Showing posts with label Leisurestyle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leisurestyle. Show all posts

Friday, October 29, 2010

Excuse me...Forgive the Gaucheness but ...

ART?


Hirst

Wurm

McCraken

Oursler

Apparently taste matters. So if you have no weekend plans you can read all about these guys.

For me being cultured is one thing. But I draw the line at absurdity and I refuse to aspire to the elevated mentat state where I find meaning in the absurd. But I can appreciate quirky and funny. But something tells me these artists aren't trying to tickle my funny bone.










Saturday, October 23, 2010

Winter Plans

I missed summer in September...wanted to cling to it...But now that it's October I want to run out and buy the sexiest pair of practical black boots I can find and cover my body in fleece and furs...am embracing the season. I just don't know whether to sleep or pretend at being a ski bunny.Winter plans any one?

Click on Imade to Read Details






jimmy...effing...choo at saksfifthavenue.com


St.Moritz


Spa in Charmey/Gruyere


Cheese in Gruyere


Skiing in the Alps

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Chattel House

Chattel Houses: A Dream Vacation Home…

A vacation home: what should it look like? What should it have? Honestly, anything you want. A bed, no bed, a chair, some bricks topped with some down cushions…I just think the ultimate vacation home should transport you to another frame of mind. It should be your idea of relaxation and leisure.

I think Chattel Houses are a great idea for a beautiful vacation home. Meanwhile, my best friend thinks am crazy... I love these colourful homes and the reason they are so perfect is that they are already built and some nice island villager may just agree to sell it to you at the right price. So then all that’s left to be done is for you to call the moving truck and plop the house down on a ½ acre or so of a picturesque patch of countryside or balmy bluff that overlooks a beach. English Garden in the sun anyone? But as you know in the Caribbean we do get some seriously strong hurricanes and to adopt one of these beauties as a home today would require serious reinforcements. But with a good architect and some creative engineering and design instincts it is feasible.



Here are 10 things about Chattel Houses that will help to convince you that I am not crazy and that this idea is feasible.


Present in almost all Caribbean Islands: The word “chattel” is used in the common law legal system to refer to private or personal property as opposed to real property (real estate); in the civil law legal tradition it is used to mean movable property which was not sold with the land like two cows, a donkey and a couple roosters and hens, for example.


 Movable Property: So Chattel Houses are movable houses in both civil law and common law legal systems? Yes! So in Barbados (common law) and St. Lucia (mixed civil and common law) you could buy a chattel house as a vacation home? Right!


 Originally Used by Slaves and Plantation Workers: These small brightly-coloured houses were set on blocks or rocks and were used to house slaves and later plantation workers.


 Easily Dismantled: It is also true that these houses were originally built using pegs and not nails so that they could be easily dismantled (now of course they're built with nails). Since the plantation workers couldn’t afford the land or the land tax associated with the property they were keen to be able to have a house that they could easily move from one lease-holding to another. Plus, it did help too that if the plantation owner fired you, you could just pack-up, call a donkey and moving cart and call it a day. Genius! No? So imagine how useful they became to plantation workers who could be fired and ordered off the land where they lived without a word’s notice. Perfect recession houses.


 Somewhat Hurricane Resistant: The roofs on these homes were built quite steeply so that the rain could easily seep off and, if you look closely you’ll see that most of the roofs of most of the chattel houses are built with corrugated metal. In Jamaica we just say “zinc roof”---utility here is (supposedly) that the corrugated roofs withstand not just heavy rains but high winds also. Well it does…to an extent it lessens the impact of hurricanes and the slope must have prevented the roofs from blowing off too quickly in hurricanes. Later more modern roofing systems have been used to replace “zinc” roofs on Chattel Houses. The corrugated metal was also used to make additions to the houses, or even fencing around property (and is still used as such today).


 Two or Three Rooms: A typical chattel house is quite modest in terms of square footage and number of rooms. The houses were usually one or two rooms and sported beautiful ornate fretwork, miniature jalousie windows and front patios with carved wooden banisters. If you buy an old Chattel House it will likely have one main room used as a living room, a small bedroom, a little kitchen and a bathroom. Yes, well hello: what else could you possibly need in a vacation home?


 More Commonly Found in Barbados: Most Chattel Houses will be found in Barbados, St. Kitts and Antigua and a few other Eastern Caribbean Islands. You will find more Chattel Houses in Barbados because Barbados is less prone to hurricanes than the other islands.


 Buy one today for 60,000 USD: Original Chattel Houses that have been passed down from generation to generation can be purchased today and are reasonably priced (anywhere from 5,000 USD to 60,000 USD). Of course the price depends on the integrity of the structure (e.g. the condition of the wood), the square footage of the property and the number of rooms it has.


 Build One From Scratch: You can also build a new Chattel House (buy some beautiful Guyanese purpleheart wood and get a good local architect and contractor to do your bidding). A newly built Chattel House could cost anywhere between 15,000 USD and 40,000 USD.


 Sold in Local Papers: The classified ads in the local newspapers are a great starting point in finding a Chattel House for sale. You can also contact local real estate agents or simply take a mini-break and go driving around a couple local villages and test your luck. You never know: someone may just be willing to sell his birthright. If you are thinking of buying a Chattel House or building one I think the best way to start is to buy/rent the land first. I’d say check the local newspapers to gauge the land prices and start from there.

 
Just Imagine the Possibilities...








Still don’t believe in the dream? Get a hold of Lord Glenconner in front of this cute little gingerbread number that he had moved from a mountain village in St. Lucia. Oh and look at the dapper Lord’s digs on his fabulous Beau Estate in St. Lucia. Read more about Lord Glenconner's home in St.Lucia at Architectural Digest.


Friday, May 14, 2010

Two Cigarette’ and Two Icy Mint’

Two Cigarette’ and Two Icy Mint’

My Uncle Stuby was my favourite uncle when I was a little girl (don’t tell my other uncle that…). I think it’s because he was so expressive in his love for my cousin and I.

He used to pick me up at school on a bicycle that he made from scrap parts. At least two or three different bicycles went into his one unique home-made model.

At fours years old, in infant school, I was the most timid, insipid little thing –a skinny, scrawny little girl with an enormous head of hair that was too heavy for my little neck to carry. After lunch, at school, all of us children would travel single file back to the classroom--with our sticky fingers and bubble-gum lips-- and we were told to take a nap. Like a nice little obedient girl I would put my head on the desk, close my eyes and fall asleep.

Later in the afternoon around 3.00 pm my uncle would come to school to take me home on his scrap bicycle. He would take one look at me and haul me up into his arms and give me one of his big pity kisses: during nap time some of my classmates would have undone my plaits leaving me with my big sticky, bubble-gum hair straining my neck. My uncle would bend down and undo the lace from his beloved Clarks suede shoes, and, with great concentration and effort, bundle up my hair and try to fashion me a ponytail with his shoe lace. He would then climb on to his bicycle and hoist me up to sit on the red bar connecting the patchy leather seat and the yellow handlebar of the bicycle; and home we went with the sun burning our foreheads and my Uncle’s gravelly voice singing Dennis Brown in my ear.

On a Friday evening, after a long week of work at the bottling factory, my Uncle would gear up for a relaxing weekend. He would start out by sending me to buy two cigarettes and two icy mints. Icy mints were mint sweets like breath fresheners – the mint flavor was so strong that it felt like ice on the tongue. After dinner and a shower he would sit in front of the TV and smoke his cigarettes; one icy mint was his, the other mine. This time was luxury for my uncle— a week of hard work, time with family, two cigarettes and two icy mints.

As I grew older I savoured so many different things in life. My “cigarette and two icy mints” have gone through many changes: At 4 years old it was “two cigarette and two icy mint’” with my Uncle Stuby; at 20 years old in Barbados it was a stop at my favourite used book store on a Saturday morning where I would buy a dozen romance novels and go home to bed to read all weekend; at 25 in the Bahamas it was two hours at the gym that overlooked the beach; more recently it’s that 20 minutes before I fall asleep when, to my noisy protests, my unruly dog would hop up on our bed and burrow a space between my husband and I.

What’s your “two cigarette’ and two icy mint’”?