Nice places you mentioned there, been many times whilst touring on the motorcycle, but will have to stick with sunny Cleveleys for now. Sent from my SM-G920F using TZ-UK mobile app
I live right on the Bristol Channel in a town called Portishead, the town has everything you need in regards to shops, dining, pubs, boating etc.
Also great walks from National Trust coastal paths to woodland walks all within a few hundred yards of my house which I take advantage of every day with my dog, with the strong tides and climatic weather the scenery is changing all the time..
Nice places you mentioned there, been many times whilst touring on the motorcycle, but will have to stick with sunny Cleveleys for now. Sent from my SM-G920F using TZ-UK mobile app
Yes agree, ive lived in Cleveleys just north of Blackpool for the past 17yrs and love it here, also love the West Coast of Scotland too, never been to Northumberland but heard it's nice also.
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Last edited by Matt68; 17th November 2020 at 07:16.
+1 for Cornwall. Not far from where I live. Just love it down that way.
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Is your forum name inspired by your location?
We used to live near Clevedon and on a visit back to the area last year we were amazed at the changes that have taken place to Portishead, what was a sleepy seaside town has developed so much over the last couple of decades.
R
Ignorance breeds Fear. Fear breeds Hatred. Hatred breeds Ignorance. Break the chain.
I'd say that depends on how you look at things.
We had a nice lodge on a small park in Devon and I'd say the running costs were about £6k per year (in line with Ruggertech's breakdown). It provided us with many years of weekends away and we'd stay most of the school holidays there, often having friends join us and some of whom we'd let use it* when we weren't there. I'd estimate we holidayed there for about a total of twenty weeks per annum, but for the same amount of time staying elsewhere it would have cost us far, far more than there.
*We never let our property out commercially, but some other lodge owners did and the rental income generated from £400 up to £1000 per week, so you could easily recuperate your annual costs if you wished to.
R
Ignorance breeds Fear. Fear breeds Hatred. Hatred breeds Ignorance. Break the chain.
Oh I agree, the enjoyment we had for 18 years or so was worth every penny and then some, and I also used to do the cost of that versus other holidays maths also.
But when we are talking about being retired on a limited income things change. Around my way a 40k pa income is way above average, so a good let's say 20k pa pension off that doesn't really allow for 5 or 6k a year keeping a caravan or lodge.
I'd be seriously worried letting out a caravan, it would get a hammering, a lodge less so I'd suppose as it's more redectoratable (if that's a word).
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I restored a house near Blackwood last year and after spending months there I became very fond of the area..
Back on topic, a friend has a top of the range caravan at an expensive site in Newquay, just with site fees and finance he took out to buy it is around £900 a month, to subsidise this he has to let it out and I think that is part of the agreement, in the last year he has struggled as the finance and site still want their money but with lockdown over major parts of the summer there has been very limited holiday letting.
Certainly not cheap owning holiday homes but at least the memories last which is more important..
Yes indeed. My next door neighbour in Spain rents his villa out for the entire two months of July and August and the income from that (£900pw) pays for all of his running costs. So basically his tenants are buying his villa for him and he intends to use it 20 odd weeks a year when he retires in 3 years time.
Personally I would never rent out my villa as I don't want some other bugger farting in my sofa and mattress.
Glad you liked it, I'm biased, but for me the Sirhowy Valley is a very green and pleasant place. I no longer live there, but not far away and I visit my folk and other family weekly.
I took voluntary retirement last summer (2019) and have been living off redundancy money until I turn 55 in January and can claim my pensions. We sold the caravan with the intention of buying a holiday home which we would have had to let out to be able to afford it. We wouldn't have gone under, but our savings would have taken a hammering this year! And who knows what next year holds? So we've bought a vw campervan out of the money we had for selling the caravan instead.
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Last edited by Ruggertech; 17th November 2020 at 11:17.
TBH, I never heard of any of the owners having a bad experience from their renting out, but of course there is that possibility. Like you, we really enjoyed our period of ownership and loved the area, so much so we moved down here a few miles from where the lodge was and still keep in touch with some of ex-neighbours.
https://moorviewsouthdevon.co.uk
R
Ignorance breeds Fear. Fear breeds Hatred. Hatred breeds Ignorance. Break the chain.
I guess the risk of bad renters is the same as providing an air bnb, and although anything can be repaired a caravan seems very 'flimsy' compared to a lodge or a bricks and mortar property.
Very nice that you were able to move to the same area. Where we had our caravan in Pembrokeshire is still very high on our eventual forever home list, indeed some of the other caravanners and quite a few locals are what we think of as our real friends, so it will make a lot of sense for us when we can.
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Last edited by number2; 17th November 2020 at 14:38.
"Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time it's enemy action."
'Populism, the last refuge of a Tory scoundrel'.
We have a flat in Spain. The people below us rent their place out: we don't.
They do however lock the master bedroom up when they aren't there, so mattress farting isn't an issue.
Just as an aside, I haven't been at our place in Spain since the start of this year, due to the various lockdowns over there and over here, and the lack of flights. Flybe going bust didn't help there, as the direct flights from Exeter have just about disappeared. Ryanair still do direct flights, and we'd booked to go back out early next year but they've just emailed us to say it's cancelled.
So, we're shelling out a fair bit of wonga for something we can't currently use. My Spanish family in law are taking full advantage though.
They are photos of the bay and beach our holiday home directly overlooks in North Somerset. I just grabbed them off the net, as I don't have the photos I have taken with me at the moment.
It's a stunning location, and for a Rockhound keen lifelong amateur geologist and paleontologist like me, it's a slice of heaven.
So clever my foot fell off.
I was born in Bonnie Scotland and left the then warzone that was Glasgow in the 60s and 70s to live and work in Oxfordshire where I eventually met my wife. Once I introduced her to the delights Scotland had to offer, she wanted nothing more than to holiday there each year, which was at least three times annually! When I retired a few years ago after over 40 years down south, a move (back, for me) to Scotland to be by the sea was actually driven as much, if not more by her than me!
We moved to Cellardyke, on the East Neuk of Fife, just over 3 years ago, and we’ are living the proverbial dream! She works 3 or 4 days a week in St Andrew’s which is 10 miles away, and I work weekends as a parachute instructor at nearby Glenrothes, so we get to spend lots of quality time together.
We can see the sea from our window, the 113 miles of the Fife coastal path is almost literally on our doorstep, and the sun rises on the sea horizon and shines on us without hindrance or shadow all day. We enjoy fresh seafood straight off the boats at Pittenweem, we can sail to the nearby Isle of May to see the seals and puffins, we can wander on deserted beaches and swim in crystal clear water, and Anstruther, which is next door to us has all the amenities, other than high street shops, that anyone might need.
We are no more than 2 hours from 5 cities, and 2 hours from the Glenshee ski centre in the Cairngorms. The western isles and the highlands are easily in touch. The east enjoys a much kinder climate than the west, although we do get er, a bit of wind here occasionally, and there are nae midges!
It’s quieter and slower with, we think a better standard of living, without the crowds, the traffic, the jams, the noise, the constant bustle and impersonal atmosphere we left behind. We don’t really miss any of that.
Yeah, we quite like living by the coast...
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Last edited by pinpull; 17th November 2020 at 17:39.
Beautiful Pinpull, and cooked lobster for seven quid!
So clever my foot fell off.
I could see myself living anywhere on the coast, if the house was right. Recently I've found myself coveting various properties from an Italianate terraced mansion in Waterloo in Merseyside, late Victorian red-brick houses in Eastbourne and Hastings, and a 1920s Lutyens house near Durdle Door that I first saw on a school geography trip and fell in love with as a teenager. Not that I can afford any of them, sigh...
We holiday in Charmouth on the Jurassic coast. If moving there to live, I’d probably budge along to Lyme Regis.
However, I keep returning to this:
Swain Street, Watchet
https://www.rightmove.co.uk/property...-62641417.html
[QUOTE=pinpull;5590732]I was born in Bonnie Scotland and left the then warzone that was Glasgow in the 60s and 70s to live and work in Oxfordshire where I eventually met my wife. Once I introduced her to the delights Scotland had to offer, she wanted nothing more than to holiday there each year, which was at least three times annually! When I retired a few years ago after over 40 years down south, a move (back, for me) to Scotland to be by the sea was actually driven as much, if not more by her than me!
We moved to Cellardyke, on the East Neuk of Fife, just over 3 years ago, and we’ are living the proverbial dream! She works 3 or 4 days a week in St Andrew’s which is 10 miles away, and I work weekends as a parachute instructor at nearby Glenrothes, so we get to spend lots of quality time together.
We can see the sea from our window, the 113 miles of the Fife coastal path is almost literally on our doorstep, and the sun rises on the sea horizon and shines on us without hindrance or shadow all day. We enjoy fresh seafood straight off the boats at Pittenweem, we can sail to the nearby Isle of May to see the seals and puffins, we can wander on deserted beaches and swim in crystal clear water, and Anstruther, which is next door to us has all the amenities, other than high street shops, that anyone might need.
We are no more than 2 hours from 5 cities, and 2 hours from the Glenshee ski centre in the Cairngorms. The western isles and the highlands are easily in touch. The east enjoys a much kinder climate than the west, although we do get er, a bit of wind here occasionally, and there are nae midges!
It’s quieter and slower with, we think a better standard of living, without the crowds, the traffic, the jams, the noise, the constant bustle and impersonal atmosphere we left behind. We don’t really miss any of that.
Yeah, we quite like living by the coast...
Looks fantastic. If it wasn't for the fact that you probably won't see daylight until March, I'd be very temped to join you.
Lyme Regis is great, although it gets so busy these days. We went a couple of times in the summer for the day and it was rammed. My parents have a place there but no-one has stayed there for a few years as they took half the furniture out and put it in Topsham where they also never stayed 😂. It’ll be sold next year and my wife was seriously considering whether we should buy it.
After seagulls, the second biggest gripe about these hidden coastal villages: monthly pagan sacrifices!
Wow, I walk my dog most days past the sailing club and along the beach, your right every now and again the water does take a tinge of blue..
At least we get to smell the sea every day and I tell my lad how lucky he is to grow up near the sea, when I was I kid I used to play on railway lines!
A fair bit further afield of course but this seems like cracking value to live in Phuket. Cheaper than most 1 bed flats in London!
https://www.fazwaz.com/property-sale...phuket-u160591
That one is a few miles from the sea - if you want to be right by the sea and are ok living in an older property (much cheaper) then this one would do the trick
https://www.fazwaz.com/property-sale...-phuket-u18978
Much more expensive of course but you'd not get anything in Poole or Bournemouth next to the sea for anything close to that price and they are offering it at the 'Thai price' of £754k instead of the 'foreigner price' of £1.63m (typically the price you pay in Thailand is dictated by your nationality)
Last edited by ryanb741; 18th November 2020 at 08:02.
We moved down to Chichester just over a year ago and we're about 7 miles from the sea.
However according to global warming and rising sea level forecasts, in less than 30 years we'll be in a beach front property!
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That last part about getting perpetually shafted for being a foreigner would get on my nerves.
And those prices although 'cheap' cf Londres are still pretty stiff...I bought a 4 bed, 2 bathroom place in Spain, detached house, admittedly a whole 4km from my nearest beach, for only 155, 000 pounds, 3 years ago...add in the cost of the 70 sq m pool, porch and additional 350 sq m's of terracing and it's still only 210,000 pounds...Just for perspective.
Last edited by Passenger; 18th November 2020 at 13:24.
But, I think it’s the reason these paradise-type properties are relatively cheap in Thailand.
If they allowed anyone to buy 100% of the freehold like the do in the U.K. and a lot of other countries, Thailand property would be a lot more expensive.
Good on Thailand for not letting letting their population get priced out by rich farangs. Unlike vast swathes of prime London.
It is because their buying power is higher and they would simply buy up all the properties making it unaffordable for most of the locals. Kind of like what happened in the UK. E.G £650k for a 1 bed apartment in London propped up by Chinese 'investors'. So it is to protect the local market who bizarrely view a house as somewhere to live in and not something to flip, remortgage against or rent out to make a profit.
Foreigners can still buy apartments at whatever the market rate is btw.
Last edited by ryanb741; 18th November 2020 at 13:49.