Friday, February 6, 2009

Four Seasons in the Algarve

Located in the prestigious golfing resort of Quinta do Lago, the Four Seasons Country Club has been a favorite with holiday makers for many years. This resort is set amongst beautiful gardens with a clubhouse at the hub of its activities. It is well situated for sports enthusiasts and anybody else who wishes just to relax. A choice of 1 or 2 bedroom apartments can be rented. It could be the fact that the resort offers a high standard of accommodation throughout, and with all the properties with the same décor clients know what to expect. Its popularity could also be due to the fact that it offers excellent facilities on site including a kids club meaning it makes an easy and convenient holiday for families. Golfers also like the Four Seasons Country Club as golf courses are as close as 500m and guests receive preferential rates.

Along with the choice of one and two bedroom apartments sleeping up to six people, the Four Seasons Country Club also offers a gym, health and fitness club, restaurant and bar and indoor and outdoor pool, really making it a club for all seasons! Despite the array of facilities, the Four Seasons Country Club is pretty. The apartments are built in little clusters with the appearance of a little white washed village. The beach and nature reserve is also very close.

It would be fair to say that the Four Seasons Country Club suits all types of holiday makers and its excellent reputation means that accommodation gets booked up very early.

Michael Reilly is marketing manager of Select Resorts, a lettings agency who offer a range of Quinta do Lago Villas and La Manga Club Villas

Golf Estates - Some of the Best Places to Live

Golf estates have become the leading real estate phenomenon of the 21st Century in South Africa. And there is good reason for their growing popularity - they offer peaceful, protected luxury living for you and your family, whether ardent golfer or not.

A safe haven in times of crime

Golf estate property is an investors dream as they not only offer safe havens in an turbulent ocean of crime but the maintenance and upkeep of the manicured gardens, fairways and greens are the responsibility of the Body Corporate of the estate.

This community involvement in the maintenance of the golf estate will generally mean that your golf property is likely to improve in value in leaps and bounds over time. There is little doubt that investing in one of the hundreds of golf estates that dot the South African landscape will be a shrewd and lucrative move on your part.

Possibly the pick of golf real estate lies in two distinct areas, both of which are attractive tourist destinations - the fabled Garden Route of the Cape and the mystical bushveld to the north of the country.

Versatile range of Garden Route golf real estate

The Garden Route has a versatile range of golf real estate to choose from, so whether Mossel Bay, George or Plettenberg Bay is your preferred choice of urban centre, rest assured there is a luxurious and tranquil golf estate close by.

The developers of golf estates are also particularly aware of their responsibility to the environment and design the golf course and adjoining homes in harmony with nature so as not to interfere too much with the sustainability of the region. This leaves bird and animal life to prosper, making golf estates a veritable paradise to live in.

Most leading golf estates are a fine blend of glorious green fairways, indigenous fynbos and magnificent ocean and mountain vistas along the Garden Route, or pristine bush, jam-packed with a vast selection of wild and woolly creatures in the case of the northern offerings.

No unauthorised access

Golf estates are generally fenced communities with 24 hour security limiting access to the entire property. Sadly, South Africans have been under the cosh of rampant crime, even since its emancipation, and we all have to think long and hard about our family's security. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out that golf real estate is one of the safest options for you and your kids.

So if you are keen to enjoy a life of tranquillity, added security and unlimited access to the great outdoors, consider purchasing golf real estate property today.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Top Five Beaches to Visit on a Holiday in North Cyprus

The Mediterranean has sun, sea and sand in abundance, and boasts some of the world's best beaches. Several of these are in North Cyprus, and if you go on holiday there you're in for a treat. The problem is that you are spoilt for choice. With so many beaches on offer, which ones should you visit or stay close to? We count down the top five to help with your choice.

5. Silver Beach, Famagusta

Silver Beach is south of the ruins at Salamis, and those who want a varied holiday in North Cyprus can combine the joys of this beach with the history and culture on offer in this famous area. The beach is also varied in terms of activities, with a reef that is great for snorkelling and exploring; there are huge numbers of fish and interesting types of marine life to be discovered among the ancient jetties in the cove. The cove is also suitable for younger children due to the shallow shelving of the sand, so the whole family can enjoy the area at any age.

4. Glapsides Public Beach, Famagusta

A short drive from Nicosia, Glapsides Public Beach is great if you are staying in the capital and looking for an accessible beach. It has excellent facilities, with local a mini market, bar, restaurant and showers, as well as dolphin rides designed to make any holiday to North Cyprus special. The beach is busy, but the atmosphere is friendly, with the beach's users being mainly young people and families. There is also dance and club music played by DJs on the beach for people who like to party in the evenings.

3. Alagadi Turtle Beach, Kyrenia.

Alagadi Turtle Beach is for those who want to experience the natural side of North Cyprus beaches. Holidays to Kyrenia are enhanced by visiting this beach, where you can see green and loggerhead turtles come and lay their eggs in the summer; there are cordoned off areas of the beach where you can enjoy the sea and sand as usual while protecting the ecology of the local area.

4. Escape Beach, Kyrenia

Escape beach is interesting from an enjoyment and historical perspective. The beach is known as Yavuz Cikarma Plaji, the area where the Turkish Troops landed during the Peace Operation in 1974, but is now carefully landscaped with lush grass and beautiful flowers.

On the beach proper there are a plethora of water sports available, from jet skiing to banana ride, canoeing to pedal boats and from snorkelling to scuba diving. The beach also has a volleyball area, restaurant and bar, with all the facilities you could ask for. The beach has an incredible mix of activities and history for you to enjoy on your Holidays in North Cyprus.

1. Karpaz Beaches

Our number one beach is less one specific beach and more a series of remote beaches. The Beaches in Karpaz are more secluded, and appeal more to those on luxury holidays to North Cyprus because of their isolated and much more exclusive nature. Each beach in the area has its own charm; the beach at Kasa was an ancient harbour called Karpasia; Yeni Erenkoy is a public beach with showers and hot food available; and there are small coves along the Karpaz peninsula itself that offer utter seclusion. Karpaz has the greatest variety of beaches available, and staying on or near the peninsula gives you complete choice while on holiday in North Cyprus.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Copenhagen Capital of Denmark

Love is unpredictable. In the end, the unhappy mermaid looks on speechless as her prince abandons her in favour of a woman. In Andersen's fairy tale, the little mermaid throws herself into the sea, dissolving in the waves. Today, the bronze mermaid created by Eric Eriksen sits on a rock on the harbour at Langelinie Pier.

Vandals have attacked the statue on several occasions, but luckily, city officials keep the original bronze moulds in a secure location. Identical replacement limbs are always available.

When Denmark became a kingdom in the tenth century, what would later become the great city of Copenhagen was a small, non-descript fishing village named Havn. Located at the entrance to the Baltic Sea, its central location attracted the attention of the Danish crown. Recent archeological finds show that by the 11th century, Copenhagen had already evolved into a small town with a large estate, a church, a market, at least two water wells and many smaller habitations spread over a fairly wide area

Havn was transformed virtually overnight into an important business centre. The building of Slotsholm Fortress in 1167 is usually said to be the catalyst for the city's founding. Three years later, Copenhagen was given its current name, which in Danish means "merchant's harbour". In 1443, the emergent city became the official capital of the Kalmar Union of Denmark, Norway and Sweden. When the union disbanded in 1523 it became capital of the Kingdom of Denmark.

Amalienborg, the famous winter palace of the Danish royal family, stands on a broad, paved, octagonal plaza. Four nearly identical palaces were built along the four diagonal sides of the octagon. At the centre of this beautiful rococo complex, one of the loveliest in Europe, is an equestrian monument honouring King Frederik V. A changing of the guard takes place outside the palaces each midday.

The best view of the Old City of Copenhagen may be from the wide platform on top of the Round Tower. Although the tower is only 36 metres high, the spiral staircase to the top winds around 209 metres. It was once possible to ride to the top on horseback, as Peter the Great did when he visited.

Unfortunately, horses are now banned from the tower. Trinity Church is adjacent to the tower, with the shopping districts of Stroget and Straedet nearby. Most of the Old City is off limits to motor vehicles, making it one of Europe's biggest pedestrian zones. Christiansborg Palace is on the small island of Slotsholm, the site of the original fortress, which is today joined to the rest of the city by several bridges.

The palace was once home to the Danish royal family, and is now the seat of the Danish government and its parliament, the Folketing. This is the sixth building to stand here since the 1167 founding of the city. Invading armies, fires and modernization have all taken their toll. While the first castle on the site stood from 1417 into the late eighteenth century, rebuilding and renovation has been fast and furious ever since.

The present Christiansborg was built in the early twentieth century. Accessible from every quarter of the city, Tivoli Gardens amusement park first opened on 15 August 1843. Visitors can take a trip in a small boat on the moats once used for Copenhagen's defense or take a pleasant ride on the big wheel looking down at the city from on high. It has a new, zero-G roller coaster ("the Demon") and twenty-five other rides, as well as many restaurants and concert venues.

The mime presentations in the Pantomimes are extremely popular. After 150 years of continuous operation, neon signs are still banned in Tivoli. Instead, more than 110,000 incandescent lanterns brilliantly illuminate one of Europe's oldest surviving pleasure gardens. The white bulbs hung from trees contribute to Tivoli's uniquely old-fashioned atmosphere, even as the roller coaster hurtles by.