of shelter space in Palo Alto—and more broadly in Santa Clara and San Mateo counties, which comprise the peninsula south of San Francisco and around San Jose—is unusual for an area of its size and population. A 2013 census showed Santa Clara County having more than 7,000 homeless people, the fifth-highest homeless population per capita in the country and among the highest populations sleeping outside or in unsuitable shelters like vehicles.

San Francisco and the rest of the Bay Area are gentrifying rapidly—especially with the most recent Silicon Valley surge in social media companies, though the trend stretches back decades—leading to a cascade of displacement of the region’s poor, working class, and ethnic and racial minorities. In San Francisco itself, currently the city with the most expensive housing market in the country, rents increased 13.5 percent in 2014 from the year before, leading more people to the middle-class suburbs. As real estate prices rise in places like Palo Alto, the middle class has begun to buy homes in the exurbs of the Central Valley, displacing farmworkers there.

Suzan, who is 70, is short and slight, with her bobbed hair dyed red. The first time I met her, she wore leggings, a T-shirt, a black cardigan wrapped around her shoulders, and fuzzy black boots I later learned were slippers she’d gotten from Goodwill and sewn up to look like outside shoes. (She wore basically the same outfit, with different T-shirts, nearly every time we met, and I realized she didn’t have many clothes.) Her voice is high and singsongy and she is always polite. You can tell she tries to smooth out tensions rather than confront them. She is a font of forced sunniness and likes to punctuate a sad sentence with phrases like “I’m so blessed!” or “I’m so lucky!” She wore a small necklace and said jewelry was important to her. “I feel, to dispel the image of homelessness, it’s important to have a little bling,” she said.

In the van, Suzan was in charge of taking care of everyone and everything, organizing a life that became filled with a unique brand of busy boredom. She and James spent most of their time figuring out where to go next, how to get there, and whether they could stay once they arrived. They found a short-term unit in a local family shelter in Menlo Park that lasted for five weeks. Afterward, they stayed in a few motels, but even fleabags in the area charge upwards of $100 a night. When they couldn’t afford a room they camped out in the van, reclining the backseats and making a pallet out of blankets piled on top of their clothes and other belongings. Slowly, there were fewer nights in hotels and more in the van, until the van was where they lived.

A life of homelessness is one of logistical challenges and exhaustion. Little things, like planning a wardrobe for the week, involved coordinated trips to storage units and laundromats, and could take hours. The biggest conundrum? Where to pull over and sleep. Suzan and James learned quickly not to pull over on a residential block, because the neighbors would call the police. They tried a church or two, 24-hour businesses where they thought they could hide amidst the other cars, and even an old naval field. The places with public toilets were best because, for reasons no one can quite explain, 3 a.m. is the witching hour for needing to pee. They kept their socks and shoes on, both for staying warm on chilly Bay Area nights and also for moving quickly if someone peered into their windows, or a cop flashed his light inside, ready to rouse. Wherever they were sleeping, they couldn’t sleep there. “Sometimes, I was so tired, I would be stopped at a red light and say, ‘Don’t go to sleep. Don’t go to sleep,’” Suzan said. “And then I would fall asleep.”

A few months in, a nice man in a 7-Eleven parking lot told them about a former high school turned community center on the eastern side of town called Cubberley. He’d walked up to their van after recognizing signs of life in the car, tired faces among the junk piling up in the back. Suzan and James were familiar with the community center because they’d taken their daughter to preschool there many years before, but they hadn’t thought about sleeping there. Cubberley had a quiet back parking lot, a flat grass amphitheater with a concrete paddock for a stage, and 24-hour public bathrooms with showers in an old gym. Rumor was that the cops wouldn’t bother anyone.

imageSuzan’s husband, James Russaw, pictured with two of their grandchildren.

Cubberley was a psychic relief because it solved so many basic needs: It had a place to bathe in the morning, a place to charge your phone. The parking lot had also formed its own etiquette and sense of community. People tended to park in the same places, a spot or two next to their neighbors, and they recognized one another and nodded at night. They weren’t exactly friends, but they were people who trusted each other, an impromptu neighborhood no one wanted to lose after losing so much. It was safe, a good place to spend the night. But it was next door to a segment of homeowners who were fighting hard to move the car dwellers out.

Normally, wealthy people who move into an area don’t see the results of their displacement because the people who lose their homes don’t stick around; they move to cheaper suburbs and work themselves into the fabric elsewhere. But the folks at Cubberley, 30 people on any given night, were the displacement made manifest. Most weren’t plagued with mental health or substance abuse problems; they simply could no longer afford rent and became homeless in the last place they lived. People will put up with a lot to stay in a place they know. “I’ve been analyzing why don’t I just get the heck on. Everybody says that, go to Wyoming, Montana, you can get a mansion,” Suzan said. “Move on, move on, always move on. And I say to myself, ‘Why should I have to move on?’”

It’s a new chapter in an old story. In his seminal 1893 lecture at the Chicago World’s Fair, Frederick Jackson Turner summarized the myth of the American frontier and the waves of settlers who created it as an early form of gentrification: First, farmers looking for land would find a remote spot of wilderness to tame; once they succeeded, more men and women would arrive to turn each new spot into a town; finally, outside investors would swoop in, pushing out the frontiersman and leaving him to pack up and start all over again. It has always been thus in America. Turner quoted from a guide published in 1837 for migrants headed for the Western frontiers of Ohio, Indiana, and Wisconsin: “Another wave rolls on. The men of capital and enterprise come. The ‘settler’ is ready to sell out and take the advantage of the rise of property, push farther into the interior, and become himself a man of capital and enterprise in turn.” This repeating cycle, Turner argued, of movement and resettlement was essential to the American character. But he foresaw a looming crisis. “The American energy will continually demand a wider field for its exercise,” he wrote. “But never again will such gifts of free land offer themselves.” In other words, we would run out of places for the displaced to go.


Suzan was born in 1945. Her father worked at what was then the Lockheed Corporation, and her mother had been raised by a wealthy family in Oak Park, Illinois. Her family called her Suzi. Though she grew up in nearby Saratogaand spent some time in school in Switzerlandshe distinctly remembers coming with her mother to visit Palo Alto, with its downtown theaters and streets named after poets. Palo Alto more than any other place formed the landscape of her childhood. “It was a little artsy-craftsy university townyou find charming towns are university towns.”

Like many women of her day, Suzan didn’t graduate from college. When she was 24, after her last stay in Switzerland, she moved to Mountain View, the town on Palo Alto’s eastern border that is now home to Google and LinkedIn. She was living off a small trust her family had set up for her when she met James at a barbecue their apartment manager threw to foster neighborliness among his tenants. James had grown up in a sharecropping family in Georgia, moved west during World War II, and was more than 17 years her senior, handsome and gentlemanly. Suzan thought: “I can learn something from him.” They were an interracial couple in the late 1960s, which was unusual, though she says her family didn’t mind. It was also an interclass marriage, and it moved Suzan down the income ladder.

For years, James and Suzan lived together, unmarried. They bought a house on University Avenue, just north of the county line and blocks from downtown Palo Alto, in 1979, and four years later had their only daughter, Nancy. It was the area’s ghetto, and the only source of affordable housing for many years. It was also the center of violence in the region, and, in 1992, was the murder capital of the country.

They never had much money. For most of their marriage, James ran a small recycling company and Suzan acted as his bookkeeper, secretary, and housewife. They refused to apply for most government assistance, even as homeless elders. “My husband and I had never been on welfare or food stamps,” she told me. “Even to this day.”

Suzan’s parents died in 2002 and 2003, and her older sister died in 2009. (“I thank God that they’re gone,” she told me. “They would die if they saw me now.”) It was a hard time for Suzan, who went to care for her dying parents and nearly left James. She felt he’d checked out of the difficulties. In retrospect, she thinks his dementia might already have been setting in; James was already in his seventies. He had taken out a second mortgage on their home, and they couldn’t pay it after he retired. They sold the house at a loss in 2005; it’s now a Century 21 office.

After they moved into the van, they settled into a routine. On the nights before James’s early-morning treatments, they slept in the dialysis center’s parking lot. Otherwise they generally stayed at Cubberley. They were still living off James’s retirement income, but most of it went to the $500 needed to rent the two storage units where their furniture remained, until they lost one for nonpayment. Finally, a few months in, Suzan was able to use a clause in a trust set up by her mother’s father to help her out in an emergency. It doubled their incomemuch of which was eaten up by the costs of gas, the remaining storage unit, parking tickets, and the other expenses of an unsettled life. It was a respectable income, one that technically kept them above poverty, but it still wasn’t enough for rent.

James was increasingly ill and van life was taking a toll. In addition to James’s other problems, both he and Suzan were starting to experience some of the health problems common among the homeless. The backseat of the van filled with bags of clothes, papers, fast-food detritus, pens, old parking tickets, and receipts. As the junk built up, the recline of their seats inched forever upward, until they were sitting up all the time, causing their legs to swell and nerves to become damaged, the medical consequences of not being able to raise your feet at night.


Gentrification used to be about poor neighborhoods, usually black and brown, underdeveloped and full of decrepit and neglected housing stock, run by the occasional slumlord—often described as “blighted,” though that designation has always been problematic—and how they become converted into wealthier ones, usually through the influx of richer white people and their demand for new services and new construction. It’s a negative process for the people who have to move, but there’s occasionally an element of good, because neglected neighborhoods revive. But what’s happening now in the Bay Area is that people who’ve done nothing wrong—not paid their rent late, violated their lease, or committed any other housing sin—are being forced out to make way. Displacement is reaching into unquestionably vibrant, historic, middle- and working-class neighborhoods, like The Mission in San Francisco, a former center of Chicano power. (The Mission alone has lost 8,000 Latino residents in the past ten years, according to a report from the local Council of Community Housing Organizations and the Mission Economic Development Agency.) And it’s happening to such an extent that the social workers who used to steer people to affordable apartments as far away as Santa Rosa or Sacramento, a two-hour drive, are now telling people to look even farther out. The vehicle dwellers I spoke with said they’d heard of friends living in places like Stockton, once a modest working-class city in the middle of the state, receiving notice-to-vacate letters like the one Suzan and James received.

For the most part, the traits that draw people to Palo Altogood schools, a charming downtown, nice neighborhoods in which to raise a family, and a short commute to tech jobsare the very same things that made the residents of Cubberley want to stay, even if it meant living in their car. The destabilizing pressure of a real estate market is also felt by the merely rich, the upper middle class, and the middle class, because the high-end demand of the global elite sets the market prices. “My block has the original owners, a retired schoolteacher and a retired postal worker,” said Hope Nakamura, a legal aid attorney who lives in Palo Alto. “They could never afford to buy anything there now.” Most people told me if they had to sell their homes today they wouldn’t be able to buy again anywhere in the area, which means many Palo Altans have all of their wealth tied up in expensive homes that they can’t access without upending their lives. It makes everyone anxious.

imageThe view inside a van parked outside a Palo Alto homeless organization.

The outcry from the neighbors over Cubberley was so fierce that it reshaped Palo Alto’s city government. The city council is nonpartisan, but a faction emerged that revived an old, slow-growth movement in town, known as the “residentialists.” Their concerns are varied (among them, the perennial suburban concerns of property values and traffic), but their influence has been to block any new development of affordable housing and shoo people like Suzan and James away from Palo Alto. An uproar scuttled an affordable-housing building for senior citizens near many public transit options that had been proposed by the city housing authority and unanimously approved by the city council. Opponents said they were worried about the effect the development would have on the surrounding community—they argued it wasn’t zoned for “density,” which is to say, small apartments—and that traffic congestion in the area would be made worse. Aparna Ananthasubramaniam, then a senior at Stanford, tried to start a women’s-only shelter in rotating churches, modeled after the Hotel de Zink. She said a woman came up to her after a community meeting where the same concerns had been raised by a real estate agent. “Her lips were quivering and she was physically shaking from how angry she was,” Ananthasubramaniam told me. “She was like, ‘You come back to me 20 years from now once you have sunk more than $1 million into an asset, like a house, and you tell me that you’re willing to take a risk like this.”

The trouble for Cubberley began when neighbors went to the police. There’d been at least one fight, and the neighbors complained about trash left around the center. At the time, Cubberley was home to a 64-year-old woman who’d found a $20-an-hour job after nine years of unemployment; a tall, lanky, panhandler from Louisiana who kept informal guard over her and other women at the center; a 63-year-old part-time school crossing guard who cared for his dying mother for 16 years, then lived off the proceeds from the sale of her house until the money ran out; two retired school teachers; a 23-year-old Palo Alto native who stayed with his mother in a rental car after his old car spontaneously combusted; and, for about six months, Suzan and James. “They didn’t fit this image that the powers that be are trying to create about homeless people. They did not fit that image at all,” Suzan told me. “We made sure the premises were respected, because it was an honor to be able to stay there.” She and others told me they cleaned up their areas at the center every morning.

“I said, ‘We have no place to go, and we’re staying right here.’ They were going to know about it.”

Pressured to find a way to move the residents out, the police department went to the city council claiming they needed a law banning vehicle habitation to address the neighbors’ concerns. Advocates for the homeless said that any problems could be solved if police would just enforce existing laws. Local attorneys warned the city council that such laws could soon be considered unconstitutional, because the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals was hearing a challenge to a similar law in Los Angeles. Carrie LeRoy, an attorney who advocated on behalf of the unhoused, and other attorneys threatened to file a class-action lawsuit if the vehicle-habitation ban ever went into effect. The city council passed the ban anyway, in a 7-2 vote in August 2013, and the police department and other groups in the city started an outreach program to tell people about the law. “All of them had received these notices from the city,” LeRoy said, “And it was basically like, ‘Get out of our town.’”

A few weeks later, the city council also voted to close the showers at Cubberley and give it a 10:30 p.m. curfew, which made it illegal to sleep there. On their last night there, in October 2013, Suzan and James left around 8 p.m. so they wouldn’t get caught past the new curfew. They tried some old haunts and got kicked out. The stress of living in the van was hard on James. Around this time, James decided to end his dialysis. “Of course, we knew what that meant,” Suzan said.

One night, about a month after leaving Cubberley, the police pulled Suzan and James over. Their registration was expired. “This officer, he got a wild hair, and he said, ‘I’m going to impound your car,’ and called the tow truck.” Suzan told me. They got out of the car. Without pushing and demanding, she realized, she was never going to get out of the situation. She told me she said to the officer, “This is our home, and if you impound it we will not have a home.” He insisted. “I said ‘That’s fine. You do that. We will stay right here. I will put the beds out, I will put what we need here, right here on the sidewalk.” Other officers arrived and talked to them. They asked Suzan whether, surely, there was some other place they could go. “I said, ‘We have no place to go, and we’re staying right here.’ I was going to make a stink. They were going to know about it.” Suzan told me people were poking their heads out of their homes, and she realized the bigger fuss she made, the more likely officers might decide just to leave them alone.

Because James’s health had continued to worsen, he and Suzan finally qualified for motel vouchers during the cold weather. They got a room in a rundown hotel. “It had a microwave and a hot bath,” Suzan said. In his last few days, James was given a spot in a hospice in San Jose, and Suzan went with him. “It was so cut-and-dry. They said, ‘This is an end-of-life bed, period,’ ” Suzan said. “And I never said that to James.” He died on February 17, 2014, and a few weeks later a friend of theirs held a memorial service for James at her house. Suzan wore an old silk jacket of her mother’s, one that would later be ruined by moisture in the van, and a necklace Nancy had made. They ate James’s favorite foodscornbread, shrimp, and pound cake. Suzan had a few motel vouchers left, and afterward stayed with friends and volunteers for a few weeks each, but she felt she was imposing.

That summer, she returned to her van. It was different without James; she realized she’d gotten to know him better during their van life than she ever had before. Maybe it was his dementia, but as they drove around or sat together, squished amidst their stuff, he’d started to tell her long stories, over and over, of his youth in Georgia. She’d never heard the tales before, but she’d started to be able to picture it all. On her own, without his imposing figure beside her, Suzan was scared, and more than a little lonely. Most nights, she stayed tucked away in a church parking lot, without permission from the pastor, hidden between bushes and vans. The law wasn’t being enforced, but sleeping in the lot made her a kind of a criminal. “The neighbors never gave me up,” she said.


Suzan told me she was in a fog of denial after James’s death, but it’s probably what protected her because homelessness is exhausting. “You start to lose it after a while,” she said. “You feel disenfranchised from your own society.” The Downtown Streets Team, a local homeless organization, had been helping her look for a long-term, stable housing solution. Indeed, Suzan told me that at various times, she and James had 27 applications in for affordable housing in Palo Alto. (When he died, she had to start over, submitting new applications for herself.) Her social worker at the local senior citizens center, Emily Farber, decided to also look for a temporary situation that would get Suzan under a roof for a few months, or even a few weeks. “We were dealing with very practical limitations: having a computer, having a stable phone number,” Farber said. Craigslist was only something Suzan had heard of. She’d finally gotten a cell phone through a federal program, but hadn’t quite mastered it.

For many months, Farber struck out. She didn’t think Suzan would want to live with three 25-year-old Google employees, or that they’d want her, either. She even tried Airbnb. Because Suzan didn’t have a profile, Farber used her own, and wrote to people who had rooms listed to say her 69-year-old friend needed a place to stay in the area for a couple of weeks. “We got three rejections in a row,” she said. Finally, in November, they found a room available for rent for $1,100about 80 percent of her income from the trust and her widow’s benefits from Social Security. Suzan would have her own bedroom and bathroom in the two-bedroom apartment of a single mother. The mother crowded into the other bedroom with her 16-year-old son and seven-year-old daughter. The only downside for Suzan was that it was in Santa Clara, another charmingly bland suburban enclave in the South Bay, a half hour south of Palo Alto and a world away for Suzan. “It’s out of my comfort zone, but that’s OK!” she told me.

I met Suzan on the day she moved in, and the concept of being able to close a door was almost as unsettling to her as the concept of sleeping in the van had been. “I’m in this kind of survival mode,” she said, and had found a certain comfort in her van. “I’ve got this little cocoon I’m staying in, and everything is within arm’s reach.” She had a big blue mat in the back of the van, like a grown-up version of the kind kindergartners nap on, but soon she’d acquire a bed. She retrieved her old TV from her storage unit. She made a comfortable room, with chairs and a bed and a small table, and decided to eat her meals in there. She only signed a lease for three months, because it wasn’t really sustainable on her fixed income. She’d also applied for an affordable housing complex being built for seniors in Sunnyvale, one that would provide permanent housing for 60 senior citizens from among the 7,000 homeless people in the county at the time. She’d find out in April if she was selected in the lottery. All her hopes were pinned on it.

In the first few weeks after her move to Santa Clara, Suzan spent a healthy portion of her limited income on gas, driving the Explorer back and forth to Palo Alto. After all, her post office box was there, and so were her social workers. Her errands demanded a lot of face time, and in some ways, she still filled her days the way she had before she got her room, moving around trying to solve her problems. Her car was still packed, too, as if she hadn’t let go of the need to drive in it, to move forward, to keep her stuff around her within arm’s reach, as if she were still without a home base.

Two afternoons a week she went to a Palo Alto food closet. She usually made it right before it closed, in the early afternoons. When her number was called, she went up to the counter to watch the volunteer sort through what was left on the shelves, finding the most recently expired itemsthese were older goods grocery stores couldn’t keep past their sell-by dates. Suzan’s politeness was, as always, almost formal, from an earlier era, when being ladylike was a learned skill. The volunteer would ask her if she wanted milk, or peaches, or a serving-size Baggie of cereal, and she’d say, “Yes, very much so!” These days, she got to take raw eggs instead of the boiled ones, a treat reserved for those with kitchens. Her requests were glancing rather than direct. “Have you any lettuce?” and the answer was often no. I said it seemed like an efficient operation. Suzan said, “I really know the drill!”

Suzan needed to visit her social worker, Julia Lang, at the Downtown Streets Team office to get the form that allowed her to go to an even better food bank. She asked the receptionist whether her social worker was in. She wasn’t, and Suzan explained she was looking for the food bank vouchers. Then the receptionist asked for her address. That stopped Suzan. The receptionist explained that the pantry was for Palo Alto residents, and Suzan was considering, for the first time, whether that counted her. Suzan explained that she and her husband had gone to the pantry the year before, and said they should be in the system. We waited while the receptionist looked. Suzan waved at someone she’d seen around for years, from her car-dwelling days. Suzan told the receptionist, again, that they really should be in the system. But they weren’t. Suzan said that was OK, and she would come back. The receptionist said, “Are you sure? I just need your ID and your address.” Suzan demurred. She needed to talk to her social worker. This is what it meant to have to leave her hometown. She was leaving the city where she and James had known people, the city where James had died, the city where she’d grown up and near where she’d raised her own daughter. It was the city where she knew where to go, where she’d figured out how to be homeless. It was the city where she knew the drill.


That homelessness persists in Silicon Valley has puzzled me. It has an extremely wealthy population with liberal, altruistic values. Though it has a large homeless population relative to its size, in sheer numbers it’s not as large as New York City’s or L.A.’s. Some of the reasons could be found in the meeting on November 17, 2014, when the city finally overturned the car-camping ban. It had never been enforced because, as predicted, the Ninth Circuit had overturned L.A.’s ban. In the end, all but one person who’d voted for the ban the first time around voted to overturn it. The lone dissenter was councilman Larry Klein. “The social welfare agency in our area is the county, not the city,” he said. “To think we can solve the homeless problem just doesn’t make sense.”

This idea was repeated many times among city officials—that homelessness was too big an issue for the city to resolve. The city of Palo Alto itself has one full-time staff member devoted to homelessness, and it coordinates with county and nonprofit networks to counsel, house, and feed the homeless.

imageSuzan shows where she stored food in her car while homeless.

During the fight over the ban, the city tried to devise an alternative—a program that would allow car dwellers to park at churches—but then left the details up to the faith community to work out. Nick Selby, an attorney and member of the Palo Alto Friends Meeting House, said he and his fellow Quakers met with community resistance when they tried to accommodate three or four car dwellers on their tiny lot. Neighbors circulated a petition listing concerns like “the high prevalence of mental illness, drug abuse, and communicable diseases in the homeless population” and the risk of declining property values. But Selby said some of their concerns were fair. “People who objected were saying to the city, ‘What’s your program?’” Selby said. “And the city really had no answer to those questions.” Without a solid plan and logistical help from the city, other churches were reluctant to step forward. “The churches weren’t prepared to deal with this,” he said. After the church car-camping plan fell through, the city council said it had no choice but a ban.

Santa Clara County, too, struggles to address the problem. The county is participating in federal programs to build permanent supportive housing for the chronically homeless population, the population of long-term homeless who typically have interacting mental health and substance abuse problems. But land is expensive here, and the area is shortchanged by the federal formula that disperses funds. California, ever in budget-crisis mode, provides limited state funds. There isn’t a dedicated funding stream from the cities, which don’t necessarily pay a tax to the county for these projects, and local affordable housing developments are often rejected by residents as Palo Alto’s was. In September, the city of San Jose and the county announced a $13 million program to buy old hotels and renovate them as shelters, which will make 585 new beds available. While advocates credit the county’s efforts with cutting the estimated homeless population by 14 percent since 2013, the number of people like Suzan, who hide in their cars, is almost certainly underestimated. But most such efforts are centered in San Jose. Chris Richardson, a director of the Bay Area’s Downtown Streets Team, said what needs to happen is not a mystery: Other cities have to fund affordable housing, they have to fund more of it, and they have to do it in their own neighborhoods, without relying on San Francisco and San Jose to absorb all of the area’s poverty and problems. “You can’t just ship them down to the big, poor city,” he said.

When Palo Alto originally passed the car-camping ban, it also devoted $250,000 to the county’s homelessness program. When they voted to rescind the ban, council members asked for an update on what happened to the money. The city staff was not prepared to report on how it had been spent at that council meeting, more than a year into the funding. Members of the council again reiterated their desire to help the homeless. “Helping the homeless” was tabled, as a general idea, for another agenda at another meeting, as it always seems to be, or passed off to the county, or to someone elseand so helping the homeless is something nobody does.


Through the winter, Suzan remained ill; it was a bad flu season. She kept paying the rent on her room, on her storage units, on her P.O. box in Palo Alto, and she tried setting aside money she owed on parking tickets. Some months she’d run out of gas money to drive the 15 miles to Palo Alto and check her mail or visit her social workers. She was waiting to hear about the affordable apartment.

In May, she was denied. Suzan had bad credit, both because of the unpaid storage unit she and James had lost and because otherwise her credit history was so thin. Julia Lang, one of her social workers, told me she couldn’t even get a credit score for Suzan. Lang said people get denied on credit, or because they make too little for affordable housing that’s supposedly intended for extremely low-income people, all the time. “When you’re that destitute and have gone through so many complicated situations, what are the chances that your credit’s going to be good?” she said.

Suzan was livid and despondent, and she decided to appeal. “I wasn’t going to take that lying down,” Suzan told me. “I was proud of myself.” Catholic Charities helped her appeal. Suzan had to write a letter showing how she intended to repair her credit, and that she understood why it was bad in the first place. During the months of back and forth, Suzan bought a new Jeep, only one year newer than the Explorer, in case she needed to sleep in her car again. In July, she learned she’d won her appeal. She had two weeks to get her affairs in order, pay the first month’s rent and security deposit, and move in. Her social workers helped her with some of the move-in costs, and she signed a lease for a year.

I saw Suzan again in August, about three weeks after she’d moved in. Her hair was trimmed. She was wearing a brightly colored muumuu, blue and green with tropical flowers“It’s a housedress but you can wear it out on the street!”and a green sweater tied around her shoulders. She seemed relaxed and rested, and I told her so. Her bed was full of folded clothes, and her room was still in disarray. She was trying to cull her storage unit so that she could get a smaller one and cut down on rent. Most of the people in her complex had been in the same boat as Suzan, or had been worse off. She pays $810 a month, the amount determined to be affordable for her income. It had taken her more than three years, help from at least three social workers, and thousands of dollars, but she was finally stably housed. At least, for a year. 

Friday, September 15, 2017

Beneteau First 50 - MySailing.com.au

Read article : Beneteau First 50 - MySailing.com.au

Beneteau's latest cruiser/racer is from super-yacht specialist Philippe Briand, by Vanessa Dudley.

FIRST of all, it's not a Farr boat. French boat builder Beneteau has had a golden run with its First line of production cruiser/racers bearing the Farr Yacht Design name, most notably with the First 40.7 and more recently the 47.7, 44.7 and 36.7.
For its new First 50-footer, however, Beneteau turned to Philippe Briand, the French naval architect whose focus in recent years has been on super-maxis like the 140ft Mari Cha IV. Briand advances the proposition that "the primary function of a yacht is to be aesthetic. Her owner has to be proud of her?.

"Philippe Briand was brought onboard to produce a beautiful boat," says John Cowpe of the Australian Beneteau importer, Vicsail. While smaller First models like the 44.7 and 34.7 have been aimed at IRC racing, the new First 50 has a different primary focus, Cowpe says. "It's a sports cruiser, a boat you would race in Premier Cruising division rather than against the IRC class boats like the Cookson 50s."

The result is a stylish and well-proportioned yacht which has some interesting signature features like the "eyebrows" (or eyelids) over the side windows in the coach house (giving the boat a distinctive look, while also providing protection so the windows can be left open while sailing in moderate conditions), and the long bank of green tinted skylight hatches along the centreline both ahead and behind the mast.

It is a much sleeker craft than Beneteau's other current model 50 in the Oceanis cruising range.

In fact it probably has more in common with semi-custom craft such as the Marten 49 in the modern performance/sports cruiser category. With its carbon composite construction the Marten offers higher performance, but at a considerably higher price.

The first boat to arrive in Australia is Playstation 3, for Sydney yachtsman Dean Harrigan, stepping towards a more performance oriented boat from his previous Beneteau 53f5 Big Kahuna, and Greg Hargraves.

Playstation 3 attracted a great deal of interest at the Sydney International Boat Show in August before whisking away for the delivery north to the Audi Hamilton Island Race Week, where it was to compete in the Premier IRC division.

By the time this review is published, there will be racing results on the board for the new boat, which at the time of writing did not yet have an IRC rating.

Rig and deck layout

Playstation 3 is fitted with a black-painted aluminium mast produced by Sparcraft; keel-stepped and tapered with triple aft-swept (20 degree) spreaders. A slightly taller carbon mast, weighing roughly 100kg less, is a more expensive option. The large section aluminium boom is also from Sparcraft.

"A lot has been learned from racing boats to produce a simple boat that works," says John Cowpe. The mainsheet trims on an electric-powered winch on a central island base with no traveller, relying on vang sheeting. There are Navtec hydraulic controls for the vang and the backstay.

Harken winches are used with a 53.2 self-tailer for the main, 60.2 self-tailers for the primaries and four 48.2s on the coach house for the halyards and control lines.

Standard running rigging includes Dyneema halyards and control lines leading back to jammers on the coach roof within reach of the cockpit. Where possible lines are recessed into the deck to provide less cluttered space.
The headsail has a fixed genoa furler under the foredeck. The anchor locker houses a tilting bow roller fitting for the 24kg Delta anchor. A hydraulic ram controls anchor launching on the pivoting arm, which turns through 180 degrees, and there is a 12 volt 1500 watt electric windlass. A separate sail locker with its own access hatch is also located at the bow.
The electronic instruments on Playstation 3 are from B&G, which also supplied an autopilot. This makes the steering a little heavier than would otherwise be the case, but will be a boon for deliveries and cruising.

The standard boat comes with teak cockpit seats, but Playstation 3 was also given a full teak decking job by Vicsail's after-sales team. This added an estimated 80-110kg of weight; "one big guy spread across the whole boat, so it?s not a big issue," says John Cowpe.

The two steering wheels are 900mm diameter painted aluminium. The transom folds down by simply releasing a barrel bolt to provide a boarding and swim platform. The aft section of the cockpit houses a large locker for the life raft or tender, safety gear, etc, and there is a lot more storage in the cockpit seat lockers.

Playstation 3 is set up with a cockpit lighting system of blue LEDs on the boom in front of the mainsheet so "doing a race like the Pittwater to Coffs, the crew can see without blinding the helm," says John Cowpe.

Below decks

The First 50 interior is very much in keeping with the latest styling across the major production yacht builders, including the use of light oak coloured timber, open floor spaces and those raised, square hand basins which are everywhere these days.

The first time I saw this styling ? Japanese influenced to my eye ? was on the German Hanse range, although I'm not sure if that's where it originated.

Stepping down the companionway brings you into a large, light and airy saloon, with a lot of headroom (1.95 to 2.01m) in spite of the relatively low-slung proportions of the coach roof.

The row of green tinted hatches in the centre of the coach roof can be sealed off with blinds and provides a healthy amount of light. According to Beneteau there are in fact 24 opening ports and hatches when you count up all the Lewmar windows with their anodised aluminium frames and include the sliding companionway hatch.

Halogen lighting and articulating reading lamps are included in the standard fit out.

The layout provides three private double cabins, the forward cabin having an en suite bathroom with a separate shower stall, while the mirror-image aft cabins are served by a smaller bathroom on the port side of the companionway. The forward toilet has an 80lt holding tank.

The two aft cabins have innovative soft fabric zip-up hanging lockers on stainless steel frames, while the front cabin has a more conventional full height locker. There is plenty of attention to detail throughout this craft, such as the internal light which comes on automatically when you open this forward locker.

Other details include a dedicated holding area for the stormboards behind the companionway steps, and drawers within drawers in the galley, which is on the starboard side at the aft end of the saloon.

The galley facilities include a 60lt top-opening icebox with a 12 volt evaporative cooling system, plus there is a 100lt fridge, as well as an LP gas oven and stove and quite a lot of storage compartments and bench space.

The L-shaped settee on the port side flanks a timber table on stainless steel legs, while there are two more removable/reversible seats on the centreline. Opposite to starboard is another settee, while outboard on both sides are banks of cupboards with upward opening doors.

Aft of the dining area is a generously sized navigation station with swivel chair, chart table, electrics panel and space to mount nav instruments, radios, etc. An aft-facing desk area can accommodate a laptop computer. The radio/CD/MP3 player is included in the standard equipment list with two saloons and two outside speakers.

Instead of having large floorboards which can be difficult to manage, the First 50 has small laminated timber squares which are lifted individually using a suction cap. This allows access to the bilge and inclusions such as the wine rack housed under the floorboards adjacent to the front of the galley.

The Yanmar 55hp engine under the companionway has an 80Amp alternator attached and a 40Amp battery charger. The 12 volt batteries include a 110 Amp engine starting battery plus two 140 Amp house batteries and there is 220V shore supply with a circuit breaker, and seven 220 volt sockets around the cabins.

Performance

By the time this test is published, Playstation 3 will have some runs on the board from the Audi Hamilton Island Race Week. We did not race the boat, but sailed her in a 5-12kt westerly breeze on Sydney Harbour in flat water.
She is a big, powerful performer, with the T-profile torpedo bulb keel providing a reassuring amount of righting moment when pressed.

In bumpy water you would not expect her to equal the performance of boats like the carbon hulled Marten 49, but her IRC rating should reflect that difference, and in flat water she achieved impressive numbers upwind and reaching without using her new suit of Norths 3DL sails or a spinnaker, which will be flown conventionally from a pole rather than a bowsprit.

Beneteau clearly sees a future in the sports/performance cruiser concept, as the company will release a First 45, also designed by Philippe Briand and similar to the 50 with stylish lines, twin wheels and an open transom, at this year's Paris Boat Show in December.

Specifications

Length overall ... .. .. 14.98m
Waterline length ... ... .. 14.65m
Beam ... ... ... 4.37m
Draft (deep draft option)... 2.80m
Displacement ... ... ... 13,780kg
Ballast ... .. ... 4300kg
Sail area:
Mainsail.............. 68.60sq m
Genoa.............. 70.10sq m
Spinnaker.......... 160sq m
Construction: Solid GRP hull, reinforced by longitudinals and local reinforcements in high load areas, with structural inner hull and deck mouldings bonded and laminated into place. Infusion moulded deck of sandwich GRP/balsa/polyester resin. Mixed lead/cast iron keel with lead and antimony bulb and hollow keel fin, fixed to the hull using stainless steel bolts and backing plates. Composite rudder of GRP/foam with rudder stock of biaxial and unidirectional cloth.
Fuel capacity......................237lt
Water capacity....................................568lt
Engine..........................................Yanmar 75hp marine diesel sail drive with three-bladed folding propeller
Base price: $756,000 ex sails & instruments; $925,000 as tested
Designer: Philippe Briand
Builder: Chantiers Beneteau, Saint-Hilaire-de-Riez, France, www.beneteau.com.
Australian distributor: Vicsail, Rushcutters Bay, NSW. Tel (02) 9327 2088; or visit www.vicsail.com 

Tuesday, December 5, 2017

30 Magnificent Large Cottages to Rent for Your Next Big Group Holiday

Read article : 30 Magnificent Large Cottages to Rent for Your Next Big Group Holiday
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If you are planning a trip away with a group of friends and family there are many large cottages to rent around the UK. Whether this is a birthday gathering, family reunion, corporate event or wedding celebration, there are large and luxurious properties available in the most beautiful parts of the UK. Depending on the type of break you are looking for, there is holiday accommodation for your taste, group size and budget. Find properties with indoor pools, sea views, lakes and stunning outdoor opportunities.

Discover a list of large cottages to rent in some of the most scenic areas of the UK.  Browse and book today at affordable prices. The bigger your group the more your can save per person (and the bigger your accommodation). Make your next holiday the one that will be talked about for years to come!

Find large cottages to rent around the UK. Book your holiday house today!" src="https://i0.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/large-cottages-to-rent.jpg?resize=480%2C320" alt="Find large cottages to rent around the UK. Book your holiday house today!" />Find large cottages to rent around the UK. Book your holiday house today!

For a quick look at the large cottages to rent that we’ll be discussing below, here’s the full list:

  • Aarons, Okehampton, Devon
  • The Moors House, Okehampton, Devon
  • Scarlet Pimpernel, Colchester, Suffolk
  • Chubbs Farm, Axminster, Devon
  • Redgate Farm, Axminster, Devon
  • Apple Mill, Sidmouth, Devon
  • Blencowe Hall, near Greystoke, Cumbria
  • Hause Hall Farm & Cruik Barn, Martindale, Cumbria
  • Waternook, The Lake District, Cumbria
  • New Lodge, near Penrith, Cumbria
  • Kirkbride Hall, Penrith, Cumbria
  • Glassonby Old Hall, Glassonby, Cumbria
  • Cazenovia Hall, near Greystoke, Cumbria
  • The Normans, Wells-next-the-Sea, Norfolk
  • Long Barn, Norfolk
  • The Oaks, All Stretton, Shropshire
  • Lletty & Annexe, Colwyn Bay, Conwy
  • The Old Post Office, Liss, Hampshire
  • Oat Hill Farmhouse, Broadway, Cotswolds
  • The Manor House, Stroud, Cotswolds
  • White Willow Lodge, near Lechlade, Cotswolds
  • August House, near Northleach, Cotswolds
  • Barnhouse, near Lechlade, Cotswolds
  • Forthampton Court, Tewkesbury, Cotswolds
  • Lower Farmhouse, Moreton-in-Marsh, Cotswolds
  • Bellhouse, near Nympsfield, Cotswolds
  • Hunter Court, Oxfordshire, Cotswolds
  • Furlong Barn, Southam, Warwickshire
  • Ivy House & Reading Room, near Ashbourne, Derbyshire
  • Hillside Farm, Whitby, Yorkshire

Looking for a large cottage to rent in a particular UK region? Select from the the list of locations below to find a cottage for your large group.

1. Aarons

Book Aarons today

Aarons, Whiddon Down, OkehamptonAarons, Whiddon Down, OkehamptonAarons, Whiddon Down, Okehampton, First FloorFirst floor of Aarons, Whiddon Down

Whiddon Down, Okehampton, Devon (DV166)
Sleeps: 8 guests
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 3 (an en-suite bathroom, family bathroom and shower room)
About the property: Aarons is a beautiful light and airy barn conversion in a small hamlet, based in Dartmoor National Park.
About the location: This property is perfect for exploration in Devon and Cornwall. The A30 is only a short drive away.

Layout:
The ground floor includes:

  • A large hall
  • Utility room with washing machine and dryer
  • Shower room with wc
  • Double bedroom with 5’ bed and en-suite bathroom
  • Twin bedroom with 3’ beds
  • Another twin bedroom with 3’ zip and links (which can convert to 6’ double)

The first floor:

  • Double bedroom with 5’ bed
  • Bathroom
  • Kitchen
  • Large sitting/ dining room with French windows onto a large patio

House rules:

  • Pets not allowed
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Minimum stay two nights
  • Kid-friendly
  • Baby-friendly

Key features & amenities:

  • Wood burning stove
  • Enclosed garden with garden furniture and barbecue
  • Off street parking (three vehicles)
  • Wi-Fi
  • Pub nearby
  • Great size for groups and families

Additional features:

  • Electric double oven with halogen hob, larder fridge, freezer, microwave and dishwasher
  • Utility room including washing machine and tumble dryer
  • Smart TV with Freeview, DVD/CD player
  • Mobile telephone
  • Two travel cots and two high chairs (upon request)
  • Children’s table and chairs, toy box & outdoor toddler toys
  • Garage available to store things (bikes & equipment)

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Cycling
  • Fishing
  • Golf
  • My personal sanctuary spa
  • Walking

Nearby attractions:

  • Changford: 2.5 miles away. Here you can find great shops, pubs restaurants and the famous Gidleigh Park Hotel (two Michelin Stars).
  • National Trust’s Castle Drogo, Drewsteignton: You can see this from the house. This is an early 20th Century Castle.
  • Exmouth: 30 minute drive away. This is Devon’s oldest seaside town and has two miles of sandy beaches. Not to mention, is a world Heritage site.
  • Coasts both north and south in easy reach
  • Museum of Dartmoor Life, Okehamptom: Located next to the Tourist Information Centre
  • Dartmoor Letterboxing: Dartmoor is known for it’s hidden letterboxes. This is a great activity where participants search the Tors and valleys for hidden treasure, following clues or looking under rocks.
  • Surfing beaches of North Cornwall and Devon
  • Exeter: 18 miles from the property. Devon’s capital city and home to Exeter Cathedral
  • High Moorland Visitors Centre, Princeton: Here you can find information on where to go and insight into Dartmoor.

Price: lowest price from £425

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2. The Moors House

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The Moors House, South Zeal, Okehampton, DevonThe Moors House, South Zeal, Okehampton, DevonThe Moors House, South Zeal, Okehampton, Devon, Ground FloorGround floor of The Moors House in Okenhampton

South Zeal, Okehampton, Devon (DV134)
Sleeps: 10 guests
Bedrooms: 5
Bathrooms: 3 en-suite shower rooms and 2 family bathrooms
About the property: This is an 18th century self catering holiday longhouse. The Moors House is located in the village of South Zeal, on the northern part of the Dartmoor National Park, Devon.

Layout:

Ground floor:

Stairs to reading area leading to five bedrooms:

  • Two double bedrooms with 6’ zip and link beds (can convert to 3’ twin beds upon request). Both rooms have TV/DVD
  • One bedroom with 5’ bed with TV/DVD
  • Two more bedrooms with 5’ beds.
  • Three en-suite shower rooms, one bathroom with a bath and shower over bath, one bathroom with separate shower.

About the location: The house is a short walk to the Devonshire village of South Zeal. Here you can find two friendly pubs serving food, a store and a coffee shop. This is the perfect location for outdoor exploration as Dartmoor National Park and the Tarka Trail are at your doorstep. The home is also only four miles east from the town of Okehampton.

House rules:

  • Pets not allowed
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Minimum stay three nights
  • Kid-friendly
  • Baby-friendly

Key features & amenities:

  • Log burner/ open fire
  • Fully enclosed garden
  • Parking for five vehicles
  • There are steps down to the house
  • WiFi
  • Pub nearby
  • Great size for groups and families

Additional features:

  • Thatched roof and exposed beams
  • Electric range cooker with gas hob, microwave, dishwasher, larder fridge, separate small freezer
  • Washing machine and dryer
  • Two TVs, two DVDs and DAB radio with docking station.
  • Three bedrooms with TVs and DVDs
  • Cot and high chair (available on request)
  • Garden furniture and gas barbecue
  • My Personal Sanctuary service

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Cycling
  • Fishing
  • Golf
  • My Personal Sanctuary Spa
  • Walking

Nearby attractions:

  • Exeter: 15 miles west. Property is easily accessible from Exeter St Davids, Exeter Airport and the A30/M5
  • Roadford Lake for sailing and angling (20 minutes away)
  • Beaches are a 30 minutes’ drive away.
  • The Eden Project: One hour from the property.
  • Numerous golf courses in the area
  • Two riding stables within five miles

Price: lowest price from £518 (for 7 nights)

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3. Scarlet Pimpernel

Book Scarlet Pimpernel now
Scarlet Pimpernel, Stoke by Nayland, ColchesterScarlet Pimpernel, Stoke by Nayland, ColchesterViews from lodges at Scarlet Pimpernel, Stoke by Nayland, ColchesterViews from lodges at Scarlet Pimpernel, Stoke by Nayland, Colchester

Stoke by Nayland, Colchester, Suffolk (SU061)
Sleeps: 8
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 4
About the property: This is a combination of lodges Scarlet and Pimpernel that together accommodate eight guests.

Layout:

Scarlett:

  • Open plan kitchen
  • Dining and sitting room
  • Two twin bedrooms with 3’ zip and link beds (can be made into double). Both have en-suite bathrooms.

Pimpernell:

  • Open plan kitchen
  • Dining and sitting room
  • Two twin bedrooms with 3’ zip and link beds (can be made into double). Both with en-suite bathrooms.

About the location: Scarlet Pimpernel is located in the peaceful Constable Country, which is near Stoke by Nayland in Suffolk. This is the perfect place for a family and friends’ reunion and golf or spa breaks.

House rules:

  • Pets not allowed
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Minimum of two night stay
  • Kid-friendly
  • Baby-friendly

Key features & amenities:

  • Wooden balconies
  • Onsite parking
  • Welcome hamper provided
  • WiFi

Additional features:

  • Lodge Porter on call 24/7 to transport guests to and from the spa/golf/dining facilities
  • House Chef available to prepare a bespoke menu at the lodge
  • Complimentary access to indoor heated swimming pool, sanarium, steam room, jacuzzi and technogym
  • Onsite spa and two championship golf courses (additional charges)
  • Onsite two AA restaurant, bars, clubhouse restaurant, gift and golf shops, squash court, pool, fishing, covered driving range and professional golf lessons (charges will apply)
  • Underfloor heating throughout
  • Electric oven and four ring induction hob, microwave, dishwasher, fridge and freezer
  • Flatscreen TV, Blu-Ray DVD player, surround sound in the sitting room and iPod docking station
  • Travel cot and high chair available on request (may be addition charges)

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Fishing
  • Golfing
  • Swimming
  • Walking

Nearby attractions:

  • Colchester Castle: a complete Normal castle and grade II listed building
  • Colchester Zoo: with over 260 rare species (may part of breeding programmes)
  • Lavenham: known as “the most complete medieval town in Britain” with a fine collection of medieval and Tudor architecture
  • Constable’s Dedham: where Britain’s greatest landscape artist went to school
  • Flatford Mill: grade I listed watermill on the Rier Stour built in 1733 that is most famous for being painted by artist John Constable in 1816
  • The Beth Chatto Gardens
  • Antique shops
  • Kentwood Hall in Long Melford: romantic moated Tudor mansion with extensive gardens and rare breed farm

Price: lowest price from £866 (for seven nights)

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4. Chubbs Farm

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Chubbs Farm, Axminster, DevonChubbs Farm, Axminster, DevonGround floor of Chubbs Farm in DevonGround floor of Chubbs Farm in Devon

Axminster, Devon (DV083)
Sleeps: 12
Bedrooms: 6
Bathrooms: 3 (one shower room, one en-suite bathroom and one family bathroom)
About the property: This property used to be part of a farm set and is detached and thatched. This house accommodates 12 guests and is situated at the end of a track within 10 acres with views down to and across the Axe Valley. The recent refurbishment to the property combines the original features with a more contemporary design.

Layout:

Split level ground floor:

  • Large entrance hall
  • Children’s snug with TV & video
  • Sitting room
  • Five steps down to the dining room
  • Large farmhouse kitchen with breakfast table, utility room
  • Large shower room with WC
  • Boot room
  • Double bedroom with a 5’ bed
  • Twin bedroom with 3’ beds
  • Bathroom with WC and small sitting area
  • Galleried stairs to first floor

First floor:

  • Master bedroom with 6’ bed, balcony and en-suite bathroom with shower over the bath
  • Small queen-size double bedroom
  • Two twin bedrooms with 3’ beds
  • Bathroom

About the location: Chubbs Farm is set in a quiet and rural position, only two miles from Axminster. The property is a 10 minute drive from Lyme Regis, the regency resort. You can enjoy a day at the beach or go fossil hunting on the nearby cliffs.

House rules:

  • Smoking not allowed
  • Pets not allowed
  • Minimum three night stay
  • Kid-friendly
  • Suitable for children under 5 years

Key features & amenities:

Additional features:

  • Thatched roof
  • Hall with slate floor and rest of property has rugs/ oak floors
  • French doors from kitchen onto a patio
  • Double electric range oven, microwave, fridge, freezer, dishwasher, washing machine, tumble dryer
  • Additional fridge/freezer in utility room
  • Flat-screen digital TV, video, DVD, stereo with iPod docking station
  • Three travel cots and two highchairs (available on request)
  • Gas barbecue available
  • Private water supply

Activities & things-to-do:

Nearby attractions:

  • Close to a local beach
  • Many lovely walks through nearby fields
  • The nearest town is Axminster with a pub, shops, cafes and restaurants
  • Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall’s River Cottage Canteen and Deli is in Axminster
  • Nearby towns include: Salcombe, Seaton, Beer and Sidmouth

Price: lowest price from £833 (for seven nights)

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5. Redgate Farm

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Redgate Farm, Shute, Axminster, DevonRedgate Farm, Shute, Axminster, DevonGround floor of Redgate Farm in Shute, DevonGround floor of Redgate Farm in Shute, Devon

Shute, Axminster, Devon (DV145)
Sleeps: 10
Bedrooms: 6 (two in the annex)
Bathrooms: 3 (one family bathroom, one en-suite bathroom and one shower room)
About the property: Located in the peaceful village of Shute, Redgate Farm is a thatched, 17th century, Grade II listed farmhouse. The property has a beautiful garden and views over the surrounding farmland.

Layout:

Ground floor:

  • Utility and boot room
  • Kitchen with doors to breakfast room/ conservatory
  • Sitting room with wood burning stove dining room
  • Study/TV room

First floor:

  • Double bedroom with zip and link beds (can convert to two singles)
  • Two single bedrooms with 3’ beds
  • Family bathroom
  • Double bedroom with 6’ bed and en-suite bathroom with separate shower

Annexe with first floor accommodation:

  • Double bedroom with zip and link beds (can convert to two single beds)
  • Twin bedroom (access via the double bedroom)
  • Shower room (access via the double bedroom)
  • Annex attached to the main house (step into a lobby to access the annex)

About the location: Redgate Farm is located in the charming village of Shute, located between Honiton (seven miles) and Axminster (four miles). The National Trust property of Shute Barton is at the centre and Redgate Farm was originally part of the Shute Estate. The surrounding countryside offers you the opportunity to enjoy walks in the local area.

Also, there are two local pubs only a five minute drive away from Kilmington which serve good food. The nearest shops can be found in Colyton, a six minute drive away.

House rules:

  • Smoking not permitted
  • Minimum of three night stay
  • Pet friendly
  • Child friendly
  • Baby friendly

Key features & amenities:

Additional features:

  • Property set in six acres of grounds
  • Oil-fired central heating, electric storage heaters in the annex, gas fire in the TV room
  • Range cooker with gas hob, fridge/freezer, dishwasher, washing machine, tumble dryer
  • TV, CD/radio, DVD player.
  • Travel cot and high chair (available on request)
  • Steps between some of the rooms
  • Games barn with table tennis, table football and darts board
  • Garden leading to croquet lawn
  • Paddock for ball games
  • Covered Bothy for outside entertaining
  • No barbecues permitted due to thatch

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Games room
  • Walking
  • Fishing

Nearby attractions:

  • Lyme Regis, a lovely seaside resort is within easy reach of this property
  • The town of Axminster where you can visit one of the River Cottage Canteen for a delicious breakfast, lunch or dinner
  • Nearest beaches at Branscombe (eight miles) or Beer (seven and a half miles)

Price: lowest price from £83

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6. Apple Mill

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Apple Mill, Venn Ottery, Sidmouth, DevonApple Mill, Venn Ottery, Sidmouth, DevonGround floor kitchen at Apple Mill in Venn OtteryGround floor kitchen at Apple Mill in Venn Ottery

Venn Ottery, Sidmouth, Devon (DV060)
Sleeps: 8
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 3
About the property: Apple Mill is a Grade II listed property and can be accessed via its own driveway. The property has its own secluded, private garden with hot tub and courtyard.

Layout:

Ground floor:

First floor:

  • Double bedroom with a 5’ bed and en-suite shower room
  • Master bedroom with a king-size 5’ bateau lit (sleigh) bed and en-suite bathroom with a roll top bath and separate shower

About the location: This property is located in the stunning Devon countryside. Apple Mill is only four miles from Sidmouth in a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty near the Jurassic Coast, the UK’s only natural World Heritage Site. It is also near to Venn Ottery Common and the Otter Valley, which are perfect for Devon countryside walks.

The Woodbury Park Golf and Leisure Club is only 10 minutes from Apple Mill (enjoy free complimentary membership during your stay). The facilities include an 18-hole championship golf course, a nine hole golf course, driving range, indoor swimming pool with Jacuzzi, sauna, gym, squash courts, tennis courts, beauty therapist and two restaurants. Green fees, court fees and beauty treatments not included.

House rules:

  • Smoking not permitted
  • Pets not permitted
  • Minimum of three night stay
  • Kid-friendly

Key features & amenities:

Additional features:

  • Electric range cooker with gas hob, microwave, fridge/freezer, dishwasher, washing machine
  • Freeview Sky TV, further TV in master bedroom. Video, DVD & radio/cassette/CD player
  • Telephone (available on request)
  • Travel cot (available on request)
  • Gas barbecue and patio furniture
  • Private water supply
  • Two adult bikes (available on request)
  • Dinner delivery service from Tasmin Lear at Wild Thyme
  • Free complimentary membership to Woodbury Park Golf and Leisure Club

Activities & things-to-do:

Nearby attractions:

  • You can visit many of the local National Trust houses, gardens or castles in the area
  • For a family day out, you can visit an adventure park, farms or steam railways which are within easy reach of the cottage
  • There are many wonderful beaches nearby at Sidmouth, Budleigh Salterton, Beer, Branscombe and Exmouth

Price: lowest price from £553

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7. Blencowe Hall

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Blencowe Hall in CumbriaBlencowe Hall in CumbriaSitting area at Blencowe Hall, CumbriaSitting area at Blencowe Hall, Cumbria

Blencowe, near Greystoke, Cumbria (CU037)
Sleeps: 24
Bedrooms: 12
Bathrooms:13
About the property: This is a multi award-winning Grade I listed, fortified manor dating back to the 1400s. It has undergone extensive renovations, bringing the two towers into use for the first time in more than 300 years.
Blencowe Hall has won the following awards: English Heritage Construction Conservation Award, Eden District Design Award, the NWDA Conservation Award and the RICS National Conservation Award. Visit England has also awarded it 5 stars.
About the location: Blencowe Hall is located on a bluff above the river Petteril and is surrounded by gardens, grounds and fields with access to the river. Views extend to the nearby Lakeland fells and across the rolling Eden Valley fields.
The property is on the edge of the Lake District (only four miles from Lake District National Park and seven miles from Lake Ullswater. Also nearby is Aira Force National Trust waterfall, perfect stream to paddle in. There is also a tea shop and scenic walk up to the peak of Gowbarrow Fell.

House rules:

  • Smoking not allowed
  • Pets allowed
  • Kid-friendly
  • Minimum three night stay

Key features & amenities:

  • Two open fires
  • Lawned garden with patio
  • Onsite parking
  • Up to two dogs welcome (small fee)

Additional features:

  • Oak panelling and beams
  • Ancient masonry walls and doorways
  • Spiral stone staircases
  • Ancient carde robes
  • Juliette balconies
  • Four poster beds
  • Wood chip central heating, the Billiards Room has a gas fired open fronted cast stove
  • Four door oven gas Aga, a separate Bosch hob, Bosch electric oven. Two refrigerators, microwave, two dishwashers
  • Washing machine and tumble dryer
  • Utility area with second sink, storage and cloakroom
  • LCD TV, DVD player, iPod docking system
  • Telephone
  • Catering service available
  • Barbeque with charcoal provided and outdoor furniture
  • Bicycles may be rented

Activities & things-to-do:

Nearby attractions:

Price: lowest price from £3065

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8. Hause Hall Farm & Cruik Barn

Hause Hall, Hallin Fell, Martindate, CumbriaHause Hall, Hallin Fell, Martindate, CumbriaGround floor at Hause Hall in CumbriaGround floor at Hause Hall in Cumbria

Hallin Fell, Martindale, Cumbria (CU050)
Sleeps: 14 (option to for 18 guests if you book The Stables as well)
Bedrooms: 7
Bathrooms: 7
About the property: Hause Hall Farmhouse and the Cruik Barn offers you 5 star rated accommodation in the Lake District National Park close to Lake Ullswater.
The farmstead extends several traditional lakeland stone buildings. This includes Grade II listed five bedroom, five bathroom farmhouse and the adjoining two bedroom, two bathroom Cruik Barn. These are linked across a traditional paved stone terraces along with The Stables. The Hause Hall Farmhouse can also be booked with The Stables to sleep 18 guests.
About the location: The property, Hause Hall Farm and its two adjoining cottage, is located part way up Hallin Fell at the south end of Ullswater in Martindale. Enjoy spectacular views over the fells and up into the hidden valleys of this secluded area of the Lake District.
The property is a short distance from the Howtown Hotel and its Walkers Bar, open to non residents from April to November. Also, only one mile away on the footbath is the Michelin starred Sharrow Bay Hotel. The Cruik Barn and Stables are never let independently to value your privacy during your stay at Hause Hall Farm.

House rules:

  • Kid-friendly
  • Pets allowed
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Minimum three night stay

Key features & amenities:

Additional features:

  • Spectacular views over the fells and up into the hidden valleys
  • Cycle storage

Hause Hall:

  • Central heating provided by ground source heat pump with underfloor heating downstairs and radiators in bedrooms
  • Gas fired four-oven Aga and separate gas hob with an electric oven. Microwave, fridge, fridge/freezer, dishwasher, washing machine, tumble dryer
  • LCD TV, DVD iPod dock
  • Telephone
  • Catering service available
  • Travel cot, highchair and stair gate (available on request)
  • Garden furniture and Weber barbecue

Cruick Barn:

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Cycling
  • Fishing
  • Golfing
  • Walking

Nearby attractions:

  • The property is only a short walk away from the Howtown Hotel and the Walkers Bar (open to non residents April to November)
  • One mile up the country lane or footpath is the Michelin starred Sharrow Bay Hotel
  • Ullswater Cruises provides two hour cruises and short trips on a daily basis
  • Derwentwater Marina is close to Keswick offering the opportunity for windsurfing, canoeing, rock climbing courses, boats for hire and sailing
  • Nearby historic houses: Dalemain House and Gardens, Acorn Bank Garden and Watermill, Hutton-in-the-Forest and Appleby Castle

Price for Hause Hall Farm & Cruick Barn– sleeps 14 guests: lowest price from £1790 (Book here)

Price for Hause Hall, Cruick and The Stables– sleeps 18 guests: lowest price from £2,092 (Book here)

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Image: The Rowley Estates, Holiday Cottages

9. Waternook

Waternook, Ullswater, The Lake DistrictWaternook, Ullswater, The Lake DistrictLake view from Waternook in CumbriaLake view from Waternook in Cumbria

Ullswater, The Lake District, Cumbria (CU060)
Sleeps: 12 (option for 20 guests if you book The Great Barn as well)
Bedrooms: 6 double bedrooms (all en-suite)
About the property: Set within 26 acres of private grounds and gardens, Waternook provides a secluded setting with views of lake and mountain. The property is located at the base of Hallin Fell and is complimented with half a mile of Ullswater lake with boathouse and private jetty.
The property has sleek and sophisticated interior styling, making it the perfect place for a special event, wedding or gathering with friends.
About the location: The Ullswater Valley lies in the the English Lake District and is a place that offers a great escape since it is relatively untouched by tourism. Ullswater is surrounded by beautiful Lakeland fells, perfect for walks. This is an adventure destination for the family or a romantic escape. Ullswater also offers a lot of exciting opportunities for thrill seekers looking for an adventure.

House rules:

Key features & amenities:

  • Half a mile of lake frontage
  • 26 acres of private estate grounds
  • Lake view
  • Terraced gardens with seating
  • Boathouse with private jetty
  • Infinity terrace with hot tub
  • Two dogs are welcome (small fee)
  • Onsite parking
  • Concierge services available

Additional features:

  • Stone and porcelain en-suite bathrooms with rain showers
  • Designer baths in two bedrooms
  • State of the art kitchen
  • Wood burning stove
  • Spa and wellness sanctuary
  • Lake view dining
  • Panoramic views of lake and mountains
  • Integrated music system and iPad control
  • TVs in all bedrooms
  • Barbecue terrace with equipment
  • Travel cot and highchair (available on request)
  • Dog beds (available on request)
  • Cinema with Sky movies and sports
  • Secure bike and canoe storage
  • Security gate entry system

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Jacuzzi/hot tub
  • Sauna
  • Cycling
  • Fishing
  • Walking

Nearby attractions:

  • Ullswater is the perfect destination for lakeshore walks. Hiking for the novice and more experienced mountaineers
  • Ullswater Lake: Known as one of England’s most beautiful lakes. You can take a Round the Lake Pass with Ullswater Steamers. You can hop on and off at different piers around the lake and explore at your own pace.
  • Lots of exciting outdoor activities: mountain biking, pony trekking, paragliding and sailing. Waternook’s concierge service can help you arrange these activities.
  • Historic houses like Dalemain and Hutton-in-the Forest: both beautiful properties with lovely gardens
  • Rheged Centre in nearby Penrith: This is an arts centre, cafe, cinema, farm shop and market selling local produce (with a grass covered roof).

Price for Waternook – sleeps 12 guests: lowest price from £4930 (book here)

Price for Waternook & The Great Barn – sleeps 20 guests: lowest price from £6886 (book here)

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Image: Last Minute Cottages,  lakelovers.co.uk

10. New Lodge

You can book New Lodge here
New Lodge, Watermillock, CumbriaNew Lodge, Watermillock, CumbriaFirst floor sitting area with views towards the lake at New Lodge in CumbriaFirst floor sitting area with views towards the lake at New Lodge in Cumbria

Watermillock, nr Penrith, Cumbria (CU056)
Sleeps: 8
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 2 (and a shower room)
About the property: New Lodge was originally the gatehouse for Leeming House, which dates back to the early 1900s. The property is located in a beautiful location with incredible views of Lake Ullswater.
This is a luxurious lakeside lodge which has a stunning architecturally designed extension. This incorporates large areas of glass allowing you to enjoy panoramic views of the Lake, Barton Fell and Haling Fell from different levels of the house. The house also has its own private shore line and a small jetty at the end of the lawn making it a wonderful location to enjoy the beautiful lakeside setting.

Layout:

First floor:

Second floor:

  • Generous landing area that leads to the master suite with 6’ bed
  • Large mezzanine master suite (lots of natural light and views with full floor to ceiling windows). Access a sofa and study area on the mezzanine balcony over the living space below. Walk in wardrobe leading to contemporary en-suite bathroom (free standing bath and shower).
  • Separate room with single bed, which is perfect for children. Through this room you can access a game/TV room with sofa and velux windows

Outside:

  • Access to the property is through a gated entrance onto a tarmaced drive with parking for up to five cars and hard standing for boats
  • The flagged patio leads to a large lawn, which extends down to the private lake shower and small jetty

About the location: This is the perfect position for exploring northern parts of the Lake District National Park. Right outside the property you can enjoy beautiful walks. There are also lots of opportunities for outdoor activities like cycling, horse riding, kayaking, fishing and sailing.

House rules:

  • Pets not allowed
  • Minimum three night stay
  • Kid-friendly

Key features & amenities:

Additional features:

  • Stunning panoramic views overlooking Lake Ullswater and surrounding fells
  • Floor to ceiling windows in the living area and master bedroom
  • Wooden beam vaulted ceilings in parts
  • Electric hob and oven, microwave, fridge freezer, dishwasher, washing machine and tumble dryer
  • Charcoal barbeque and garden furniture

Activities & things-to-do:

Nearby attractions:

Price: lowest price from £893

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“Never go on trips with anyone you do not love.” – Ernest Hemingway

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11. Kirkbride Hall

Book Kirkbride Hall today

Kirkbride Hall in the snow, Melmerby, CumbriaKirkbride Hall in the snow, Melmerby, Cumbriawood burning fire and double doors opening to the sanstone terraces and gardens" src="https://i1.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/kirkbride-hall-living-room-melmerby-nr-langwathby-penrith-cumbria.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="Kirkbride Hall living room with wood burning fire and double doors opening to the sanstone terraces and gardens" />Kirkbride Hall living room with wood burning fire and double doors opening to the sandstone terraces and gardens

Melmerby, near Langwathby, Penrith, Cumbria (CU054)
Sleeps: 8
Please note: Nearby properties can accommodate more guests – Melmerby hall (18 guests) and Stag Cottage (four guests).
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 4
About the property: Located in the Eden Valley near the Lake District National Park, Kirkbride Hall is a 5* rated property for up to eight guests. The property was completed in early 2015 and was designed to cater to all the comforts of a traditional Cumbrian cottage. This includes sandstone walls using stone sourced from within the estate, solid oak floors, antique furniture and a large welcoming wood burning stove in the sitting room.
The property is a sandstone terraced cottage situated in walled cherry and apple orchards of Melmerby Hall. The former orchard garden of Melmerby Hall is a beautiful setting for this property.
Kirkbride has open plan access and parking to the front, a large enclosed patio and garden to the rear. It is the perfect place to relax on a warm summer’s day with a lot of space for children to play safely on the property.
Since it is in on the grounds of Melmerby Hall (sleeps 18 guests) it is also a great opportunity for families that would like to be near each other but not in the same property. Stag Cottage is also nearby (sleeps four guests).
About the location:  Kirkbride is right next to the quiet and scenic churchyard of the Grade II listed St John’s Church in Melmerby. There is also private gated access to 20 acres of mixed woodland grounds of Melmerby Hall through an iron gate set into the orchard wall. These grounds include woodland paths, water meadows and a tributary to the River Eden.

House rules:

  • Pets allowed (three dogs)
  • Minimum three night stay
  • No hen or stag parties
  • Baby-friendly
  • Kid-friendly

Key features & amenities:

Additional features:

  • Oak flooring
  • Underfloor heating fired by an environmentally friendly wood chip boiler system
  • Electric oven and hob, microwave, dishwasher, fridge/freezer, washer and dryer
  • 42’ TV, DVD player, iPod docking system
  • Telephone
  • Catering service available
  • Travel cot, high chair and stair gate (available on request)
  • Barbecue and charcoal available

Activities & things-to-do:

Nearby attractions:

  • Melmerby is set within the heart of the Eden Valley at the base of Pennine fells and the Hartside Pass (which climbs 1904 feet above sea level). This offers you the opportunity to get a beautiful viewpoint on a clear day of the Eden Valley, Lake District and even as far as southern Scotland.
  • Melmerby also has a village shop, tea room, post office, antique shop. La Brocante Emporium is within walking distance of the property.
  • The ‘Coast to Coast’ Cycle route passes through the village on the A686 and ascends via Hartside to Alston

Price: lowest price from £612

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12. Glassonby Old Hall

Book Glassonby Old Hall today

Glassonby Old Hall in CumbriaGlassonby Old Hall in Cumbriaground floor dining room with stone fireplace" src="https://i0.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/glassonby-old-hall-cumbria-ground-floor.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="Glassonby Old Hall's ground floor dining room with stone fireplace" />Glassonby Old Hall’s ground floor dining room with stone fireplace

Glassonby, Cumbria (CU052)
Sleeps: 8
Please note: There are neighbouring properties that accommodate more people, Elk Cottage (sleeps four) and Jenny’s Croft (sleeps four).
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 5
About the property: Glassonby Old Hall is a 5 Star Gold Award winning traditional long house that is Grade II listed. It is one of three luxury properties in Glassonby, Cumbria. The other two properties are Elk Cottage and Jenny’s Croft, which both adjoin Glassonby Old Hall. All properties date to the 1600s.
Recent renovations brought the properties back into habitation for the first time since 1764. Glassonby Old Hall still retains many of its original features like the old ship timber oak beams, oak mullion windows, flagged stone floors, open fires and stone staircases.
Layout:

Ground floor:

First floor:

About the location: The property used to be a farm and is positioned on the hills of the Eden Valley, giving amazing views toward the Pennines and the rolling countryside.

This is the perfect location to an outdoor holiday in Cumbria. There are lots of walks nearby and leading to Lacey’s Caves along the Eden River, to the Long Meg Stone Circle (second largest in England) and to the nearby Cumbrian village of Melmerby. Here you can find the nationally acclaimed organic Village Bakery.

House rules:

  • Kid-friendly
  • Baby-friendly
  • Pets allowed (two dogs welcome)
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Minimum three night stay

Key features & amenities:

Additional features:

  • Oak and sandstone flag flooring with underfloor heating
  • Four oven Aga, electric hob and separate oven, microwave, fridge freezer, dishwasher, washing machine and tumble dryer
  • Large screen LCD TV, DVD player, iPod docking system
  • Telephone
  • Catering service available
  • Heated towel rails in all bathrooms
  • Cots and high chairs (available on request)
  • Barbecue with charcoal available to use
  • Garden furniture

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Fishing
  • Golfing
  • Cycling
  • Walking

Nearby attractions:

  • Village shop in Kirkoswald (one and a half miles away) which has two local pubs
  • You can rent bicycles, locks and helmets locally
  • Nearby fishing spots
  • Great walks from right outside of the property – from Dale Raven along the banks of the Riven Eden, a walk to Lacey’s Caves along the Eden River and a walk to the Long Meg Stone Circle
  • Glassonby is situated along the popular C2C cycle route and there are also many quiet lanes in the local area for cyclists. Cycling route maps provided at property.
  • Glenridding Sailing Centre, where you can hire canoes and sailboats
  • Rookin House Farm where you can go on a Pony trek
  • Lake Ullswater at the Sharrow Bay Hotel, where you can enjoy a leisurely meal on the shoreline
  • Junction 40 of the M6 is nine miles away
  • Penrith the historic market town can be easily reached by taxi from the station (three hours train journey time from London)

Price: lowest price from £612

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Image: The Rowley Estates, Holiday Images

13. Cazenovia Hall

Book Cazenovia Hall here

Cazenovia Hall, Near Greystoke, CumbriaCazenovia Hall, Near Greystoke, CumbriaFirst floor double bedroom at Cazenovia HallFirst floor double bedroom at Cazenovia Hall

Near Greystoke, Cumbria (CU046)
Sleeps: 8
Please note: There are neighbouring properties that accommodate more people, Riverain and Wythburn Cottage (both sleeping six guests).
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 4
About the property: Cazenovia Hall is a Grade II listed and 5 Star Gold Award winning property located in the secluded grounds of the family owned Grade I listed Blencowe Hall. This holiday home has been renovated to a high standard with light and airy four bedroom traditional stone built barn that dates back to 1726.
This property has views up over the nearby hills. It’s secluded south facing sandstone terraces are perfect to relax after a day adventuring the Lake District.
About the location: This property is based on the edge of the Lake District (four miles away from Lake District National Park). Blencowe is also close to the Aira Force National Trust waterfall, offering a place to paddle, tea shop and walk up to the peak of Gowbarrow Fell.
Cazenovia Hall is also just over a mile from Greystoke Village, with a village shop, traditional Lakeland pub (The Boot and Shoe), a heated swimming pool and Greystoke Castle with its 3,000 acres of woodland grounds for country walks.

House rules:

  • Kid-friendly
  • Pets allowed (two dogs)
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Minimum three night stay

Key features & amenities:

  • Open fire
  • Private garden with sandstone terraces
  • Parking (four vehicles)
  • WiFi

Additional features:

Activities & things-to-do:

Nearby attractions:

Price: lowest price from £612

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14. The Normans

Book The Normans here

The Normans, Wells-next-the-sea, NorfolkThe Normans, Wells-next-the-sea, NorfolkSecond floor master bedroom at The NormansSecond floor master bedroom at The Normans

Wells-next-the-Sea, Norfolk (NO088)
Sleeps: 14
Bedrooms: 6
Bathrooms: 4 en-suite bathrooms and 1 en-suite shower room
About the property: The Normans is a three storey holiday townhouse based in the centre of Wells-next-the-Sea in Norfolk. The property is only a two-minute walk from the harbour and the sea. This is a self catering luxury rental house that’s garden is enclosed by a high wall.
The bedrooms are spacious and offer impressive views across the coast from Holkham to Stiffkey.
History of the property: The house was built for the town’s wheat merchant (rumoured to be a smuggler). This is why there is a spy window at the top of the house, from where the merchant could watch boats come in. The house had tunnels running beneath which lead to different locations in the town.
About the location: Wells-next-the-Sea is a popular Norfolk town that is based in a small harbour on the beautiful North Norfolk Coast. This area is one of the UK’s designated Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The town is known for its narrow streets, old alleys and yards with plenty of shops, pubs and cafes. Also, many impressive Victorian and Georgian buildings.

House rules:

  • Smoking not allowed
  • Pets not allowed
  • Kid-friendly
  • Baby-friendly
  • Minimum three nights stay

Key features & amenities:

  • Open fire
  • Enclosed, walled garden
  • Parking (four vehicles)
  • WiFi

Additional features:

  • Electric oven with induction hob, microwave oven, fridge with freezer compartment, dishwasher, washing machine and tumble dryer
  • TV, DVD player
  • Travel cot and high chair (available on request)
  • Garden furniture and charcoal barbecue
  • Swinging seat and petanque pit in garden
  • Catering can be arranged through Julie Abbs Catering

Activities & things-to-do:

Nearby attractions:

  • You can access the beach via a miniature steam train from the harbour. The beach has pine trees, sand dunes and colourful beach huts.
  • The quay has an active fishing fleet and sailing club
  • North Norfolk Coastal Path, perfect for walkers and birdwatchers with many creeks and marshes

Price: lowest price from £1199

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“A good friend listens to your adventures. A best friend makes them with you.” – Amanda Bradley

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15. Long Barn

Long Barn, Felmingham nr Aylsham, NorfolkLong Barn, Felmingham nr Aylsham, Norfolkfloor drawing room with wood burning stove and underfloor heating" src="https://i2.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/long-barn-felmingham-nr-aylsham-norfolk-ground-floor-drawing-room.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="The Long Barn's first floor drawing room with wood burning stove and underfloor heating" />The Long Barn’s first floor drawing room with wood burning stove and underfloor heating

Felmingham nr Aylsham, Norfolk (NO021)
Sleeps: 10 (or 16 if you also rent the adjoining property, Dovecote)
Bedrooms: 5
Bathrooms: 1
About the property: Located on the grounds of Felmingham Hall (a Grade II listed Elizabethan manor house) are the Felmingham Hall Barns. These are two award-winning holiday properties within a stunning 18th century barn conversion. Off a country lane and located at the end of a long drive, you can find the barns set within a walled garden and surrounded by farmland. There is a grape and laburnum covered pergola leading up to the properties.
The Long Barn is light and spacious, with a 30’ high vaulted drawing room with imposing fireplace, heating and double doors to front and rear gardens and terrace. The dining room leads out to a covered loggia (via double doors) where you can enjoy a meal while overlooking the private south-facing walled garden with views to the Hall. There are inter-connecting doors between Long Barn and Dovecote (sleeps six guests)
Property history: The Long Barn was once the home of William Talman, an architect of Chatsworth House and Master of the Works to the court of James I. Felmingham Hall was constructed in 1569 and is one the earliest examples of Elizabethan architecture in North Norfolk.

Layout:

Ground floor:

  • Drawing room with a wood burning stove and underfloor heating, dining room, kitchen/breakfast room
  • Twin bedroom with 3’ beds and an en-suite bathroom

First floor:

  • Double room with a 4’6 bed, an en-suite shower room and a window over the grand hall
  • Twin room with an en-suite shower room
  • Double bedroom with a 4’6 bed and an en-suite bathroom
  • Double bedroom with a 5’ bed, an ornate window/ fire escape an an en-suite bathroom

About the location: This property is based in unspoilt countryside not far from the National Trust’s Blickling and Felbrigg estates. It is the perfect location for exploring the Norfolk coastline, only 20 minutes away by car.

House rules:

  • Kid-friendly
  • Baby-friendly
  • Pets not allowed
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Minimum two night stay
  • No stag or hen parties allowed

Key features & amenities:

Additional features:

  • Short walk from the beach
  • Shared game rooms (table tennis, table football and toys)
  • Freeview TV, DVD, CD, Telephone
  • Travel cot, high chair and stair gate (available on request)
  • Private water supply
  • Garden furniture and barbecue
  • Catering can be arranged through Julie Abbs Catering

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Walking
  • Game Room

Nearby attractions:

  • Weaver’s Way, a famous network of country walks is ten minutes from the property.
  • The east coast is just fifteen minutes by car.
  • Holt and Burnham Market, both picturesque Georgian towns
  • Cley, a seaside village with famous bird sanctuaries
  • Cromer, a traditional English resort town its Hotel de Paris
  • Sheringham and Wells, both towns a short drive away and offer delicatessens, antique shops, restaurants and theatres

Price for Long Barn – sleeps 10: lowest price from £1039 (book here)

Price for Dovecote – the adjoining property that sleeps 6: lowest price from £612 (book here)

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16. The Oaks

Book The Oaks today

The Oaks, Inwood All Stretton, ShropshireThe Oaks, Inwood All Stretton, Shropshirelarge bay window and views" src="https://i2.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/the-oaks-inwood-all-stretton-ground-floor-sitting-room.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="The Oaks sitting room with large bay window and views" />The Oaks sitting room with large bay window and views

Inwood, All Stretton, Shropshire (SH019)
Sleeps: 10
Bedrooms: 5
Bathrooms: 3
About the property: The Oaks is a detached country holiday house based in the South Shropshire Hills. This luxury self catering rental has been refurbished to a high standard, offering contemporary, spacious and light accommodation.
The garden is two acres and surrounded by post and rail fencing and hedges. There are also two large, sunny stone patios with teak furniture facing west and south, offering views over Shropshire’s Caradoc and Lawley Hills.
About the location: The Oaks is based on the side of the Long Mynd and enjoys stunning views over the surrounding hills. This area is regarded as one of the UK’s designated Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty.

House rules:

  • Pets not allowed
  • Minimum three night stay
  • Kid-friendly
  • Baby-friendly

Key features & amenities:

Additional features:

  • Perfect celebration venue for family or friends
  • Beautiful views
  • Visiting organic spa treatment service available with My Personal Sanctuary
  • Oil Aga plus a separate electric hob, oven and microwave
  • Fridge/freezer, dishwasher, washing machine, tumble dryer
  • 42’’ Plasma TV with DVD. 19’’ plasma TV
  • Separate TV and video in games room with selection of children’s videos, children’s pool table, table football and board games
  • CD player, Bose iPod speakers, radio
  • Travel cot, highchair and stair gate (available on request)
  • Outdoor furniture and barbecue
  • Catering service available

Activities & things-to-do:

Nearby attractions:

Price: lowest price from £944

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17. Lletty & Annexe

Book Lletty and Annexe here

Lletty located above the Eglwysbach Valley at the Bodnant Estate, ColwynLletty located above the Eglwysbach Valley at the Bodnant Estate, ColwynBodnant Garden in Conwy, WalesBodnant Garden in Conwy, Wales

Bodnant Estate, Colwyn Bay, Conwy (CY008)
Sleeps: 8
Bedrooms: 3
Bathrooms: 2
About the property: Lletty is one of eight luxury self-catering cottages on The Bodnant Estate near Conwy in North Wales. This is the perfect location for an outdoor break.
The property is a historic three-storey Grade II stone holiday farmhouse dating from the 17th century. The farmhouse has been rescued from dereliction and restored which has lead to it receiving an award from the Conwy Civic Society in 2009 for the restoration. The farmhouse has many period features and the separate annexe provides accommodation for two guests.
Layout:

Ground floor:

  • Twin bedroom with 3’ beds, a vaulted ceiling and a private bathroom
  • Study/sitting room with stairs up to dining room and door to the garden

First floor:

  • Double bedroom with a 5’ bed
  • Twin bedroom with a 3’ single zip and link beds (can be converted into a 6’ king-sized bed on request)
  • Bathroom with a shower over the bath

Annexe:

About the location: The Estate lies off a woodland track where there are many walking opportunities, paths, woods and farmland. It is located high above the Eglwysbach valley, with pastoral views.
Central to the Bodnant Estate is Bodnant Garden, owned by the National Trust. Also, the garden is only one to two miles walking distance from this property and open every day of the year.

House rules:

  • Baby-friendly
  • Child-friendly
  • Pets not allowed
  • Smoking now allowed
  • Minimum three night stay

Key features & amenities:

  • Wood burning stove
  • Enclosed garden, parts on a slope with steps and a level sitting area below the house. Also, an eating terrace to one side of the house
  • Parking (three vehicles)
  • Access is via a single country road and graded track across fields
  • WiFi

Other properties on the estate:

Additional features:

  • Period features within the property – oak and slate floors, vaulted ceilings, exposed beams and a bread oven
  • Gas range cooker, microwave, larder fridge, freezer, dishwasher, washing machine
  • TV, Freeview, DVD, CD/radio
  • Travel cost, highchair and stair gate (available on request)
  • Garden furniture and barbecue
  • 10% discount at Hayloft restaurant, the Tearooms, Bodnant Cookery School and Bodnant Garden Centre
  • Fishing permits available at Bodnant Garden Centre
  • ‘Click and Collect’ service allowing you to order food in advance and then collect on arrival from the Bodnant Welsh Food Centre

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Cycling
  • Fishing
  • Walking

Nearby attractions:

  • Access to miles of private paths that run through the woods and across farmlands
  • Bodnant Welsh food where you can find the Hayloft restaurant, producing rustic Welsh food with a modern twist
  • Bodnant Tearooms where you can enjoy fresh cakes and look out to the beautiful Conwy Estuary and Carneddau Hills (also 25 meters of adventure play trail for children here)
  • Bodnant Cookery School, where you can hone your skills with personal guidance from culinary experts. Classes for beginners and the more advanced.
  • Fishing permits can be purchased so you can fish right near the property (Roach, Tench, Perch, Eels and Rainbow Trout)
  • Bodnant Garden Centre
  • Bodnant Craft Centre

Price: lowest price from £471

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“With freedom, books, flowers, and the moon, who could not be happy?” – Oscar Wilde

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18. The Old Post Office

Book The Old Post Office here

The Old Post Office, Empshott, Liss, HampshireThe Old Post Office, Empshott, Liss, HampshireThe Old Post Office's kitchen and dining room in HampshireThe Old Post Office’s kitchen and dining room in Hampshire

Empshott, Liss, Hampshire (HA018)
Sleeps: 10
Bedrooms: 5
Bathrooms: 3
About the property: The Old Post office is situated back from the road within a unique and private woodland setting and is complemented by the beautiful landscape.
Once the old post office, this property has been transformed with restored and reclaimed pink flooring throughout, stunning entrance hall and impressive stairway leading to a galleried landing. The sitting room leads into a piano room which then leads into the kitchen/dining room.
The open plan of the property gives you a great feeling of space with bi-fold doors leading to the patio area, garden and views over the woodlands. The master bedroom has vaulted ceilings, which creates an airy New York loft feel. This room also has a balcony which provides stunning views over the surrounding Hampshire countryside.
Property history: This property was once a family run business, which included the village stores, post office and bus stop. It was built in 1907 to serve the Le Court Estate and has been extended and renovated by the current owners. The restoration retains and enhances many of the original features with lovely decor along with replacing the tilting outside the property with handmade clay tiles. This restoration was featured on a television series.

Layout:

Ground floor:

  • Kitchen/dining room
  • Large galleried entrance hall
  • Snug
  • Sitting room
  • Piano room
  • Utility
  • Cloakroom

First floor:

About the location: Alton, a nearby market town offers a variety of high street shops and also a weekly market. Also, the Watercress Line runs close with its steam locomotives. You can also venture into Farnham, Winchester and Basingstoke where there are more shops and a mainline railway station with connections to London Waterloo.

House rules:

  • Kid-friendly
  • Pets allowed (one dog)
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Minimum three night stay

Key features & amenities:

  • Large galleried entrance hall & landing
  • Parking (six cars)
  • WiFi

Additional features:

  • TV with Freeview and 3D smart TV with integrated Netflix/ Talk Talk TV for movies, CD player
  • Gas cooker, dishwasher, washing machine, microwave, fridge and freezer
  • Cot, high chair and stair gate (available on request)
  • Garden with stream along the edge of the garden

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Fishing
  • Golfing
  • Walking

Nearby attractions:

  • Hamlet of Empshott, only two miles from the historic village of Selbourne and not far from the home of Jane Austen
  • Many beautiful country pubs and walks in the vicinity
  • South Downs National Park sites and nearby woodland
  • Southampton Airport, accessible via M3 and M27 coastal motorway (40 minute drive)
  • Frequent trains from London to Liss via South West Trains
  • Liss, Hawkley, WInchester, Petersfield and Haslemere all offering villages, shops and dining

Price: lowest price from £1706

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19. Oat Hill Farmhouse

Book Oat Hill Farmhouse

Oat Hill Farmhouse, Snowshill, Broadway, Cotswolds" src="https://i0.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/oat-hill-farmhouse-snowshill-broadway-cotswolds.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="Oat Hill Farmhouse, Snowshill, Broadway, Cotswolds" />Oat Hill Farmhouse, Snowshill, Broadway, CotswoldsOat Hill Farm House, Snowshill" src="https://i0.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/oat-hill-farmhouse-snowshill-broadway-cotswolds-ground-floor.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="Ground floor, Oat Hill Farm House, Snowshill" />Ground floor, Oat Hill Farm House, Snowshill

Snowshill, Broadway, Cotswolds (CO232)
Sleeps: 16
Bedrooms: 8
Bathrooms: 5 and 2 shower rooms
About the property: Oat Hill Farmhouse is a 17th century farmhouse located in the centre of Snowshill and full of character features. This is a Cotswold village located at the top of the slope of villages of Stanway, Stanton Broadway, Buckland and Laverton.
About the location: You can get to the nearest pub within a three minute walk (The Snowshill Arms). Also, there is a church and its manor house within the village with beautiful gardens and tea rooms which are administered by the National Trust. On the edge of the village, you can also find Snowshill Lavender Farm, where you can wander through fragrant lavender fields (35 different varieties) and enjoy their tea rooms after.

House rules:

  • Pets not allowed
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Kid-friendly
  • Suitable for children under five

Key features & amenities:

  • Two open fireplaces (including a huge inglenook in the kitchen)
  • Large, tiered garden patio area for dining
  • Parking (eight vehicles)
  • WiFi

Additional features:

  • Spacious family kitchen
  • Exposed beams
  • Some flag stoned floors and stone walls
  • South and west facing summer house
  • Kitchen includes large range cooker, microwave, large fridge freezer with ice maker, two dishwashers, wine fridge and island work station
  • TV room with 46’’ TV screen with HD Freeview. DVD.
  • External utility room with washing machine, tumble dryer, additional fridge and space for storage
  • Garden furniture and barbecue
  • Travel cot and high chair (available on request). Also, rooms large enough to accommodate a travel cot

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Theatre
  • Walking
  • Cycling
  • Polo
  • Cricket
  • Golfing
  • Horse racing

Nearby attractions:

  • Broadway (less than three miles away) and offers several restaurants, tea rooms and shops
  • Towns of Chipping Campden, Moreton-in-Marsh and Stow-on-the-Wold are all a short drive away with wonderful restaurants and pubs
  • Stratford-upon-Avon (a little farther away) with the Royal Shakespeare Theatre
  • Cotswold Way in Chipping Campden offers plenty of footpaths for walkers
  • For sports lovers there are several golf courses closeby, National Hunt Racing at Cheltenham, Cricket at Worcester and Polo at Cirencester Park

Price: lowest price from £2095

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Image: Holiday Images

“To move, to breathe, to fly, to float, to gain all while you give, to roam the roads of lands remote, to travel is to live.” – Hans Christian Andersen

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20. The Manor House

Book the Manor House today

Swimming pool and gardens" src="https://i0.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/the-manor-house-bisley-stroud-cotswolds-gardens-and-swimming-pool.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="Manor House, Bisley, Stroud, Cotswolds - Swimming pool and gardens" />An aerial view of The Manor House with it’s lovely gardens and swimming poolOat Hill Farm House, Snowshill" src="https://i1.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/the-manor-house-bisley-stroud-cotswolds-swimming-pool.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="Ground floor, Oat Hill Farm House, Snowshill" />Outdoor heated swimming pool with changing rooms available from May to September at The Manor House

Bisley, Stroud, Cotswolds (CO268)
Sleeps: 14
Bedrooms: 7
Bathrooms: 6
About the property: This is a stunning 16th century Manor house with original features like an inglenook fireplace and mullioned windows. The gardens have a swimming pool and are maintained all year round. It is perfect for a break away  in the Cotswolds for a reunion with family, friends, gatherings and celebrations.

Layout:

Ground floor:

  • Hallway
  • Fully fitted kitchen/breakfast room (seating for 16)
  • Dining room
  • Drawing room with inglenook fireplace
  • Sitting room
  • Utility room and wc

First floor:

  • Master bedroom with 6’ bed and en-suite
  • Bedroom with 6’ bed and en-suite
  • Bedroom with twin 3’ beds
  • Bedroom with 4’6 bed
  • Bedroom with a 4’6 bed and en-suite
  • Bedroom with 5’ bed and an en-suite
  • Family bathroom

Second floor:

  • Bedroom with twin 3’ beds and en-suite

Outside property:

About the location:The property provides breathtaking views into the surrounding countryside. This is also the perfect place for walking, cycling and horseback riding. Also, the Manor House is great at any season with the beautiful pool in the summer and the log fire in winter months.

House rules:

  • Smoking not allowed
  • Pets not allowed
  • Minimum two night stay

Key features & amenities:

  • Open fire
  • Lawns and gardens with terrace
  • Outdoor heated swimming pool with changing rooms (available May to September)
  • Plenty of on-site parking

Additional features:

  • Views across the Cotswold countryside.
  • Property retains many of its original features from the 16th century.
  • Inglenook fireplace.
  • Four oven oil fired Aga, dishwasher, fridge/freezer, washing machine, tumble dryer.
  • Multiple televisions.
  • Garden furniture and barbecue.

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Swimming
  • Golfing
  • Walking
  • Gardens
  • Shopping

Nearby attractions:

Price: lowest price from £2494

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21. White Willow Lodge

Book White Willow Lodge today

White Willow Lodge, Near Lechlade, Cotswolds" src="https://i1.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/white-willow-lodge-near-lechlade-cotswolds.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="White Willow Lodge, Near Lechlade, Cotswolds" />White Willow Lodge, Near Lechlade, CotswoldsWhite Willow Lodge, Lechlade, Cotswolds" src="https://i1.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/interior-white-willow-lodge-near-lechlade-cotswolds.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="Sitting Room of the White Willow Lodge, Lechlade, Cotswolds" />Sitting Room of the White Willow Lodge, Lechlade, Cotswolds

Near Lechlade, Cotswolds (CO282)
Sleeps: 12
Bedrooms: 5
Bathrooms: 5
About the property: This property is set on a stunning lake in the centre of the Cotswolds. This is a great property for time away with family or friends. There is complimentary use of the luxury spa and outdoor facilities included in your stay. There are sleeping arrangement for ten plus an additional bunk bed for two for children only.
There are lake views throughout the property across three floor. The interiors are warm and luxurious in a contemporary design. The property has been published in ‘25 Beautiful Homes’ magazine.
Guests have access to kayaks, bikes, fishing, sailing and rowing boats, zip wires, a luxury spa on the estate with 20 meter pool, sauna, spa and fully-equipped gym. In home catering and beauty treatments are also available.

Layout:

  • Master suite 1 – sleeps two, King bed
  • Bedroom 2 – sleep 2, King bed
  • Bedroom 3 – sleeps 2, Super king or twin bed
  • Bedroom 4 – sleeps 4, Super king or twin bed and bunk beds
  • Bedroom 5 – sleeps 2, King bed

About the location: Situated in a 650 acre estate of ‘Lakes by Yoo’ near Cirencester and only 90 minutes from London.

House rules:

  • No pets allowed
  • Minimum stay two nights
  • No stag or hen gatherings allowed

Key features & amenities:

  • Log fire in sitting room and master suite
  • Outdoor terrace overlooking lakes
  • Onsite parking
  • Wifi

Additional features:

  • Concierge Menu available (fridge stocking, fire lighting and bike hire)
  • Security on call 24/7 at gated entrance
  • Catering with a range of chefs
  • On site spa offering treatments (gym, heated pool, sauna, steam and hot tub)
  • Nanny services available with qualified childcare professionals. The ‘Yoo’ kids club  encourages kids to take part in outdoor adventures such as Ben Fogle’s School of Wild.
  • Kitchen equipment and a Nespresso machine
  • Outdoor terraces on both ground and top floor with a barbecue
  • Sky TV, DVD/Blue Ray player, Sonos system and board games
  • Two double kayaks available when lakes are open
  • Onsite tennis courts, fishing, boating and wild swimming within the estate

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Tennis
  • Fishing
  • Boating
  • Kayaking
  • Swimming
  • Walking
  • Children’s camp/activities

Nearby attractions:

  • Many wonderful pubs nearby like: The Swan at Southrop (within walking distance) and The Five Alls in Filkin.
  • Many waterways including the Thames, Avon and Severn run through the region. The Coln and Leach join the Thames at Lechlade, making the town a favourite mooring place for narrow boats and a hub for cruises. Also, there are opportunities to tour up-river on a Thames Launch or charter your own boat for the day.
  • Lechlade, a market town that is home to a music festival and churchyard that inspired Shelley
  • Burford, a medieval town that has been featured in Forbes list of Europe’s loveliest places to live
  • Filkins, part of the estate of Sir Stafford Cripps
  • Southrop with a beautiful 12th century church
  • Lots of walking and hiking available with 3,000 miles of public footpaths. You can spend a few days walking the length of the Gloucestershire Way (100 miles from Forest of Dean to Tewkesbury Abbey)
  • Daylesford Organics with handmade cheeses, pastries, breads and local produce
  • Coln Valley Smokery in Northleach
  • Benson’s Farm, delivers organic apple juice
  • Cheltenham Festival, The Gold Cup (March)
  • Cotswold Wildlife Park to get up close to the rhinos, camels, lions and more.

Price: lowest price from £1220

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22. August House

Book August House today

August House, Hampnett, Near Northleach, CotswoldsAugust House, Hampnett, Near Northleach, CotswoldsSitting Room of August House in the CotswoldsSitting Room of August House in the Cotswolds

Hampnett, near Northleach, Cotswolds (CO300)
Sleeps: 12
Bedrooms: 7
Bathrooms: 7
About the property: Built in 1872, August house was originally the village rectory but has been transformed into a modern home. This unique property is based in one of the Cotswolds most picturesque hamlets and perfect for family holidays away.
August House is spacious and perfect for family and friends to gather together. The ground floor offers a large kitchen/ breakfast room, family room, two sitting rooms, dining room and also a children’s playroom. Upstairs the bedrooms are decorated with double beds and en-suite bathrooms.
About the location: This property is located on the edge of Hampnett and is surrounded by countryside. There are six acres of landscaped parkland to explore and large gardens with formal lawns and box hedges. Also, an outdoor swimming pool is available in the summer months.

House rules:

  • Kid-friendly
  • Suitable for children under 5
  • Pets not allowed
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Minimum of two night stay

Key features & amenities:

Additional features:

  • Antique furniture throughout
  • One bedroom with en-suite bathroom on the ground floor.
  • Children’s playroom with toys and games
  • Gas range cooker, fridge with small freezer compartment, two dishwashers.
  • Televisions with Freeview in playroom, snug and kitchen.
  • Bose iPod docking station and Roberts radio.
  • Cooking and baking can be arranged prior (additional charge)

Activities & things-to-do:

Nearby attractions:

  • Northleach is only a mile away and includes a convenience store, butcher and post office
  • Burton-on-the-Water (10 minutes drive away) and Stow-on-the-Wold (15 minutes drive) have larger supermarkets and shops
  • Nearby villages include Bourton-on-the-Water, Lower Slaughter, Burford, Stow-on-the-Wold and Cirencester
  • Cotswold Wildlife Park and Gardens is perfect for a day out
  • Crocodiles of the World, the UK’s only crocodile zoo
  • Far Peak Climbing, a climbing facility at nearby Northleach (all ages and abilities welcome)
  • Historic spa town of Cheltenham, only 10 miles away and known for festivals (literary, music and food) and famous racecourse
  • Blenheim Palace, historic house and gardens open year round and perfect for walks with friends and family
  • Gardens at Snowshill, Kiftsgate, Sezincote, Batsford and Hidcote (within an hour’s drive)
  • Rail services run to Kingham railway station. There is a direct service from London Paddington (one and a half hours).

Price: lowest price from £2233

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23. Barnhouse

Book the Barnhouse today

View of Barnhouse, Near Lechlade, CotswoldsView of Barnhouse, Near Lechlade, CotswoldsOutside Pool at Barnhouse in the CotswoldOutside Pool at Barnhouse in the CotswoldInside Barnhouse in the CotswoldsInside Barnhouse in the Cotswolds

Near Lechlade, Cotswolds (CO290)
Sleeps: 10
Bedrooms: 5
Bathrooms: 7 (5 are en-suite)
About the property: The Barnhouse was designed by Kate Moss and pricing includes the services of a butler during your stay. This is a gated community where you receive the ultimate rural retreat. This is a five bedroom, seven bathroom barn that is tucked away in the woods with panoramic windows across Bowmoor lake.

Layout:

About the location: The property is located on Cotswold Water Park and is a great spot for exploring the local area. The Barnhouse is on a private estate on 650 acres of idyllic Cotswolds countryside. You are only 15 minutes from Cirencester, 30 minutes from Cheltenham Racecourse and 90 minutes from London.

House rules:

  • Kid-friendly
  • Ask about pets
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Minimum stay of two nights

Key features & amenities:

  • Price includes butler services
  • Five bedrooms with one master suite with art deco four poster bed and balcony
  • Log fire in the sitting room
  • Private outdoor heated pool
  • Playroom
  • Large secluded garden
  • Parking available on property
  • WiFi

Additional features:

  • Concierge Menu available (fridge stocking, fire lighting and bike hire)
  • Security on call 24/7 at gated entrance
  • Catering available
  • On site spa offering treatments (gym, heated pool, sauna, steam and hot tub)
  • Nanny services available
  • ‘Yoo’ kids club available
  • Kitchen equipment and a Nespresso machine
  • Outdoor terraces on ground and top floor with barbecue
  • Sky TV, DVD/Blu Ray player, Sonos system and board games
  • Two double kayaks available when lakes are open
  • Onsite tennis courts, boating, fishing and wild swimming all on the estate

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Cycling
  • Fishing
  • Walking
  • Golfing
  • Tennis
  • Boating
  • Kayaking
  • Spa facilities
  • Swimming

Nearby attractions:

  • The Five Alls in Filkin and The Swan at Southrop (both excellent nearby pubs)
  • Many local waterways offering boating and cruise opportunities. The Thames, Avon and Severn run through the region and the Coln and Leach join the Thames at Lechlade.
  • Lechlade, home to music festival and churchyard that inspired Shelley
  • Burford, medieval town named one of Europe’s loveliest places to live by Forbes
  • Filkins, part of the estate of Sir Stafford Cripps
  • Many walking opportunities with the Gloucestershire Way offering 100 miles from Forest of Dean to Tewkesbury Abbey
  • Cotswold Wildlife Park
  • Cheltenham Festival, The Gold Cup (March)
  • Daylesford Organics offering fresh produce

Price: lowest price from £4530

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Image: Big Cottage Company, Daily Mail, CoolStays

24. Forthampton Court

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Forthampton Court, Tewkesbury, Cotswolds" src="https://i1.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/forthampton-court-tewkesbury-cotswolds.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="Forthampton Court, Tewkesbury, Cotswolds" />Forthampton Court, Tewkesbury, CotswoldsForthampton Court in the Cotswolds" src="https://i1.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/forthampton-court-bedroom-tewkesbury-cotswolds.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="Bedroom at Forthampton Court in the Cotswolds" />Bedroom at Forthampton Court in the Cotswolds

Tewkesbury, Cotswolds (CO186)
Sleeps: 10
Bedrooms: 5
Bathrooms: 6
About the property: Forthampton Court is a modernised and spacious self-contained wing of a Grade II listed manor house. The property has been redecorated to a high standard and is furnished throughout with decorative prints and antique furniture.
Property history: Some parts of the house date as far back as the 15th century. This includes the Medieval Great Hall built by the Abbots of Benedictine monastery at Tewksbury. Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn were also believed to have stayed at the property in July 1535. The wing was added around 1890 by Philip Webb, the Arts and Crafts architect.
Layout:

Ground floor:

  • Entrance lobby with wc and utility room leading to a staircase hall, adjoins oak-panelled drawing room with open fire
  • External door leading to the rose garden from drawing room
  • Dining room and breakfast kitchen

First floor:

  • Master bedroom with a 6’ bed, simulated coal gas fire and en-suite bathroom (roll-top bath and separate shower)
  • Double bedroom with a 5;6 bed, simulated coal gas fire and en-suite bathroom with shower over bath.
  • Double bedroom with a 6’ zip and link bed (can convert to two 3’ singles upon request) and en-suite shower room)

Second floor:

  • Double bedroom with 5’6’’ bed and en-suite bathroom with separate shower
  • Twin bedroom with 3’6’’ beds and an adjoining wc and wash basin

About the location: The property is close to the west bank of the River Severn on the Gloucestershire/Worcestershire border.

House rules:

  • Children over 12 years are welcome
  • A dog is welcome
  • Minimum three night stay

Key features & amenities:

  • Open fireplace
  • Aga
  • Rose garden (fully enclosed, private walled, brick paved)
  • Parking space for one car outside the front door and more space in adjoining garage yard
  • WiFi

Additional features:

  • Drawing room with oak panels
  • Catering can been arranged (please give notice)
  • Open fire in the drawing room
  • Gas “coal-effect” fires in first two floor bedrooms
  • Four oven Aga with two hot plates and a four ring gas hob attached, microwave, huge fridge/freezer, two dishwashers, washing machine, tumble dryer
  • TV with DVD player
  • Garden furniture and barbecue

Activities & things-to-do:

Nearby attractions:

  • The Lower Lode pub is only a half a mile walk away. There are lots of other pubs only a short drive away.
  • Tewkesbury, the medieval town is only a few miles away with restaurants, pubs and shops.
  • Cheltenham (12 miles away) offers literary and music festivals as well as a famous racecourse
  • Gloucester and Worcester offer museums and cathedrals (25 minutes away)
  • Malvern Hills and Bredon Hill provides walking opportunities
  • 18-hole golf course at Puckrup (6 miles) and Tewkesbury Park (5 miles).
  • Boating on the Severn and Avon at Tewkesbury
  • Riding can be arranged locally
  • Historic houses: Eastnor Castle near Ledbury and Sudeley Castle near Winchcombe
  • Gardens of Kiftsgate and Hidcote

Price: lowest price from £1119

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Image: Holiday Images

25. Lower Farmhouse

Book Lower Farmhouse today

Lower Farmhouse, Todenham, Moreton-in-Marsh, Cotswolds" src="https://i1.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/lower-farmhouse-todenham-moreton-in-marsh-cotswolds.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="Lower Farmhouse, Todenham, Moreton-in-Marsh, Cotswolds" />Lower Farmhouse, Todenham, Moreton-in-Marsh, Cotswoldswood burning stove at Lower Farmhouse, Todenham" src="https://i0.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/lower-farmhouse-todenham-moreton-in-marsh-cotswolds-ground-floor.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="Ground floor sitting room with wood burning stove at Lower Farmhouse, Todenham" />Ground floor sitting room with wood burning stove at Lower Farmhouse, Todenham

Todenham, Moreton-in-Marsh, Cotswolds (CO216)
Sleeps: 10
Bedrooms: 5
Bathrooms: 5
About the property: This is a 19th century stone holiday farmhouse and is a Cotswolds self-catering property with five bedrooms, all en-suite. There is also a large Inglenook fireplace with a wood burning stove and exposed beams. Also, a beautiful garden for spending times with friends and family, cooking on the barbecue or relaxing over a glass of wine.

Layout:

Ground floor:

  • Contemporary kitchen with aga
  • Separate electric hob and oven
  • Utility room
  • Dining room

First floor:

  • One step down to the landing area
  • Two steps down into the two twin bedrooms each with 3’ zip and link beds (can convert to 6’ doubles upon request) and each with en-suite shower room
  • Double bedroom with a 6’ zip and link bed (can convert into two 3’ singles upon request with en-suite walk in shower)
  • Double bedroom with a 5’ bed and an en suite-bathroom with shower over bath

Second floor:

  • Double bedroom with a 6’ zip and link bed (two 3’ singles upon request) and bathroom with shower over the bath

About the location: Lower Farmhouse is located on Todenham Manor, a working farm just outside Moreton-in-Marsh.

House rules:

  • Kid-friendly
  • Suitable for children under five
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Pets not allowed
  • Minimum three night stay

Key features & amenities:

  • Inglenook fireplace with wood burning stove
  • Aga
  • Certain areas around the house are restricted since the property is situated on a working farm with livestock
  • South facing garden with patio area
  • WiFi

Additional features:

  • Todenham Manor farm can deliver a box of fresh meat to your cottage
  • Underfloor heating in parts of the cottage
  • Oil-fired aga, electric hob and oven, microwave. Fridge, fridge/freezer in the utility room, dishwasher, washing machine.
  • Flatscreen TV, and TVs in all bedrooms, Freeview, CD player, DVD player and iPod dock.
  • Travel cot and high chair (available on request)
  • Fixed stair gate on first floor
  • Garden furniture and barbecue

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Cycling
  • Walking
  • Gardens
  • Restaurants
  • Golfing
  • Racecourse

Nearby attractions:

Price: lowest price from £1029

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Image: Holiday Images

“It doesn’t matter where you’re going – it’s who you have beside you.”
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26. Bellhouse

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Bellhouse, Near Nympsfield, CotswoldsBellhouse, Near Nympsfield, CotswoldsGround floor sitting room with <a href=wood burning stove at Lower Farmhouse, Todenham" />Ground floor sitting room at Bellhouse in the Cotswolds

Near Nympsfield, Cotswolds (CO229)
Sleeps: 8
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 3
About the property: Bellhouse is a spacious house with lots of character, situated in a  quiet setting with lots of opportunities for long walks in the country. Bellhouse is the south-west wing of Woodchester Park House, a Grade II listed building. The property has private gardens and a patio area provides a great place for a meal with friends. The large lawn is surrounded by mature trees and great for children to play.
Property history: This property dates back to the 1860’s and retains many of its original features.

Layout:

Ground floor:

  • Stone flagged entrance halls
  • Fully fitted kitchen
  • Larder and laundry room
  • Large dining and sitting rooms (both with wood burning stove)
  • Twin bedroom with 2 x 3’ beds
  • Bathroom with bath and separate shower

First floor:

  • Large double bedroom with 5’ bed and en-suite bathroom
  • Large double bedroom with 6’ bed which can be made into twin beds upon request
  • Smaller bedroom with two 3’ beds
  • Bathroom with bath and separate shower

About the location: The garden and woodland boundary Woodchester Park, which is owned by the National Trust. From the house, it is possible to walk for miles without crossing a road or seeing a car. There is plenty of wildlife with five lakes running through the Park and the Cotswold Way passing nearby.

House rules:

  • No pets allowed
  • No smoking allowed
  • Kid-friendly
  • Baby-friendly
  • Minimum two night stay

Key features & amenities:

Additional features:

  • Grade II listed building with terrace and walled courtyard garden
  • Lots of wildlife
  • Electric cooker, microwave, fridge, freezer, dishwasher and washing machine
  • Satellite TV and DVD player
  • Two travel cots and two high chairs (available on request)

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Golfing
  • Walking
  • Racecourse
  • Swimming
  • Bridwatching
  • Cycling

Nearby attractions:

Price: lowest price from £747

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Image: Holiday Images, homeaway.co.uk

27. Hunter Court

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Hunter Court, Clanfield, Oxfordshire, Cotswolds" src="https://i0.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/hunter-court-clanfield-oxfordshire-cotswolds.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="Hunter Court, Clanfield, Oxfordshire, Cotswolds" />Hunter Court, Clanfield, Oxfordshire, CotswoldsHunter Court in Oxfordshire" src="https://i2.wp.com/www.wegoplaces.me/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/hunter-court-sitting-room-clanfield-oxfordshire-cotswolds.jpg?resize=862%2C574" alt="Ground floor sitting room at Hunter Court in Oxfordshire" />Ground floor sitting room at Hunter Court in Oxfordshire

Clanfield, Oxfordshire, Cotswolds (CO215)
Sleeps: 8
Please note: Hunter Cottage is also within the grounds and offers additional accommodation for two guests.
Bedrooms: 5
Bathrooms: 1
About the property: This is a luxury Cotswold holiday house set in the village of Clanfield. The property offers a lot of space and is tastefully decorated with a homely feel. There are five acres of property with two fields (often with sheep) and a half an acre of walled garden.

Layout:

Ground floor:

  • Large kitchen with separate garden room for dining and sitting
  • Family room off the kitchen
  • Utility room
  • Cloakroom with wc
  • Large sitting room, dining room, conservatory, office

First floor:

  • Master bedroom with a 6’ bed an en-suite bathroom with walk-in shower
  • Double bedroom with a 6’ bed (can convert to two 3’ singles upon request) and an en-suite shower room
  • Double bedroom with a 5’ bed
  • Double bedroom with a 5’ bed
  • Family bathroom with walk in shower
  • Single bedroom with a 4’6’’ bed and en-suite shower room.

About the location: Hunter Court is only a two minute walk from 17th century pubs offering excellent food and roaring log fires (The Clanfield Tavern and The Plough Inn). The neighboring village of Bampton offers a supermarket, butchers, art gallery and a few pubs.

This is a great location for an outdoor break in Oxfordshire since there are plenty of walking, cycling, fishing and boating (Thames is only two miles away) opportunities. Burford is eight miles away, Cirencester 18 miles, Oxford 21 miles and Heathrow Airport one hour and ten minutes.

House rules:

  • Children over 10 years are welcome
  • Baby under six months is welcome
  • Pets are not allowed
  • Minimum three night stay

Key features & amenities:

  • Open fireplace in the sitting room
  • Wood burning stove in the family room
  • Attractive, walled garden (half an acre with feature pond and trees)
  • Parking for three vehicles
  • WiFi

Additional features:

  • Garden furniture and barbecue (available between April and October)
  • Gas hob, electric oven, multi-functional microwave, fridge/freezer, dishwasher, washing machine, tumble dryer
  • Television with Sky
  • Two fields (with sheep)
  • Two minutes walk from pub with great food and open fires
  • Conservatory and office
  • Catering available upon request

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Walking
  • Cycling
  • Fishing
  • Boating
  • Golfing

Nearby attractions:

  • Clanfield, great for walking cycling, fishing and boating
  • Roadcot, offers one of the oldest crossing points over the River Thames
  • Burford (eight miles away), Oxford (21 miles) and Cirencester (18 miles)
  • Heathrow Airport, one hour and 10 minutes
  • Nearest railway station is Hanborough (13 miles) with Oxford (21 miles), Didcot (22 miles) and Swindon (17 miles)

Price: lowest price from £966

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28. Furlong Barn

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Furlong Barn, Itchington, Southam, WarwickshireFurlong Barn, Itchington, Southam, WarwickshireSitting room at Furlong Barn in WarwickshireSitting room at Furlong Barn in Warwickshire

Long Itchington, Southam, Warwickshire (CO244)
Sleeps: 7
Bedrooms: 4
Bathrooms: 1
About the property: Furlong Barn is a beautiful property that is situated in a secluded location and offers views across Warwickshire farmland. This property has been stylishly renovated and there is a great attention to detail in every room. The vaulted main bedroom, sitting room and dining kitchen offer exposed, limited timbers which are set off by oak or slate flooring.

Layout:

Ground floor:

  • Kitchen/ dining room
  • Sitting room
  • Double bedroom with 6’ zip and link bed and en-suite bedroom with separate shower
  • Double bedroom with 6’ zip and link bed and en-suite shower room
  • Both bedrooms have french windows that open out into the garden
  • Shower room

Staircase to first floor:

  • Twin bedroom with one 3’ bed and one 2’6’’ bed
  • Separate staircase to further twin bedroom with 3’ beds and en-suite shower room

About the location: Furlong Barn is on the edge of the village of Long Itchington, offering a pond and village green within walking distance. The Buck and Bell pub is on the green with local beers and great food. Also, Hilltop Farm is only a short car ride away where there is a farm shop and restaurant.

House rules:

  • Baby-friendly
  • Kid-friendly
  • Pets not allowed
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Minimum three night stay

Key features & amenities:

  • Property suitable for up to seven adults and one child
  • Walled, gravelled courtyard with slate patio and lawned areas
  • Parking (four vehicles)
  • WiFi

Additional features:

  • Electric rangemaster, fridge/freezer, washer/dryer, dishwasher, microwave
  • 46 inch smart television with Freeview. DVD player, CD player with iPod dock
  • Travel cot, high chair and stair gate (available on request)
  • Garden furniture and barbecue

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Walking
  • Cycling
  • Silaing

Nearby attractions:

Price: lowest price from £947

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29. Ivy House & Reading Room

Book Ivy House & Reading Room today

Ivy House and Reading Room, Wetton, Near Ashbourne, DerbyshireIvy House and Reading Room, Wetton, Near Ashbourne, DerbyshireGround floor kitchen at the Ivy House and Reading Room in DerbyshireGround floor kitchen at the Ivy House and Reading Room in Derbyshire

Wetton, Nr Ashbourne, Derbyshire (DE006)
Sleeps: 10 (Ivy House sleeps six and Reading Room sleeps four)
Bedrooms: 5
Bathrooms: 3
About the property: The Ivy House and Reading Room are adjacent semi-detached holiday cottages next to the church in the centre of the village of Wetton. The property has been refurbished to modern standard and still retains many of its original features, including its exposed beams.

Layout:

Ivy House ground floor:

Ivy House first floor:

  • Master bedroom with a 5’ poster bed
  • Bedroom with 4’6” bed and an additional 3’ single bed (flexibility to use room as double ro twin) and an en-suite bathroom
  • Small twin bedroom with 3’ beds
  • Bathroom with a separate shower

Reading Room ground floor:

  • Sitting room with open fire
  • Kitchen with flagstone floor and dining table
  • Twin bedroom with 3’ beds

Reading room first floor:

  • Double bedroom with a 4’6” bed
  • Bathroom with shower over the bath

About the location: These holiday cottages are located in Wetton and are tucked away deep in the Derbyshire Dales. The property is only 100 yards from the local village pub which serves excellent food, The Royal Oak.

House rules:

  • Kid-friendly
  • Baby-friendly
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Two well behaved dogs welcome (small fee)
  • Minimum three night stay

Key features & amenities:

Additional features:

Ivy House:

  • Four poster bed
  • Fridge, freezer, dishwasher, washing machine, tumble dryer
  • TV, video, radio/cassette/CD. Payphone.
  • Travel cot and high chair (available on request)
  • Charcoal barbecue and garden furniture

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Walking
  • Sailing
  • Canoeing
  • Boating
  • Fishing
  • Cycling

Nearby attractions:

  • Only a few minutes walk from the upper reaches of Dovedale and Manifold Valley in the Peak District National Park with many footpaths for walkers
  • Many opportunities for sailing, windsurfing, canoeing, kayaking, mountain biking and power boating (can hire equipment from local companies)
  • Haddon Hall, an English Tudor and country house
  • Chatsworth House and its gardens
  • Alton Towers
  • Poole’s Cavern & Country Park
  • The Heights of Abraham
  • Rudyard’s Lake, where Rudyard Kipling’s parents met and named their son
  • Blackbrook Zoo, with different species to admire

Price: lowest price from £1029

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30. Hillside Farm

Book Hillside Farm today

Hillside Farm, Littlebeck, Whitby, YorkshireHillside Farm, Littlebeck, Whitby, YorkshireGround floor sitting room at Hillside Farm in YorkshireGround floor sitting room at Hillside Farm in Yorkshire

Littlebeck, Whitby, Yorkshire (YO069)
Sleeps: 10
Bedrooms: 5
Bathrooms: 1
About the property: Hillside Farm is a detached farmhouse located in the heart of North Yorkshire Moors National Park. The property enjoys stunning views of the sea and Whitby, only a few miles away.

Layout:

Ground floor:

First floor:

  • Master double bedroom with 6’ bed and an en suite bathroom
  • Twin bedroom with 3’ beds
  • Double bedroom with 6’ zip and link bed which can convert to singles on request
  • Family bathroom with bath
  • Double bedroom with 6’ zip and link bed which can convert to singles on request

About the location: Hillside Farm is two miles away from Sleights where there is a hotel and pub, both serving food. There is also a fish and chip restaurant, butcher/delicatessen, general store (open until 10pm) and a local bakery.

House rules:

  • Kid-friendly
  • Baby-friendly
  • Pets not allowed
  • Smoking not allowed
  • Minimum three night stay

Key features & amenities:

Additional features:

  • Detached farmhouse set in centre of North York Moors National Park
  • Views of the sea and Whitby
  • Exposed beams
  • Close to the beach
  • Aga, electric hob and combination microwave/oven, fridge, freezer, dishwasher, tumble dryer, washing machine
  • Two large flat screen TVs with Sky package, DVD player, CD player
  • Travel cot and high chair (available on request)
  • Outside furniture

Activities & things-to-do:

  • Fishing (sea and river)
  • Walking
  • Cycling

Nearby attractions:

Price: lowest price from £713

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