Estate Agents In York

Friday, January 31, 2020

Country diary: the telltale signs of a wood mouse

Upton-by-Chester, Cheshire: In spring, females establish individual nests beneath hedgerows or tucked into tree roots, but they are drawn to anywhere warm with plentiful food nearby, turning up in bird boxes, sheds and even car radiators

In my wildly untidy back garden, the puppy is now big enough to scramble up a rubble pile to get next door. I’m dismantling the heavy chunks of concrete when something much more delicate is revealed: in one particular nook there is a nest. It is no more than a hand’s width in diameter and on a chilly day it looks quite inviting for a small creature: leaves, moss and grass. Access is limited and would require crawling up tight spaces from underneath; coupled with the dark droppings, like tiny grains of black rice, this suggests a rodent resident. It doesn’t smell like a house mouse nest – that pungent aroma of pee – so I suspect this was the summer home of a female wood mouse, perhaps abandoned in favour of community living for the colder months.

Wood mice nest together to get through the winter, most often in underground burrows alongside food stores collected in their frantic autumn foraging sprees. In spring, females establish individual nests beneath hedgerows or tucked into tree roots, but they are drawn to anywhere warm with plentiful food nearby, turning up in bird boxes, sheds and even car radiators. Perhaps “garden mouse” should be added to Apodemus sylvaticus’s aliases “wood mouse” and “long-tailed field mouse”.

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Country diary: the telltale signs of a wood mouse

Upton-by-Chester, Cheshire: In spring, females establish individual nests beneath hedgerows or tucked into tree roots, but they are drawn to anywhere warm with plentiful food nearby, turning up in bird boxes, sheds and even car radiators

In my wildly untidy back garden, the puppy is now big enough to scramble up a rubble pile to get next door. I’m dismantling the heavy chunks of concrete when something much more delicate is revealed: in one particular nook there is a nest. It is no more than a hand’s width in diameter and on a chilly day it looks quite inviting for a small creature: leaves, moss and grass. Access is limited and would require crawling up tight spaces from underneath; coupled with the dark droppings, like tiny grains of black rice, this suggests a rodent resident. It doesn’t smell like a house mouse nest – that pungent aroma of pee – so I suspect this was the summer home of a female wood mouse, perhaps abandoned in favour of community living for the colder months.

Wood mice nest together to get through the winter, most often in underground burrows alongside food stores collected in their frantic autumn foraging sprees. In spring, females establish individual nests beneath hedgerows or tucked into tree roots, but they are drawn to anywhere warm with plentiful food nearby, turning up in bird boxes, sheds and even car radiators. Perhaps “garden mouse” should be added to Apodemus sylvaticus’s aliases “wood mouse” and “long-tailed field mouse”.

Continue reading...

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Conveyancing: Advice for homebuyers Nottingham Estate Agents

Are you baffled by property jargon such as the term ‘conveyancing’? haart ensures you understand what the process entails with this helpful guide Conveyancing is the term applied to the legal and administrative work associated with transferring ownership of land or buildings from one owner to another. When an offer has been made and accepted […]

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Let’s move to the north Pembrokeshire coast: a place to escape the universe’s ills

Pretty, alluring and a tad quieter than the southern shores, this is an illustrious stretch of coastline

What’s going for it? It’s that time of the year when I fantasise about an escape plan, especially in the current geopolitical climate. Maybe I could move to Hokkaido and train in kintsugi. No, too clumsy of hand and, you know, kind of far. OK, maybe I could move to Brittany and open a B&B. Remember your former “career” in hospitality, Tom, pulling disastrous pints at the local? Best forgotten, eh? Or maybe I could move to the north Pembrokeshire coast and, well, do anything, really. I’d be happy as Larry employed in whatever you threw at me anywhere from St David’s Head to Cemaes Head, so long as I had a brisk walk and a pint in the Golden Lion to look forward to. It’s an illustrious stretch of coastline: a little less visited than the southern coast, but just as alluring, as if purpose-built for gannet-spotting, rugged strolls along knobbly cliffs and discovering sandy coves untouched by human toes. It’s a prime spot for escaping the ills of the universe. Personally, on my days off, I’d roam the Preseli hilltops and study the Neolithic dolmen scattered hereabouts. Who knows, one day I might open that B&B, with a kintsugi school attached.

The case against Getting around may be problematic. Jobs are often seasonal. Hotspots, such as Newport, are crowded in summer.

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Let’s move to the north Pembrokeshire coast: a place to escape the universe’s ills

Pretty, alluring and a tad quieter than the southern shores, this is an illustrious stretch of coastline

What’s going for it? It’s that time of the year when I fantasise about an escape plan, especially in the current geopolitical climate. Maybe I could move to Hokkaido and train in kintsugi. No, too clumsy of hand and, you know, kind of far. OK, maybe I could move to Brittany and open a B&B. Remember your former “career” in hospitality, Tom, pulling disastrous pints at the local? Best forgotten, eh? Or maybe I could move to the north Pembrokeshire coast and, well, do anything, really. I’d be happy as Larry employed in whatever you threw at me anywhere from St David’s Head to Cemaes Head, so long as I had a brisk walk and a pint in the Golden Lion to look forward to. It’s an illustrious stretch of coastline: a little less visited than the southern coast, but just as alluring, as if purpose-built for gannet-spotting, rugged strolls along knobbly cliffs and discovering sandy coves untouched by human toes. It’s a prime spot for escaping the ills of the universe. Personally, on my days off, I’d roam the Preseli hilltops and study the Neolithic dolmen scattered hereabouts. Who knows, one day I might open that B&B, with a kintsugi school attached.

The case against Getting around may be problematic. Jobs are often seasonal. Hotspots, such as Newport, are crowded in summer.

Continue reading...

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Inside four South African homes to rival the Love Island villa

Are they your type on paper?

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London asking rents hit new record average amid ongoing stock deficit

Read the full story, here.

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Thursday, January 30, 2020

Homes with an unusual roof – in pictures

There’s no shortage of character at these five properties, from oast houses to castles

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Country diary: sunny 'choirboys' push their ruffs out of the leaf litter

Allendale, Northumberland: Winter aconites, out before even the snowdrops, pop up in unexpected places

Since early January, their sulphur yellow buds have been tightly closed, holding promise in their gently pointed, six-petalled domes. A song thrush has flicked through the leaf litter around them, casting wary backwards glances. A stoat has skipped along beneath the sycamore branches. Mornings have been frosty or damp or flecked with snow.

Now, in a blaze of unfolding, their petals (technically sepals) have opened to the sun and each flowerhead seems to have doubled in size. Winter aconites, out before even the snowdrops, they have pushed aside the decaying leaves of the woodland border to pop up in unexpected places, among lungworts, under hellebores, between box hedge and path, with exuberant freedom.

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Country diary: sunny 'choirboys' push their ruffs out of the leaf litter

Allendale, Northumberland: Winter aconites, out before even the snowdrops, pop up in unexpected places

Since early January, their sulphur yellow buds have been tightly closed, holding promise in their gently pointed, six-petalled domes. A song thrush has flicked through the leaf litter around them, casting wary backwards glances. A stoat has skipped along beneath the sycamore branches. Mornings have been frosty or damp or flecked with snow.

Now, in a blaze of unfolding, their petals (technically sepals) have opened to the sun and each flowerhead seems to have doubled in size. Winter aconites, out before even the snowdrops, they have pushed aside the decaying leaves of the woodland border to pop up in unexpected places, among lungworts, under hellebores, between box hedge and path, with exuberant freedom.

Continue reading...

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Top energy-saving tips Nottingham Estate Agents

Saving energy, like recycling waste, is one of those good habits which people acquire, but all too often lose. We tend to get our lofts insulated and turn off electrical appliances we are not using, then fall back into our bad old ways – and end up with inflated energy bills. It should not be […]

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The ‘downsizing’ trend is an insult to young and poor renters

Moving somewhere smaller and more design-efficient is sold as a lifestyle choice. Try telling that to those trapped in shoebox-sized accommodation

Sheri Koones, author of Downsize: Living Large in a Small House, recently suggested renaming the downsizing trend “right-sizing”. Koones draws on her experience of relocating from a 6,800 sq ft house to a 1,400 sq ft one, and suggests that “the key is to have a home that is efficiently designed, both in terms of energy use and space”.

Of all the annoying lifestyle trends, downsizing is the biggest smack in the face for anyone in the private-renting trap. Shoebox-sized, sub-par rental accommodation is the norm in London, while nationwide studies show that homes are getting smaller. Younger adults who have managed to get on the housing ladder know all about the shortage of affordable, spacious accommodation.

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The ‘downsizing’ trend is an insult to young and poor renters

Moving somewhere smaller and more design-efficient is sold as a lifestyle choice. Try telling that to those trapped in shoebox-sized accommodation

Sheri Koones, author of Downsize: Living Large in a Small House, recently suggested renaming the downsizing trend “right-sizing”. Koones draws on her experience of relocating from a 6,800 sq ft house to a 1,400 sq ft one, and suggests that “the key is to have a home that is efficiently designed, both in terms of energy use and space”.

Of all the annoying lifestyle trends, downsizing is the biggest smack in the face for anyone in the private-renting trap. Shoebox-sized, sub-par rental accommodation is the norm in London, while nationwide studies show that homes are getting smaller. Younger adults who have managed to get on the housing ladder know all about the shortage of affordable, spacious accommodation.

Continue reading...

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Wednesday, January 29, 2020

10 tips for choosing your estate agent Nottingham Estate Agents

Property selling is not something most of us do every day, so choosing an estate agency to handle the sale might seem a little daunting. Contrary to what you may think, not all agencies are the same and some will be more effective than others. This guide from OnTheMarket.com will help you find a professional […]

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UK house price growth at 14-month high, says Nationwide

January property values are 1.9% higher than a year ago and average price stands at £215,897

Annual house price growth jumped to a 14-month high this month, according to Nationwide Building Society.

Across the UK, property values were 1.9% higher than a year earlier, marking the strongest annual growth since November 2018, when it was also at 1.9%. The average house price in January stands at £215,897 – 0.5% higher than in December.

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Tuesday, January 28, 2020

The £584 price tag we have had to pay for Land Registry delays

We can’t get our lease registered without a mortgage and can’t get a mortgage without the Registry

My partner and I extended the low lease of our new flat, a process which took nearly two years and cost £25,000. Our solicitor submitted the documentation to the Land Registry. She informed us there was a backlog and that it should be registered within two months.

Five months later our fixed-rate mortgage was due to end so we found a new deal with a different lender, but it was rejected because Land Registry records still showed our property on a lease of less than 70 years. The Land Registry said that, in order to expedite the matter, we needed to send them a mortgage offer. But lenders will not give an offer on a property with a lease below 70 years. Instead, we sent the mortgage rejection letter, but it still insisted on an offer.

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Do you own a holiday-let? 5 tips to get it up to scratch for next season Nottingham Estate Agents

Independent estate agent, Chartsedge, reveals the vital checks needed to ensure your holiday-let home is in good order for the year ahead It’s no surprise that many property owners are short of time and will find it difficult to visit their holiday-lets to arrange for minor work to be carried out. However, as we approach […]

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Monday, January 27, 2020

Aah, a hot bath – archive, 28 January 1936

28 January 1936 The immense satisfaction a good soak brings

Just a spot more hot from that supply which you have so lovingly conserved for this moment of scarcely perceptible diminution in that superb, that liquid, melting warmth that buoyantly enfolds you. To this haven you have attained through a barrier of scalding heat, through a frantic period of toe-dipping and flicking, with just enough self-command remaining not to ruin all by too easy a recourse to “the cold”; through a phase of immersion by instalment, when your legs assumed a lobster hue and you clenched your teeth upon the cry of parboiled agony. But it was worth it. You have achieved perfection. You reach out a languid hand to the hot tap and sink back into the depths lulled, comforted, secure, as the new water wells round you.

Related: The hot bath habit: from the archive, 7 October 1925

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A guide to helping your children get a foot on the property ladder Nottingham Estate Agents

Nottingham Mortgage Services explain how parents can offer their financial help Hundreds of thousands of first time buyers are turning to the ‘bank of mum and dad’ this year to help get a foot on the property ladder – including older children who have long since cut the apron strings. One of the main reasons […]

The post A guide to helping your children get a foot on the property ladder appeared first on OnTheMarket.com blog.



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Aah, a hot bath – archive, 28 January 1936

28 January 1936 The immense satisfaction a good soak brings

Just a spot more hot from that supply which you have so lovingly conserved for this moment of scarcely perceptible diminution in that superb, that liquid, melting warmth that buoyantly enfolds you. To this haven you have attained through a barrier of scalding heat, through a frantic period of toe-dipping and flicking, with just enough self-command remaining not to ruin all by too easy a recourse to “the cold”; through a phase of immersion by instalment, when your legs assumed a lobster hue and you clenched your teeth upon the cry of parboiled agony. But it was worth it. You have achieved perfection. You reach out a languid hand to the hot tap and sink back into the depths lulled, comforted, secure, as the new water wells round you.

Related: The hot bath habit: from the archive, 7 October 1925

Continue reading...

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UK banks approve highest number of mortgages since 2015

Bank of England could be more likely to leave interest rates on hold amid property upturn

The number of mortgages approved by Britain’s high street banks jumped to the highest level for almost five years in December, in the latest sign of a revival in the housing market.

Mortgage approvals for house purchases increased to 46,815 in December compared with 44,058 a month earlier, according to UK Finance – hitting the highest level since April 2015.

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Get another room! Should you have a dedicated sex den in your home?

Could a love nest other than the bedroom spice up your relationship – or is a sex drawer all you need? Here’s what the experts say

As if the housing crisis were not acute enough, it turns out that your home probably does not have the one room that promises a life of excitement and a long-lasting, fulfilling relationship: a shag room. A dedicated space for such purposes is the “hot new trend for sex in 2020”, according to the Sun. The actor Brian Cox recently told the Guardian that he and his wife meet up in a room a few floors below their Manhattan apartment. “It’s basically her room and I’m allowed to visit occasionally,” he said. So if you don’t have a dedicated shag space, are you missing out? Should you turf one of the kids out of their room, or forgo a downstairs loo?

For most of us, the bedroom is where the action happens, but as Lucy Beresford, the broadcaster and author of Happy Relationships, says, it “also becomes the place where you charge your mobile phone, have your laundry basket, maybe your kids come in and want to share your bed at various times of the night. All of those things need to be stripped out if possible. If that is difficult, having a room that is completely dedicated [to sex] is a brilliant idea.” Furnish it how you like, install flattering lighting. “You can pretend you’re in a hotel, you can turn it into whatever you want it to be. It’s also a place you go to, so it has that sense of anticipation – every time you go to the den, this is what’s going to happen – and that can be just as arousing. It can also be the place that everybody else knows is your sex space.”

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Get another room! Should you have a dedicated sex den in your home?

Could a love nest other than the bedroom spice up your relationship – or is a sex drawer all you need? Here’s what the experts say

As if the housing crisis were not acute enough, it turns out that your home probably does not have the one room that promises a life of excitement and a long-lasting, fulfilling relationship: a shag room. A dedicated space for such purposes is the “hot new trend for sex in 2020”, according to the Sun. The actor Brian Cox recently told the Guardian that he and his wife meet up in a room a few floors below their Manhattan apartment. “It’s basically her room and I’m allowed to visit occasionally,” he said. So if you don’t have a dedicated shag space, are you missing out? Should you turf one of the kids out of their room, or forgo a downstairs loo?

For most of us, the bedroom is where the action happens, but as Lucy Beresford, the broadcaster and author of Happy Relationships, says, it “also becomes the place where you charge your mobile phone, have your laundry basket, maybe your kids come in and want to share your bed at various times of the night. All of those things need to be stripped out if possible. If that is difficult, having a room that is completely dedicated [to sex] is a brilliant idea.” Furnish it how you like, install flattering lighting. “You can pretend you’re in a hotel, you can turn it into whatever you want it to be. It’s also a place you go to, so it has that sense of anticipation – every time you go to the den, this is what’s going to happen – and that can be just as arousing. It can also be the place that everybody else knows is your sex space.”

Continue reading...

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Star property under £500,000 Nottingham Estate Agents

The sellers of this Grade II-listed Suffolk cottage took on a real project when they bought it – and the results are clear for all to see. Mill House in the village of Barningham is believed to date back to the 1600s and is now a beautiful example of a period thatched cottage that has […]

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Sunday, January 26, 2020

If I sell a buy-to-let property and buy another, can I defer CGT?

A landlord appears to be hoping he can claim business asset roll-over relief to delay paying tax

Q If I sell a buy-to-let property and immediately use proceeds to buy another, is the payment of capital gains tax deferred?
SK

A Short answer: no. You are clearly hoping that selling a buy-to-let property and buying another would make you eligible to claim business asset roll-over relief but it doesn’t. Roll-over relief lets you put off paying any capital gains tax (CGT) due on the gain from the sale of a business asset until you sell the business asset that you bought to replace it but only – among other things – if you are trading. And HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) doesn’t consider investing in a buy-to-let property as trading.

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How to live off the grid: 8 things to consider for off-grid living Nottingham Estate Agents

Living off the grid, that great dream of self-sufficiency which burns strongly in many people seems to be coming back into vogue.  Why be reliant on state-run utilities for water and electricity when, with a bit of effort, you can generate your own? Why drive to a supermarket to buy food that has been transported […]

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Derek Jarman’s house provides a rare space for queer history. We must save it | Luke Turner

There are few public buildings in the UK that celebrate LGBTQ+ culture. Preserving Prospect Cottage in Kent would do that

In 1992 Derek Jarman, seriously ill with HIV, was asked what his memorial might be. “Oh, nothing,” he replied, “because film disappears, thank God.” It might seem strange to think of Jarman’s joy in the transience of his art in the context of a recently launched Art Fund campaign to raise £3.5m in 10 weeks to purchase and save Prospect Cottage, his home and workplace in Dungeness, Kent. There’s certainly an irony that more than a quarter of a century after his death an arts body is seeking to raise millions to preserve his house, when during his lifetime he faced a constant battle to finance his films.

Making Prospect Cottage a space to transform lives seems to me to be a wonderful way of furthering Jarman's legacy

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Derek Jarman’s house provides a rare space for queer history. We must save it | Luke Turner

There are few public buildings in the UK that celebrate LGBTQ+ culture. Preserving Prospect Cottage in Kent would do that

In 1992 Derek Jarman, seriously ill with HIV, was asked what his memorial might be. “Oh, nothing,” he replied, “because film disappears, thank God.” It might seem strange to think of Jarman’s joy in the transience of his art in the context of a recently launched Art Fund campaign to raise £3.5m in 10 weeks to purchase and save Prospect Cottage, his home and workplace in Dungeness, Kent. There’s certainly an irony that more than a quarter of a century after his death an arts body is seeking to raise millions to preserve his house, when during his lifetime he faced a constant battle to finance his films.

Making Prospect Cottage a space to transform lives seems to me to be a wonderful way of furthering Jarman's legacy

Continue reading...

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How to grow a chilli with your kind of kick

Bring on some warmth by sowing chillis. There are hundreds of varieties and strengths, and decorative ones, too

The first signs of spring might well be weeks, if not months, away, so for those impatient for warmer days ahead there is one summer crop you can get sowing right now: chillies.

Despite having grown up in southeast Asia, where we can eat chillies three times a day, it wasn’t until I moved to the UK that I really became fascinated by the enormous array of weird and wonderful varieties out there, especially from small, indie growers. With literally hundreds of varieties, in an almost infinite variety of flavour, use and spice-level, I believe there must be a chilli for everyone – even people who think they don’t like chillies! So here’s my rundown of niche varieties you will never be able to buy in stores.

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How to grow a chilli with your kind of kick

Bring on some warmth by sowing chillis. There are hundreds of varieties and strengths, and decorative ones, too

The first signs of spring might well be weeks, if not months, away, so for those impatient for warmer days ahead there is one summer crop you can get sowing right now: chillies.

Despite having grown up in southeast Asia, where we can eat chillies three times a day, it wasn’t until I moved to the UK that I really became fascinated by the enormous array of weird and wonderful varieties out there, especially from small, indie growers. With literally hundreds of varieties, in an almost infinite variety of flavour, use and spice-level, I believe there must be a chilli for everyone – even people who think they don’t like chillies! So here’s my rundown of niche varieties you will never be able to buy in stores.

Continue reading...

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Saturday, January 25, 2020

Mystery bulbs mean spring will be a bigger surprise

Green shoots, obsessive checking – and the longed-for hope of the first signs of the growing season

I grew up in a magical land of meadow snowdrops, woodland bluebells and hedgerow primroses. There were riverside banks of wild garlic, which I loved for the flowers but was repelled by the smell – it was a sheltered English 60s childhood in very rural Devon.

I guess I have been a bit sniffy about growing bulbs in pots ever since, though it has been many years since we had our own flower garden. Winter pots on the roof terrace were for green leaf, multiple shades and colours of hellebore.

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May I have a word about… why even estate agents don’t deserve to be shuttered | Jonathan Bouquet

It’s terrible news that shops are closing down all over the country, but we don’t need an ugly word for the process

I have never felt the need to address the subject of estate agents. True, theirs is a despised calling, as my daughter discovered when she briefly became one and had instant pariah status bestowed on her. But reading about the lack of office space in the City, I began to share some of the revulsion.

According to Mat Oakley, the head of commercial property research at Savills: “It is going to be a very tough year for office tenants. If you’ve bought into wellness and ESG [environmental, social and governance] and productivity, you obviously want the best of the best – you want accessible buildings, you want buildings that your staff can work flexibly.” I think, reading between the lines, this means that clients want the most space for the least amount of money.

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Mystery bulbs mean spring will be a bigger surprise

Green shoots, obsessive checking – and the longed-for hope of the first signs of the growing season

I grew up in a magical land of meadow snowdrops, woodland bluebells and hedgerow primroses. There were riverside banks of wild garlic, which I loved for the flowers but was repelled by the smell – it was a sheltered English 60s childhood in very rural Devon.

I guess I have been a bit sniffy about growing bulbs in pots ever since, though it has been many years since we had our own flower garden. Winter pots on the roof terrace were for green leaf, multiple shades and colours of hellebore.

Continue reading...

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What happens to my mortgage if I break up with my partner? Nottingham Estate Agents

Around a quarter of new mortgage approvals are now based on a couple’s joint earnings so financial issues involving a relationship break-up are extremely common. Relationship break-ups are sadly a fact of life. They can be messy and if the couple breaking up are living together, and co-signatories to a mortgage, the messiness can increase […]

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Essence of jasmine: fragrant memories of childhood, love, and comfort

Used in many Thai desserts, woven into leis and offered up in prayers, jasmine sambac is easily used in a heavenly sweet scented beverage

It took us two years to find our house. I wasn’t looking for a house so much as I was looking for space to liberate the roots of all the potted fruit trees, vegetables and herbs I had accumulated which moved from rental house to rental house with us. They certainly outnumbered our boxes of possessions which were mainly made up of books on plants.

We found the perfect block in the neighbourhood that I grew up in, it was only slightly sloping and had water tanks. I must be the only person naïve enough to favour and choose real estate based on the existing water tanks on a property.

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Essence of jasmine: fragrant memories of childhood, love, and comfort

Used in many Thai desserts, woven into leis and offered up in prayers, jasmine sambac is easily used in a heavenly sweet scented beverage

It took us two years to find our house. I wasn’t looking for a house so much as I was looking for space to liberate the roots of all the potted fruit trees, vegetables and herbs I had accumulated which moved from rental house to rental house with us. They certainly outnumbered our boxes of possessions which were mainly made up of books on plants.

We found the perfect block in the neighbourhood that I grew up in, it was only slightly sloping and had water tanks. I must be the only person naïve enough to favour and choose real estate based on the existing water tanks on a property.

Continue reading...

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Kitsch confidential in New York

A Greenwich Village designer’s passion for rebooting reclaimed treasures brings her prewar duplex apartment bang up to date

Behind the classic facade of US-born designer Sasha Bikoff’s prewar Greenwich Village duplex lies a tale of 18th-century France and glam disco-era bravado. Or, to put it another way, Marie Antoinette meets Studio 54 and 1980s Palm Beach.

“I’m inspired by the eccentricity of different eras,” says Bikoff. “So when I discovered the original 80s powder room in this place, it sealed the deal. It was just so far out that I had to live here.”

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Kitsch confidential in New York

A Greenwich Village designer’s passion for rebooting reclaimed treasures brings her prewar duplex apartment bang up to date

Behind the classic facade of US-born designer Sasha Bikoff’s prewar Greenwich Village duplex lies a tale of 18th-century France and glam disco-era bravado. Or, to put it another way, Marie Antoinette meets Studio 54 and 1980s Palm Beach.

“I’m inspired by the eccentricity of different eras,” says Bikoff. “So when I discovered the original 80s powder room in this place, it sealed the deal. It was just so far out that I had to live here.”

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Grow your likes: the unstoppable rise of the Insta plant

They’re green, photogenic and social media stars

Instagram may well have changed the way you garden, even if you don’t have an account. From the plants you buy – and where you buy them – to the gardens you visit, the platform has driven a profound change in the tastes and habits of even established gardeners, not to mention encouraging a new generation of green fingers.

Plants have been inspiring artists for hundreds of years, so they are well suited to the photo app. A younger generation (urban, cash-strapped, Insta-obsessed and renting) are driving houseplant sales, sharing pictures of their plant babies instead of the human ones they can’t afford. From the dramatic structure of mother-in-law’s tongue to blousy tea roses, you can say a lot about your taste through the species you share. Connecting with nature reduces stress, much needed in these chaotic times; even bursts of online greenery, amid Instagram’s sometimes frantic commercialism, are a tonic.

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Gardening tips: chit potatoes for an early summer crop

Then plant a dark-leaved elder and visit Bicton Park Botanical Gardens in Devon

Plant this Dark-leaved elder (Sambucus nigra f. porphyrophylla ‘Black Tower’) produces pink flowers in spring followed by elderberries. It has the added benefit of growing up rather than out, making it ideal for smaller gardens. Height and spread 250cm x 120cm: full sun or partial shade.

Chit this Get some potatoes sprouting now and they’ll be ready by early summer. Try ‘Kifli’, a blight-resistant, high-yielding salad potato that’s ideal for planting in sacks or pots. The first step is chitting: place tubers in an old egg box, blunt end uppermost, on a windowsill until the shoots are about 2cm long.

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Flowers to sow for a summer wedding | Alys Fowler

Pot marigolds are the kindest, easiest, most trustworthy of flowers that reflect the values of the woman I shall marry

This summer I’ve a wedding to grow flowers for: my own. And for someone who has known about this for some time, I have left it all rather late, but there you go. It’s not my first time doing this, so I know full well that you have to start a lot earlier than a couple of months before the big day.

With this in mind, I recently opened the Chiltern Seed catalogue and weighed up my options. Frothy ammi and sprinkles of dusky pink wild carrots are unlikely to be ready in time. The same could be said of cosmos, nicotiana, zinnia, oryla; the list goes on. Of course, it is possible to force many of these things, but that would require a greenhouse and a schedule to be around every weekend for watering.

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Country diary: could alder wood wasps be breathing new life into an old friend?

Abbeydale, South Yorkshire: A much-loved tree may have gone, but dozens of small holes drilled up its trunk make me think a new chapter is about to begin

When Jim died, we decided, having talked it through with the neighbours, to leave him where he was in the garden. Our friend had been good to us in life and there was no reason to assume that would change. Jim was a tree, a common alder, although given that alders are monoecious, or hermaphroditic, not the most appropriate moniker. He, or she, was named by our daughter Rosa, who often spent afternoons after school in Jim’s boughs, hugging the fissured grey trunk, as rough as an elephant. But despite being a similar age, with a similar lifespan, the alder didn’t long survive Rosa leaving home. Over several springs, its leaves became increasingly sparse and failed to unfurl properly. An orange stain appeared in cracks at the base of the trunk. Small branches began dying off, then larger ones. Last year Jim gave up the ghost altogether, a victim to alder dieback, the Phytophthora mould infection that is ravaging alders up and down the country.

Related: Country diary: a chainsaw massacre in the alder woods

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Grow your likes: the unstoppable rise of the Insta plant

They’re green, photogenic and social media stars

Instagram may well have changed the way you garden, even if you don’t have an account. From the plants you buy – and where you buy them – to the gardens you visit, the platform has driven a profound change in the tastes and habits of even established gardeners, not to mention encouraging a new generation of green fingers.

Plants have been inspiring artists for hundreds of years, so they are well suited to the photo app. A younger generation (urban, cash-strapped, Insta-obsessed and renting) are driving houseplant sales, sharing pictures of their plant babies instead of the human ones they can’t afford. From the dramatic structure of mother-in-law’s tongue to blousy tea roses, you can say a lot about your taste through the species you share. Connecting with nature reduces stress, much needed in these chaotic times; even bursts of online greenery, amid Instagram’s sometimes frantic commercialism, are a tonic.

Continue reading...

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Gardening tips: chit potatoes for an early summer crop

Then plant a dark-leaved elder and visit Bicton Park Botanical Gardens in Devon

Plant this Dark-leaved elder (Sambucus nigra f. porphyrophylla ‘Black Tower’) produces pink flowers in spring followed by elderberries. It has the added benefit of growing up rather than out, making it ideal for smaller gardens. Height and spread 250cm x 120cm: full sun or partial shade.

Chit this Get some potatoes sprouting now and they’ll be ready by early summer. Try ‘Kifli’, a blight-resistant, high-yielding salad potato that’s ideal for planting in sacks or pots. The first step is chitting: place tubers in an old egg box, blunt end uppermost, on a windowsill until the shoots are about 2cm long.

Continue reading...

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Flowers to sow for a summer wedding | Alys Fowler

Pot marigolds are the kindest, easiest, most trustworthy of flowers that reflect the values of the woman I shall marry

This summer I’ve a wedding to grow flowers for: my own. And for someone who has known about this for some time, I have left it all rather late, but there you go. It’s not my first time doing this, so I know full well that you have to start a lot earlier than a couple of months before the big day.

With this in mind, I recently opened the Chiltern Seed catalogue and weighed up my options. Frothy ammi and sprinkles of dusky pink wild carrots are unlikely to be ready in time. The same could be said of cosmos, nicotiana, zinnia, oryla; the list goes on. Of course, it is possible to force many of these things, but that would require a greenhouse and a schedule to be around every weekend for watering.

Continue reading...

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Friday, January 24, 2020

Renting in London: Top tips to stay ahead of the game Nottingham Estate Agents

London has a sense of energy and vibrancy like no other city. And if you are thinking of moving to or within the capital, you want to be in the heart of the action, or close to good transport links. The London rental sector is so vast, and so varied, that it remains highly competitive even in premium areas. […]

The post Renting in London: Top tips to stay ahead of the game appeared first on OnTheMarket.com blog.



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Rambling solution to weekend loneliness | Brief letters

Berkeley Homes | Journal joy | Marmalade | Walking | Church

Your article’s description of a property in Southwater (Fantasy house hunt, 18 January) may give the impression that Berkeley Homes benevolently provided the facilities mentioned as new to the village. In fact, the sports and social club, including the cricket pavilion, cricket and football pitches and playground, had been in existence for many years. However, as part of their massive housing development encompassed all the land they were on, they simply replaced the existing buildings and facilities further up the hill on the edge of an unremarkable estate.
G Butler
Southwater, West Sussex

• Thank you for a marvellously readable Journal on Thursday: Owen Jones on crime, punishment and rehabilitation; Martin Kettle on Brexit; Suzanne Moore; a wonderful obituary on Terry Jones by Stuart Jeffries; a long-overdue long read on Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe by Patrick Wintour. And I haven’t even mentioned the letters page. Worth every penny of my subscription.
Jan Jeffries
Brewood, Staffordshire

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Let’s move to Romney Marsh, Kent: ‘It takes a certain someone to love it’

Many will run for the hills, but others find its squelchy fields, sluice gates and forlorn villages impossibly romantic

What’s going for it? It takes a certain someone to love Romney Marsh. That someone happens to be me. Many will gaze at its landscape of squelchy flat fields, sluice gates and forlorn, atmospheric villages, and run for the hills, as they did for centuries. Some, though, will find them all impossibly romantic and fabulously attractive. The neighbourhood did seem to attract those certain someones: Noel Coward, for instance, or Edith Nesbit, seeking escape in a spot lifted above the day-to-day in its own existential universe. It’s hard to fathom exactly where Romney Marsh gets its particular character from. Its history of malarial marshes and smugglers’ haunts hangs about like a miasma. The blank landscape is peppered with remote medieval villages, astonishing churches, such as at Fairfield, built on the riches of the wool trade, and flat-faced postwar bungalows, staring out to sea. Or perhaps it’s this landscape’s own peculiar geographical history that is so attractive, its sense of temporariness, of the mastery of nature. The fortunes of Romney Marsh and its inhabitants have risen and fallen with the tides, and the accumulation of silt and shingle. These flatlands, just north of Dungeness, were once the English Channel, the now redundant cliffs arcing miles from the sea, from Hythe to Rye. This patch of land has only been lent to Britain by the waves, and the waves might want it back some day.

The case against Bleak. Roads that turn and twist violently, dangerously, with the ditches.

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Let’s move to Romney Marsh, Kent: ‘It takes a certain someone to love it’

Many will run for the hills, but others find its squelchy fields, sluice gates and forlorn villages impossibly romantic

What’s going for it? It takes a certain someone to love Romney Marsh. That someone happens to be me. Many will gaze at its landscape of squelchy flat fields, sluice gates and forlorn, atmospheric villages, and run for the hills, as they did for centuries. Some, though, will find them all impossibly romantic and fabulously attractive. The neighbourhood did seem to attract those certain someones: Noel Coward, for instance, or Edith Nesbit, seeking escape in a spot lifted above the day-to-day in its own existential universe. It’s hard to fathom exactly where Romney Marsh gets its particular character from. Its history of malarial marshes and smugglers’ haunts hangs about like a miasma. The blank landscape is peppered with remote medieval villages, astonishing churches, such as at Fairfield, built on the riches of the wool trade, and flat-faced postwar bungalows, staring out to sea. Or perhaps it’s this landscape’s own peculiar geographical history that is so attractive, its sense of temporariness, of the mastery of nature. The fortunes of Romney Marsh and its inhabitants have risen and fallen with the tides, and the accumulation of silt and shingle. These flatlands, just north of Dungeness, were once the English Channel, the now redundant cliffs arcing miles from the sea, from Hythe to Rye. This patch of land has only been lent to Britain by the waves, and the waves might want it back some day.

The case against Bleak. Roads that turn and twist violently, dangerously, with the ditches.

Continue reading...

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Thursday, January 23, 2020

Cosy cottages for sale – in pictures

Live a fairytale life in these character properties, from Oxfordshire to Norfolk

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How to make a competitive offer as a first time buyer Nottingham Estate Agents

Are you looking to buy your first home? Nick Manson, Director of Mansons, in Jesmond, Newcastle, talks us through how best to prepare before making an offer Being a first time buyer can be hard work, stressful and nerve-racking. Chances are that you won’t necessarily know the market and it’s easy to be blind-sided by […]

The post How to make a competitive offer as a first time buyer appeared first on OnTheMarket.com blog.



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Home ownership among young people rises after decade of decline

Help-to-buy scheme has helped 25- to 34-year-olds get on property ladder, say analysts

The proportion of 25- to 34-year-olds who own their own home in England has increased for the first time in over a decade, according to official figures.

The latest English Housing Survey found that 41% of people in the age bracket live in a home they own, with the same proportion living in private rented accommodation. This is the reversal of the trend seen in the decade after 2003-04, during which the number of young owner occupiers fell from 59% to 36%.

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Manchester is named top vegan hotspot for renters

Is it a game changer for you?

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Wednesday, January 22, 2020

Advice: Radon gas and what can be done to reduce it? Nottingham Estate Agents

Radon gas is a problem you can’t see, taste or even smell but it is affecting properties across the UK, and is something that most people aren’t aware of. It is a naturally occurring radioactive gas that is formed as a result of the radioactive decay of uranium that occurs naturally in all rocks and […]

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Star property under £250,000 Nottingham Estate Agents

York is one of the most desirable cities in the country but you don’t have to break the bank to live there thanks to this delightful period cottage. The centre terrace red brick home in the popular Dringhouses suburb of the city has two double bedrooms and spacious accommodation which has been upgraded throughout by […]

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Star property over £500,000 Nottingham Estate Agents

Not only was this amazing home once a water tower for a POW camp, it doubled as a secret communications hub during the Second World War. Known simply as The Water Tower, it rises 50ft above the Essex countryside near Braintree where 78 Working Camp was once located, housing around 700 Italian and some German […]

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Tuesday, January 21, 2020

How to add space and value to your home Nottingham Estate Agents

Selling your home quickly and for the right amount is about giving your property the edge over others. OnTheMarket.com looks at ways of breathing life into your home. Major conversion projects, such as excavating basements or building conservatories, take time and money but they can yield excellent returns. Loft conversions, for example, can add up to […]

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How to grow houseplants fit for the Chelsea flower show

The UK’s top gardening competition now has a houseplant category – but even beginners can nurture medal-worthy plants with a little expert advice

There is a whole generation of people who know their Pilea peperomioides from their Monstera deliciosa and the Royal Horticultural Society has its sights set on them. The houseplant trend among millennials, who nurture their succulents as if they were offspring, has made it through the rarefied gates of the Chelsea flower show. This year, there is a “house plant studios” category – rooms (posh sheds) created to look like a bathroom, living room or kitchen, for instance, and filled with houseplants. Judging criteria will include design, plant condition and overall impression. Here is how to get your plant babies Chelsea-ready (without even entering).

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How to grow houseplants fit for the Chelsea flower show

The UK’s top gardening competition now has a houseplant category – but even beginners can nurture medal-worthy plants with a little expert advice

There is a whole generation of people who know their Pilea peperomioides from their Monstera deliciosa and the Royal Horticultural Society has its sights set on them. The houseplant trend among millennials, who nurture their succulents as if they were offspring, has made it through the rarefied gates of the Chelsea flower show. This year, there is a “house plant studios” category – rooms (posh sheds) created to look like a bathroom, living room or kitchen, for instance, and filled with houseplants. Judging criteria will include design, plant condition and overall impression. Here is how to get your plant babies Chelsea-ready (without even entering).

Continue reading...

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Monday, January 20, 2020

Lettings rules and regulations: Part II Nottingham Estate Agents

Sean Skelton, branch manager and sales valuer at Roseberry Newhouse, revealed his first five tips to help keep all landlords up to date with lettings legislation. Here are his final five to keep landlords on track. Legionnaires’ Disease All residential properties which are rented out must now have a risk assessment undertaken to determine the […]

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Tips on How Landlords Can Manage Their Expenses

To the uninitiated, buying property with a view to letting it out can seem like a very easy way to make money, but like most things in life, when you take a closer look it is rather more complicated.  Being a landlord is an excellent way to generate a regular income and has the bonus […]

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What is a leasehold property and how do I extend a lease?

Get up to speed, here.

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Optimism returns to housing market in post-election bounce

Read the full story, here.

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Over five million homes in England are at risk of flooding

Know what to do in an emergency.

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Sunday, January 19, 2020

Should we buy a home in London or save for one in the north?

We’re priced out of much of the capital and are planning to move nearer family in the two years

Q My fiance and I are looking to buy our first home. We are in our early to mid-30s and currently live in London. However, we are looking to move back up north in the next two years mainly to be nearer family and have a better chance at getting on the property ladder.

Due to an inheritance we are incredibly lucky to be able to put down a deposit of £100,000. But because our combined income is just short of £60,000 we are still priced out of a lot of Lewisham which is where we are currently based.

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Thinking of buying a thatched home? Nottingham Estate Agents

Useful information and tips to consider ahead of buying a thatched property Here is some useful information from the Thatch Advice Centre covering important points if you are considering buying a thatched property – namely the building, maintenance, insurance and fire safety. The thatched building It is important to understand the building, its construction, design […]

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UK house prices rise at fastest rate on record

2019 general election result provided period of ‘stability’ following Brexit uncertainty

UK house prices rose over the last month at the fastest rate on record for the time of the year, as sellers felt more confident about the outlook for the housing market after the general election, according to Rightmove.

The average price of properties coming on to the market jumped by 2.3%, the biggest rise for the period since the property website started its house price index in 2002. Nearly 65,000 UK properties were marketed over the month, with an average asking price of £306,810.

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Mi casa es su casa: the family who turned their Lisbon home into a hotel

In a 1900s building in Lisbon, António Costa Lopes and Filipa Fortunato have created an intimate hotel that feels like a family home – because it is one

Over the years, Casa Fortunato in Lisbon has been many things to many people. The first floor was originally a doctor’s home, while the ground floor was divided into several shops, their glass facades facing the wide, tree-lined street. After the second world war, it served as a meeting place for the city’s Japanese community; then, from the 1960s, Lisbon diners flocked to its marble entrance when it became a fashionable restaurant. By the 1990s a financial company had put paid to that, redecorating the rooms in global-business beige.

Ten years ago, António Falcão Costa Lopes and his brother Alexandre moved the Lisbon outpost of their architecture firm here (their main office is in Angola) and the building’s fortunes took an upward turn. It is still owned by the family who had it built in the early 1900s, but under the Costa Lopes’ expert eye, various repairs were gently suggested and carried out and the building began to regain a cohesive character.

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Are your houseplants environmentally friendly? | James Wong

Keep your ‘plant miles’ down by following these tips on importing, greenhouse use and propogating

I have been getting loads of questions about the sustainability of houseplants recently. To me, it’s very encouraging that people are so interested in greening their indoors (in both senses of the word). Here is a quick run down on the environmental impact of houseplants, and how to shrink it as much as you can.

The major concern I hear is that the vast majority of houseplants sold in the UK are imported, racking up “plant miles” on their journey from the huge nurseries in the Netherlands. However, all you need do is look at a map to see that Holland is as close, if not closer, to many of us here in Britain than other parts of the UK. Secondly, these plants are transported here by road and ferry, which produces not only a fraction of the carbon emissions per mile of flying, but significantly less than smaller scale deliveries would generate from UK nurseries. If you are driving to your garden centre to buy houseplants, the emissions from your car will almost certainly be greater than the emissions generated in getting it from grower to garden centre. In fact, it is fair to say that in the production chain of houseplants, transport is one of the lowest sources of carbon emissions wherever you chose to source them from.

Continue reading...

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Are your houseplants environmentally friendly? | James Wong

Keep your ‘plant miles’ down by following these tips on importing, greenhouse use and propogating

I have been getting loads of questions about the sustainability of houseplants recently. To me, it’s very encouraging that people are so interested in greening their indoors (in both senses of the word). Here is a quick run down on the environmental impact of houseplants, and how to shrink it as much as you can.

The major concern I hear is that the vast majority of houseplants sold in the UK are imported, racking up “plant miles” on their journey from the huge nurseries in the Netherlands. However, all you need do is look at a map to see that Holland is as close, if not closer, to many of us here in Britain than other parts of the UK. Secondly, these plants are transported here by road and ferry, which produces not only a fraction of the carbon emissions per mile of flying, but significantly less than smaller scale deliveries would generate from UK nurseries. If you are driving to your garden centre to buy houseplants, the emissions from your car will almost certainly be greater than the emissions generated in getting it from grower to garden centre. In fact, it is fair to say that in the production chain of houseplants, transport is one of the lowest sources of carbon emissions wherever you chose to source them from.

Continue reading...

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Saturday, January 18, 2020

Hungry birds and marauding moles create a sense of wonder

Fill up the feeders, grab some binoculars and a guidebook, and watch as the tits, finches and blackbirds swoop in

Denmark, end of December. The constant sound of the sea, the smell of wood smoke and salt. The air is almost kippered. It’s the wettest winter since their records began. Flowering daisies in the long grass, dead leaves lie like damp leather. Confused new shoots everywhere.

The moles have been busy tunnelling under the mossy ‘lawn’. I shovel up 20 hills, barrow the sandy soil to the edges of the plot. The raked-up leaf will lie there, too. I will sow it with wild flower seed in early summer to join the wood anemone, hepatica, forget-me-not and campion that thrive in the more shadowy spaces.

Continue reading...

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Hungry birds and marauding moles create a sense of wonder

Fill up the feeders, grab some binoculars and a guidebook, and watch as the tits, finches and blackbirds swoop in

Denmark, end of December. The constant sound of the sea, the smell of wood smoke and salt. The air is almost kippered. It’s the wettest winter since their records began. Flowering daisies in the long grass, dead leaves lie like damp leather. Confused new shoots everywhere.

The moles have been busy tunnelling under the mossy ‘lawn’. I shovel up 20 hills, barrow the sandy soil to the edges of the plot. The raked-up leaf will lie there, too. I will sow it with wild flower seed in early summer to join the wood anemone, hepatica, forget-me-not and campion that thrive in the more shadowy spaces.

Continue reading...

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Tranquil Dawn named Dulux’s Colour of the Year for 2020 Nottingham Estate Agents

The start of a decade brings new beginnings – and Dulux thinks it has just the colour for the occasion. The paint brand bring together a panel of international designers every year to pick a hue that best captures the moment – the Colour of the Year 2019 was Spiced Honey. This year the team […]

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Norman conquest: an imaginatively restored French farmhouse

With everything from running water to a new roof needed, the key to updating this once-derelict farm in Normandy was patience

When Vincent Dewas first came to view the farm that is now his Normandy home, several potential buyers had already been put off by its derelict condition. But one glance at the property and its adjoining outhouses, built in 1875, was all it took. “I didn’t need to go inside to make up my mind,” he says. “What sold it to me was its proportions, the extensive grounds and the fact it sits quietly in Le Perche national park, close to the village of Bellême, surrounded by trees and cows. I told the agent I wanted it and I signed the papers there and then on the bonnet of the car.”

In France, we take the occupation of antique-hunting so seriously that we have a verb for it – chiner

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Norman conquest: an imaginatively restored French farmhouse

With everything from running water to a new roof needed, the key to updating this once-derelict farm in Normandy was patience

When Vincent Dewas first came to view the farm that is now his Normandy home, several potential buyers had already been put off by its derelict condition. But one glance at the property and its adjoining outhouses, built in 1875, was all it took. “I didn’t need to go inside to make up my mind,” he says. “What sold it to me was its proportions, the extensive grounds and the fact it sits quietly in Le Perche national park, close to the village of Bellême, surrounded by trees and cows. I told the agent I wanted it and I signed the papers there and then on the bonnet of the car.”

In France, we take the occupation of antique-hunting so seriously that we have a verb for it – chiner

Continue reading...

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Illuminating: the making of Bert Frank's luxury lighting – in pictures

Robbie Llewellyn and Adam Yeats met by chance at a London lighting shop, and soon found they shared a vision. Llewellyn’s design ideas and Yeats’s industrial knowledge have been beautifully combined to create Bert Frank.

In Yeats’s presswork factory in Clerkenwell, London – a high-end metalwork enterprise that has been in existence for more than a century – old-school manufacturing techniques and cutting-edge technology are used to produce the brass and copper shapes layered with alabaster, marble, smoked glass and bone china, that have become Bert Frank’s hallmark design

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Illuminating: the making of Bert Frank's luxury lighting – in pictures

Robbie Llewellyn and Adam Yeats met by chance at a London lighting shop, and soon found they shared a vision. Llewellyn’s design ideas and Yeats’s industrial knowledge have been beautifully combined to create Bert Frank.

In Yeats’s presswork factory in Clerkenwell, London – a high-end metalwork enterprise that has been in existence for more than a century – old-school manufacturing techniques and cutting-edge technology are used to produce the brass and copper shapes layered with alabaster, marble, smoked glass and bone china, that have become Bert Frank’s hallmark design

Continue reading...

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Rich pickings: a fashion stylist’s palace of glamour

Floral wallpaper, luxurious textures and jewel-toned accents rule in Leith Clark’s romantic home

From gold-patterned wallpaper and velvet upholstery to peacock feather fabric, there is barely a corner of Leith Clark’s glamorous Victorian house that isn’t filled with rich, dramatic shades. The hallway is papered in dark floral blooms, inspired by the cracked canvases of Dutch masters; the dining room has bold gold-and-black wallpaper and shimmering brass cupboards, giving the room the feel of a jewellery box; and the master bedroom has a decadent De Gournay decorative wallpaper. A pale grey living space – the most “calming” room – is the closest this house comes to neutral.

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Gardening tips: plant a black-stemmed dogwood

Then visit the Giant Houseplant Takeover at RHS Wisley or read about modern plant hunters

Plant this Looking for something showy for your garden this month? Black-stemmed dogwood (Cornus alba ‘Kesselringii’) underplanted with evergreen grasses or snowdrops makes a dramatic winter picture. This hardy shrub will reach 2m each way and is suitable for most aspects, aside from deep shade.

Visit this Even though my family thinks there’s a houseplant takeover already happening in our house, I’ve got nothing on RHS Wisley in Surrey. From its huge glasshouse hosts the Giant Houseplant Takeover, where hundreds of plants grow wild in a Victorian house.

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Which plants are the best bird feeders? | Alys Fowler

Although I feed song birds with meal worms, suet and seeds, I’ve come to realise that my garden can do the job just as well

I was admiring the glorious orange limbs of my strawberry tree, Arbutus unedo, meandering elegantly and covered in bright red baubles of fruit among glossy green leaves, when I spotted a blackbird, its beak crammed full of a single fruit. I was contemplating preserving this year’s bounty of fruit, but the sight of that happy blackbird was enough to make me realise I didn’t need any more jam in my life. This tree is far more giving to all of us in the garden than I could have conceived when I planted it to obscure my neighbour’s shed.

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Rich pickings: a fashion stylist’s palace of glamour

Floral wallpaper, luxurious textures and jewel-toned accents rule in Leith Clark’s romantic home

From gold-patterned wallpaper and velvet upholstery to peacock feather fabric, there is barely a corner of Leith Clark’s glamorous Victorian house that isn’t filled with rich, dramatic shades. The hallway is papered in dark floral blooms, inspired by the cracked canvases of Dutch masters; the dining room has bold gold-and-black wallpaper and shimmering brass cupboards, giving the room the feel of a jewellery box; and the master bedroom has a decadent De Gournay decorative wallpaper. A pale grey living space – the most “calming” room – is the closest this house comes to neutral.

Continue reading...

from Home And Garden | The Guardian https://ift.tt/2v1qURn
via IFTTT

Gardening tips: plant a black-stemmed dogwood

Then visit the Giant Houseplant Takeover at RHS Wisley or read about modern plant hunters

Plant this Looking for something showy for your garden this month? Black-stemmed dogwood (Cornus alba ‘Kesselringii’) underplanted with evergreen grasses or snowdrops makes a dramatic winter picture. This hardy shrub will reach 2m each way and is suitable for most aspects, aside from deep shade.

Visit this Even though my family thinks there’s a houseplant takeover already happening in our house, I’ve got nothing on RHS Wisley in Surrey. From its huge glasshouse hosts the Giant Houseplant Takeover, where hundreds of plants grow wild in a Victorian house.

Continue reading...

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via IFTTT

Which plants are the best bird feeders? | Alys Fowler

Although I feed song birds with meal worms, suet and seeds, I’ve come to realise that my garden can do the job just as well

I was admiring the glorious orange limbs of my strawberry tree, Arbutus unedo, meandering elegantly and covered in bright red baubles of fruit among glossy green leaves, when I spotted a blackbird, its beak crammed full of a single fruit. I was contemplating preserving this year’s bounty of fruit, but the sight of that happy blackbird was enough to make me realise I didn’t need any more jam in my life. This tree is far more giving to all of us in the garden than I could have conceived when I planted it to obscure my neighbour’s shed.

Continue reading...

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Friday, January 17, 2020

Silver Sharers: the site helping older renters meet their match

Services assists prospective tenants in their search for landlords of a similar age

It’s not just Generation Rent that struggles with insecure lets, unscrupulous landlords and bad accommodation.

There are more than 400,000 people aged over 60 living in private rented accommodation, up more than 60% from 2007. Research predicts a third of over-60s could be renting privately by 2040, as rising divorce rates and sky-high property prices take their toll.

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Buying or selling a property affected by Japanese knotweed? Nottingham Estate Agents

We asked Nic Seal, Environmental Scientist and Managing Director of Environet UK Ltd to provide advice to buyers and sellers alike Whereas rabbits are pre-programmed to eat grass and to go forth and multiply, Japanese knotweed DNA is hell bent on: Destruction – it loves to damage human property, growing through asphalt, destroying walls and […]

The post Buying or selling a property affected by Japanese knotweed? appeared first on OnTheMarket.com blog.



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Let’s move to Sedbergh, Cumbria: lovely in its isolation

A convivial and unpretentious ‘book town’, though it may be too lonely for some

What’s going for it? Being an introvert, it’s the lonely spots that attract me most. Sedbergh is only 15 twisty-turny minutes up the steep western escarpment of the Yorkshire Dales from the M6, a little longer from Kendal, but high up, all alone in the fells, it might be halfway to the moon. Bald moors, big skies and Alfred Wainwright’s beloved Howgill Fells loom all about, and there’s not much bar sheep, the Wensleydale Creamery and the odd village or teeny town between you and the other side of the UK. Bliss. I don’t think I’ve ever been lonelier, in a good way, than waiting on the platform at Garsdale station with only crows for company. Still, Sedbergh itself is a convivial spot, despite its isolation, and utterly unpretentious in the way only this part of the world can be – home to doughty shops, hardy people and excellent pubs where hikers battle farmers for space at the bar. And, as one of three of Britain’s “book towns” (with Wigtown and Hay-on-Wye), filled with bookshops, writing retreats and poetry festivals, even the most taciturn hermit is never short of a conversation opener, even if it’s just your take on the latest Jack Reacher plot twist.

The case against… When the wind blows, Sedbergh gets blown away. The lonely spots aren’t for everyone.

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Let’s move to Sedbergh, Cumbria: lovely in its isolation

A convivial and unpretentious ‘book town’, though it may be too lonely for some

What’s going for it? Being an introvert, it’s the lonely spots that attract me most. Sedbergh is only 15 twisty-turny minutes up the steep western escarpment of the Yorkshire Dales from the M6, a little longer from Kendal, but high up, all alone in the fells, it might be halfway to the moon. Bald moors, big skies and Alfred Wainwright’s beloved Howgill Fells loom all about, and there’s not much bar sheep, the Wensleydale Creamery and the odd village or teeny town between you and the other side of the UK. Bliss. I don’t think I’ve ever been lonelier, in a good way, than waiting on the platform at Garsdale station with only crows for company. Still, Sedbergh itself is a convivial spot, despite its isolation, and utterly unpretentious in the way only this part of the world can be – home to doughty shops, hardy people and excellent pubs where hikers battle farmers for space at the bar. And, as one of three of Britain’s “book towns” (with Wigtown and Hay-on-Wye), filled with bookshops, writing retreats and poetry festivals, even the most taciturn hermit is never short of a conversation opener, even if it’s just your take on the latest Jack Reacher plot twist.

The case against… When the wind blows, Sedbergh gets blown away. The lonely spots aren’t for everyone.

Continue reading...

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Prisoner of war camp tower has been totally transformed

It's a remarkable renovation.

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The 10 best new-season cushions

Go big and bold with strong designs and rich textures

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The 10 best new-season cushions

Go big and bold with strong designs and rich textures

Continue reading...

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The healing power of Bauhaus at London's St Mary's hospital

The work of Josef and Anni Albers has given a bright, bold new look to a children’s intensive care unit

The role of art in hospitals rarely extends beyond hanging pictures on the wall. But for Josef and Anni Albers, art was always much more than that. Both pioneers of modernism, the couple met in 1922 at the Bauhaus school, an establishment with a revolutionary approach to art. Bauhaus blurred the boundaries between craft, design and fine art and championed the concept of gesamtkunstwerk: the complete work of art, typically in the form of a house.

But why not a hospital department? That was the thinking of the Albers Foundation which, since the couple’s deaths late last century, has worked to continue their legacy. “Josef and Anni both believed that what we experience through our eyes can divert and elate us in unparalleled ways,” explains Nicholas Fox Weber, the foundation’s director. Taking inspiration from the Albers’ geometric patterns and confident use of colour, the foundation has created a bold new look for the children’s intensive care unit at St Mary’s hospital, London.

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Thursday, January 16, 2020

Homes for fitness fanatics – in pictures

Get in shape for the new year with these properties with gyms, from Kent to South Wales

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Country diary: a population explosion of garden pests on my windowsill

Crook, County Durham: Unnoticed in the withering roses, the overwintering aphid eggs experienced a premature spring

Virgin births took place on our dining table at Christmas. After a frost-free December, I had cut the last rosebuds from the garden and by Christmas Eve they had opened enough to make a table decoration. It was left forgotten on the windowsill until Twelfth Night, when the withered flowers, infested with rose aphids (Macrosiphum rosae) and sticky with honeydew, were about to be consigned to the compost heap.

Unnoticed, overwintering aphid eggs had experienced a premature spring. What followed was spectacular, thanks to these insects’ capacity for parthenogenesis, asexual reproduction from an unfertilised egg, without male involvement. When they emerge from an egg they are all females, multiplying via virgin birth, cloning themselves with production-line efficiency: a rosarian’s nightmare. It only takes one greenfly hatchling to start a population explosion.

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Country diary: a population explosion of garden pests on my windowsill

Crook, County Durham: Unnoticed in the withering roses, the overwintering aphid eggs experienced a premature spring

Virgin births took place on our dining table at Christmas. After a frost-free December, I had cut the last rosebuds from the garden and by Christmas Eve they had opened enough to make a table decoration. It was left forgotten on the windowsill until Twelfth Night, when the withered flowers, infested with rose aphids (Macrosiphum rosae) and sticky with honeydew, were about to be consigned to the compost heap.

Unnoticed, overwintering aphid eggs had experienced a premature spring. What followed was spectacular, thanks to these insects’ capacity for parthenogenesis, asexual reproduction from an unfertilised egg, without male involvement. When they emerge from an egg they are all females, multiplying via virgin birth, cloning themselves with production-line efficiency: a rosarian’s nightmare. It only takes one greenfly hatchling to start a population explosion.

Continue reading...

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Thinking of buying a second home? A guide to stamp duty for future landlords Nottingham Estate Agents

Ten key points to consider when buying a second home for your own use or as a buy-to-let investment To buy-to-let or not to buy-to-let, that is a difficult question! It can be quite a conundrum for people with capital to invest who are dithering between the stock market or bricks and mortar. Since April […]

The post Thinking of buying a second home? A guide to stamp duty for future landlords appeared first on OnTheMarket.com blog.



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Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Five common mistakes first time buyers should try to avoid Nottingham Estate Agents

Buying a home is one of the most exciting and self-affirming life experiences but it can also be one of the most stressful. Martin & Co can help you stay one step ahead. Martin & Co has put together some of the most frequent mistakes that first time buyers continue to make to help you avoid them. 1. Becoming financially […]

The post Five common mistakes first time buyers should try to avoid appeared first on OnTheMarket.com blog.



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A growing concern: is it ever OK to steal plant cuttings?

Gardeners and collectors have shared cuttings for generations, but as certain plants have become status symbols, questions of ethical grey areas have arisen

In December, Cory Jarrell of Portland, Oregon, posted a photo he never imagined he would have to share with his 16,000 Instagram followers: loose, limp cuttings of plants, pinched off without permission from over a dozen rare plants.

Jarrell’s specialty plant shop, Potted Elephant, had suffered a fate experienced by a small but growing number of nurseries, shops and botanical gardens in the wake of the booming specialty plant market: unscrupulous collectors and sellers pilfering cuttings (and sometimes, entire plants) without permission in order to resell online and net a profit.

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