Holiday Home in Tuscany


by David - Date: 2007-03-04 - Word Count: 790 Share This!

Finding and buying a holiday home in Tuscany is fun-filled and
hassle-free. You've got to be kidding! Try annoying, agonising,
frustrating, irritating, exhausting search for the impossible dream.

We went through every emotion, gave up, and then fell into the dream
holiday home in Tuscany that we thought existed only in the imagination.

We only knew that we had found the ideal location because we had spent
the previous two days looking at twenty-four different properties and
rejecting the lot. And before that we had spent six months trawling the
Internet. We had also spent several holidays in Italy and knew the
region we wanted - we wanted our holiday home in Tuscany to be set
somewhere in the hills of the Pisa - Florence - Siena triangle.

It was the food that first attracted us to Tuscany. Patricia, my wife,
adores the lamb chops you get in that area, and I the bruschetta with
its generous sprinkle of goats cheese. Of course there is also
Michelangelo, Leonardo daVinci and the opera at Verona.

To pass any church in Tuscany, no matter how insignificant, is to miss
some work of genius.
Patricia scoured the Internet. Our standards were high. Ground floor
with terrace or first floor with balcony. A swimming pool. Near a decent
sized town and within walking distance of a restaurant or bar. Good
transport links, and close to places of interest. If we were to buy a
holiday home in Tuscany then we knew what we wanted.

One piece of property we discovered on the internet interested us and
when we showed an interest it suddenly jumped in price from €110,000 to
€150,000. Sometimes emails were not replied to or else we were pestered
with emails and phone calls about property well outside our criteria.
See our own website: http://www.worldwide-infomedia-services.com and
discover what we finally settled upon on. See our holiday home in
Tuscany. Drop us an email if you want any advice.

We over-nighted in a hotel near Siena and set off the next morning to
see a range of properties in the Arezzo area. The one property we loved
on the Internet - ground floor, patio, hedged garden - proved to be a
disappointment. Which also emphasised the need to walk the ground as
well as look at photographs.

We headed north. By the time we had done Bibbiena and its surrounding
hills, we were propertied out. The properties there were okay but... I
think the main problem was the area. Everything was unkempt and tatty.

One estate agent had no English so had employed an interpreter, Jessica,
a Swedish girl living in Italy. After looking at several properties with
Jessica, Patricia and I had a quick discussion and decided to give up on
our impossible search and head back to the hotel. Another ten miles in
the wrong direction seemed a waste of time when we were tired and
hungry. On the off chance we asked the interpreter what Poppi was like.

Jessica immediately became enthusiastic. Poppi was wonderful. Poppi was
a member of the Club "I Borghi più belli d'Italia", 50 selected villages
in Italy. We had to see it.
Jessica took us to see a developer in Poppi, he was waiting for us in
the square to take us out to the development, which is a mile from the
town, and a hundred meters from the railway station, bus stop,
restaurant and bar.

The development comprises ten blocks of five or six apartments each,
with a heated swimming pool and spa. The first two blocks were being
roofed the day we were there. I had a gut feeling we were to find that
illusive holiday home in Tuscany.

Niccolò is young, gorgeous (according to Patricia), unattached and
drives a Mercedes. Niccolò is an engineer and is determined to put only
the best of materials into the apartments. We didn't understand half of
the technical details he bombarded us with. All I can say is that never
before in my life did I see COPPER guttering in an ordinary house never
mind a second home. Believe me you'll not find that sort of workmanship
in many other holiday home in Tuscany developments.

From the site you have a clear view of the walled town of Poppi to the
south. We decided on a north-facing apartment. To the north, the
farmland rises sharply into a national forest and nature reserve. Before
he let us go Niccolò gave us an escorted tour of medieval Poppi. It is
beautiful, well maintained and protected from modernisation. Most
impressively, it is still a working town.
Initially, we decided to purchase a one-bedroom apartment, which we
subsequently upgraded to a two bed, with two bathrooms (one en suite),
and a combined working kitchen, dining area and sitting room. And an
integral garage and a wine cellar. All for €200,000.

Of course, in Italy purchase fees, legal fees; stamp duties etc. add
approximately 15% to the purchase price. And there are optional extras,
like air conditioning and the view. But that's for another day. For now
we are happy, we have our holiday home in Tuscany.


Related Tags: tuscany, holiday home, make great conversation

John McAllister is an author, freelance writer and retired
accountant. John recently bought a holiday home in Tuscany. To get more
information on holiday homes in Tuscany please visit the website below.
http://www.worldwide-infomedia-services.com/.

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