7/22/08

Fast Track Ski Holidays - New Ski Resort For Bulgaria


New Ski Resort For Bulgaria - Fast Track Ski Holidays


New Ski Resort For Bulgaria
Fast Track Ski Holidays, UK - Jul 7, 2008
Britons wishing to take ski holidays in Bulgaria will soon have an additional location to choose from after it was revealed that a new resort is to be built ...
New Ski Resort For Bulgaria - Fast Track Ski Holidays
All bookings are handled by Fast Track Holidays Ltd (ABTA No J1138) who are retail agents for ATOL holders. All holidays listed on this website are subject to availability at the time of booking. As part of the building work, an existing ski lift will be renovated and a new 2.7 kilometre lift will be constructed.A third lift measuring three kilometres will be put in place during the third stage of construction. 

First Tracks - Easyjet To Add Two New Ski Routes


easyJet to Add Two New Ski Routes - First Tracks


easyJet to Add Two New Ski Routes
First Tracks, UT - Jul 9, 2008
... to Bulgarian ski resorts such a Bansko and Pamporovo in the Pirin Mountain range, where many Britons are investing in a burgeoning second home market. ...
easyJet to Add Two New Ski Routes - First Tracks
Flights will depart nine times weekly to Geneva, and three times per week to Sofia.Geneva is the gateway airport to the many nearby ski resorts in the French and Swiss Alps. Online Ski Magazine :: The ski and snowboard world at your keyboardHome |About |News | Resort Features |Forums |LinksFirst Tracks!!

Times Online - This Week's Top Stories From Around The World


This week's top stories from around the world - Times Online


This week's top stories from around the world
Times Online, UK - Jul 19, 2008
In similar shows, Britons chose Winston Churchill, Americans Ronald Reagan and South Africans Nelson Mandela. The state-controlled Rossiya television ...
This week's top stories from around the world - Times Online
A decision was takento sell the first pictures of Vivienne Marcheline and her brother Knox Leon,for a reported $11m (£5.5m) to an unnamed American magazine. Canada’s government has refused toapply for his release, fearing he will act as a rallying point forextremists. He claimed mistreatmentat the hands of his US guards and, in one section, repeatedly cried out“Help me”. Khadr is the youngest detainee at Guantanamo and the last Westerncitizen still being held in the prison. Meanwhile, the Frenchresort of Nice has been inundated with paparazzi anxious to capture thefirst picture of Jolie’s twins, delivered last weekend. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. Robbie Marsland, UK directorof the International Fund for Animal Welfare, said: “The decision playsRussian roulette with wild elephants. The decision was widelywelcomed both on the left and the right.Olivier Roy, an Islamic specialist, told Le Monde: “Wearing a burqa in Francemeans crossing a line. The family’s two-year-old daughter also died as her mother triedto smother her cries. The state-controlled Rossiya televisionchannel will broadcast programmes on the finalists, who include thecosmononaut Yuri Gagarin, the poet Alexander Pushkin and Tsar Peter theGreat, in the autumn. The tsar received 267,385 votes to Stalin’s262,997 after a last-ditch appeal by monarchists, who said a victory forStalin will shame Russia internationally.In similar shows, Britons chose Winston Churchill, Americans Ronald Reagan andSouth Africans Nelson Mandela. They show Khadr,now 21 but 16 in the tapes, weeping and disturbed. Use our dating service, read our births, marriages and deaths announcements, or place your advertisement.Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. You don’t have to worry about it ifyou’ve got less than $100,000 in the bank.

- 'Mum, Why Is Everything So Ugly?'


'Mum, why is everything so ugly?' - guardian.co.uk


guardian.co.uk

'Mum, why is everything so ugly?'
guardian.co.uk, UK - Jul 4, 2008
by Kapka Kassabova Britons don't face too much grief when travelling abroad. Everyone has heard of Britain; English is almost ubiquitous and in times of ...
'Mum, why is everything so ugly?' - guardian.co.uk
But it's always been free, the bewildered neighbours protested. But what I have often found particularly striking about the Balkans is that its nations tend to know less about their immediate neighbours than they do about France, Germany, Britain or Russia. Even for those wielding power, the system had become meaningless.Ordinary children generally knew that bureaucracy made life more awkward in eastern Europe than on the other side of the iron curtain. Everyone has heard of Britain; English is almost ubiquitous and in times of need, most of us can manage a bit of Spanglish or Franglais to see us through. Furthermore, the immigration into cities happened late in Bulgaria (mostly in the postwar period), so most Bulgarian children had one escape - to their relatives in the countryside. He didn't miss the opportunity to point out that I came from a country that wasn't a real country, but a character in a children's story called 'The Wombles'. He had wavy blond hair and a rugby-player's jaw, and presided over a court of lackeys who laughed at his jokes. He was charging people for parking their cars in our communal carpark. I watched my mother wash the pram from top to bottom every time we returned from an outing, because the mud managed to get even on to the pram's roof ... In Phys Ed, Jamie mocked my cheap canvas sports shoes from the height of his bouncy Puma trainers. Living conditions were less cramped, and her grandparents and other relatives were delightful, so she had a greater sense of normality in a place in which local gossip was much more important than learning Marx or Dimitrov by rote. More important, it meant that they had access to the vitamins and protein that were so miserably absent from an urban communist diet.Kassabova's relations also offered her a psychological escape. Pay up or piss off.' And he cracked the joints of his enormous fists ... People sold contraband cigarettes and suspect alcohol mixtures straight from their underground cellars. She finds it shattered: and even the shards of her previous life that she comes across here and there can cut and scratch unexpectedly. She has also demonstrated, without indulging in self-pity, how hard it is to be one of the tens of millions who have been compelled in the past two decades for one reason or another to up sticks and reinvent their lives elsewhere. She learned early on, after moving to England in her teens in 1990, that her Bulgarian heritage bred not interest among her classmates but contempt: "The chief heart-throb, Jamie, was also the chief bully. She senses that Bulgaria after the fall of communism is becoming a very different place, in some respects much more interesting, but in others even more dangerous than before. The Communist party didn't really give a damn what went on in the countryside, assuming, quite rightly, that the peasants were never likely to revolt. The grotty high-rise reflected Bulgarian society - neglect and hypocrisy were eating away at the foundations of lofty ideals rendered senseless through ritual repetition. They look like shit.' Jamie's lackeys sniggered. This afforded them the opportunity to run around a bit and experience a half-normal childhood. Tiny cafes and shops had mushroomed among the panels. We've parked our Moskvich here for years. While most people in Europe have heard of Bulgaria, very few can claim to know anything about it, its culture and its people. Yesterday's bully was today's entrepreneur."There are similarities between Kassabova's stories and those in Vesna Goldsworthy's Chernobyl Strawberries.

- Holidaymakers Turn To Eastern Europe As Euro Prices Surge


Holidaymakers turn to eastern Europe as euro prices surge - Telegraph.co.uk


Holidaymakers turn to eastern Europe as euro prices surge
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Jul 18, 2008
Greece welcomes 2.2 million Britons – a million more than Turkey. Tunisia, despite its new found popularity, attracted just 270000 British holidaymakers in ...
Holidaymakers turn to eastern Europe as euro prices surge - Telegraph.co.uk

Today's Zaman - Turkey Moves Up In Briton's Travel Map


Turkey moves up in Briton's travel map - Today's Zaman


Turkey moves up in Briton's travel map
Today's Zaman, Turkey - Jun 30, 2008
Destinations outside the euro zone which are mid-haul rather than long-haul, such as Turkey and Bulgaria, are on the up. Turkish figures show UK arrivals to ...
Turkey moves up in Briton's travel map - Today's Zaman
Destinations outside the euro zone which are mid-haul rather than long-haul, such as Turkey and Bulgaria, are on the up. Öz denies having prior information on Dink murderErgenekon network's deep ties grow deeper with new revelations‘Ergenekon indictment yet to reveal top name'Copyright© Since 1994 Feza Newspaper Publishing Co. Travel website Expedia says it has seen a rise in popularity for eastern European countries that do not use the euro among UK customers, as sterling is not as weak against their currencies this year as it is against the euro. Turkish figures show UK arrivals to the country rose nearly 10 percent in May from the same month last year, having climbed 17 percent since January. While holiday mainstays like France and Italy -- euro zone countries whose single currency hovers near a record high against sterling -- remain a magnet for UK tourists, cheaper European destinations outside the euro zone such as Turkey are gaining in popularity.

Sofia Echo - A SALUTE TO FRANCE: A King’S Palace In The Meadow


A SALUTE TO FRANCE: A king’s palace in the meadow - Sofia Echo


A SALUTE TO FRANCE: A king’s palace in the meadow
Sofia Echo, Bulgaria - Jul 11, 2008
And like Bulgaria, many Britons have come and settled there. And where do the French like to go? “They like moving to… France. I’m an exception. ...
A SALUTE TO FRANCE: A king’s palace in the meadow - Sofia Echo
And like Bulgaria, many Britons have come and settled there. Any unauthorised reproduction or use of it is strictly forbidden. As a members of Atelier 13, a local art club, he and others share insights with each other.Regis now has hundreds of pictures to his credit, some of which have been displayed in art galleries in Dobrich and Varna, as well as on his website. But for all intents and purposes, Regis now sees himself as a Bulgarian, having had 17 years to ponder this over. During this time, he has made about 50 friends in Dobrich, and whenever he goes for a walk, he inevitably runs into some of them. Examples include “metallic flowers”, “crowded together in boat”, and “family trees”.But his biggest inspiration has come from the world around him. Following defeat, he, along with many of his compatriots, fled the country. Fortunately the only fighting he engaged in was with Autobahn traffic as he chauffeured military officers about back in Germany.Ever keen on broadening his horizons, he then joined a cruise line firm, doing circuits around the Mediterranean, Caribbean and Pacific. He also spent a summer baking bread and picking oranges and grapefruit on a kibbutz in Israel.Then, in keeping with family tradition, Regis got drafted. He has also made a few appearances on local television.He says his inspiration comes from a variety of sources. He struck out on his own, this time to Balchik. He will continue the struggle against fascism as part of the French resistance when Germany occupied most of the country. His favourite stopover was St Lucia, which he described as lush and green with sparkling blue waters and white-sand beaches.He also had his share of culture shocks. However, as she can not go to France with him, he stayed in Dobrich with her, and found work at the local language high school.The teachers’ salary was more than adequate, as everything was ridiculously cheap back then. I can never survive there.”When not cooking, teaching or wandering about, Regis delves into poetry and painting. I’m an exception.”It comes as a big surprise when he reveals which country he will definitely not want to live. In 1996, a year after his son had been born, he stayed with a friend, Daniel, a former teacher at his parents’ home in Tulsa, Oklahoma.While there he “helped out” at an Italian restaurant. It had been organised by Bernal LaTude, a former resident of Dobrich. It was also at this time, in 1981, that Regis first set foot on Bulgarian soil, albeit for five hours along the quayside of Varna. No one greeted him there.With seasickness finally catching up with him, Regis traded the ship kitchen for a train station of the French Railway Company, training and serving as an assistant chief. Once again he experienced culture shock – but not so much from his hosts. Over the years, numerous other foreigners came and taught at the school: a Scottish man, an Irish woman, a German, a Texan. Paul had invited him to come and teach at a competitive school in Shanghai, where the pay was par excellence. Regis, you didn’t put the toilet seat back down. Reproduction of this website's content is permitted only with prior written permission from the Editor-in-Chief, should be propertly acredited and provide an active link back to our site. Right before his scheduled discharge in 1954, however, he was shipped off to Algeria. The lives of thousands of passengers were now in his hands. Then at the suggestion of a friend, he went on home-stay exchange programme involving groups of 60 Palois and Dobrouzhanets. Then with uncertainty hanging in the air following the collapse of the old system, the programme stopped.But not Regis. They shake hands, exchange news, maybe go for a coffee.Originally from Pau (pronounced poh) in south-western France, Regis Palacios Prat inherited his middle name from his paternal grandfather who had fought in the Spanish Civil War (on the Republican side). Towards the expiration of his tourist visa, the manager offered Regis a permanent position and sponsorship. Ultimately, my wife thought it best for the family to remain in Bulgaria, so I returned.”In 2006, at 47, Regis once again tried his hand abroad. When we visit my friends, you must remember to...’ After two weeks, I had had enough.

- The Holiday Home Is Going Places…


The holiday home is going places… - Telegraph.co.uk


Telegraph.co.uk

The holiday home is going places…
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Jul 18, 2008
The survey of 1500 buyers shows that there has been a surge in purchases of resort properties priced from £70000 to £200000 in countries such as Bulgaria, ...
The holiday home is going places… - Telegraph.co.uk
A typical investment home, which was more likely to be an apartment, is worth £135,000. As with so much in the property world of 2008, it's a case of wait and see.Lifestyle case studyAndrew Hutchison is a typical lifestyle buyer. But this sector is worth a vast £58 billion, according to the Office for National Statistics - a rise of £5 billion in the past year - with the recent growth supported by heavy borrowing. Demographics show there are many more of these to come. Despite oil prices, air travel is predicted to grow, according to almost all government and industry experts, and airports in most emerging "city break" locations are enlarging, he says."Renting does not suffer during a downturn," he points out. Families, in particular, may desert hotels and save money by renting a home." The survey, conducted in the first quarter of 2008, shows that a typical "lifestyle" holiday home used solely or largely by its owners is valued at £220,000. FILMNot for kidsThe Dark Knight is far from a family film despite its 12A cert. He bought a three-bedroom apartment in the so-called Golf Valley of Andalusía, southern Spain, in 2003 with two simple objectives - "to enjoy the sun and to enjoy playing golf". He bought the property near Wenceslas Square in 2005 with his wife Daniela and son Chris. He wanted to be close to courses (there are three nearby) and in the centre of an established community. High prices are often because some rental agents take 50% of the rental charge and doliitle for it.If you thinking of buying as aninvestment, think twice. I havea friend renting on a medium-termlet, a 3 bed 2 bath semi-detached withshared pool, at 350 Euros a month, NOT per week. I own a real estate agency in Thailand and agree with most of your survey, its the lifestyle choice with an option to rent and a good price are the key decision indicators. If it wasin the last four years, it can be a25/30% loss and counting.Buy to rent has been a disaster - thevisitors are not around, despite whatthe tourist offices want to believe.Currently, if you get 6 - 10 weeks ayear in rental, you are average. If you wanta buy-to-let, forget it, you are years too late.Many people have beeninduced to buy by estate agents whowere sparing with the truth - they now are suffering as a result I livehere, not in London, and see thesituation every day. In one provincealone, 69,000 newly built houses aresaid to lie unsold.If you bought ten years ago, then youwill not have lost money. In Spain, the Costa del Sol remains the leading choice despite dramatic price falls over the past two years.How do we pay for homes overseas?In 2000 almost 80 per cent of Britons owned their overseas homes outright. It's got an occupancy rate of 55-60 per cent so we're very pleased with how it has gone." The current rental more than covers their mortgage and the Norths plan to sell the flat in four years' time. Maybe all that oil and gas money, which you dont need to spend so much on in a warmer climate!Posted by alice cooper on July 21, 2008 4:08 AMReport this commentA very in depth survey. Most have buy-to-let mortgages - some more than 90 per cent of a property's purchase price - and are heavily reliant on rental income to cover monthly costs.Years of low-cost airline flights and easy mortgage availability have fuelled this trend. My family and friends now use it as and when they like, as do I. Posted by Brian on July 21, 2008 2:59 PMReport this commentDue to the inflation and interests rises, the economical impact is affecting the typical lifestyle buyer in Spain who looks for a permanent or holiday residence. So is the foreign holiday-home market the next victim of the double whammy - rising oil prices and severe restrictions on borrowing?The survey's authors believe the market will change, but not collapse. Thailand has the other group who wish a second life in the sun also.Posted by steve jennings on July 21, 2008 4:04 AMReport this commentWould you say that even though we are going through a credit crunch that it is still the right time to buy. The picture of who buys overseas, and why, has changed dramatically in the past few years: whereas we used to buy a holiday home, now many of us look for an investment. The typical home in this category is valued at £220,000."The second and faster-growing sector is for investors," Daly goes on. Then, they say, they may buy another property in another emerging location.Where do Britons buy?Some 71 per cent of buyers still choose Europe, with Spain and France out in front by a country mile. There are 425,000 British-owned homes overseas, including 35,000 that have been bought in the past year."Buyers fall into two distinct camps," says Savills researcher Jacqui Daly. There are vast numbers of over-50s and over-60s wanting homes overseas, often in traditional areas such as Spain. They are typical of a new breed of British buyer for whom income and potential capital appreciation are more important than sunshine. They have a lot of equity in UK homes, so most won't need to borrow at all." The survey also suggests that few existing owners will sell up in the light of dearer fuel prices. They want a lifestyle property in the sun. They'll see that a month's rental can, if timed well, pay for much of a year's running costs on a home." He believes that those investors with overseas city homes will not lose out. Those who have bought a holiday home are now focusing a lot on renting out their properties as much as possible to help paying their mortgages. We've used the property a little ourselves but it's primarily an investment. You are here:Telegraph>Property>OverseasContact us | Forgotten your password?

Car Rentals - Easyjet Becomes Fastest Growing Discount Airline


EasyJet becomes fastest growing discount airline - Car Rentals


EasyJet becomes fastest growing discount airline
Car Rentals, UK - Jul 18, 2008
After the UK, Spain remains the largest market for both easyJet and Ryanair, thanks to the large number Britons that still travel to this Mediterranean ...
EasyJet becomes fastest growing discount airline - Car Rentals
EasyJet becomes fastest growing discount airline@import url( http://news.carrentals.co.uk/wp-content/themes/cr/style.css ); Car Hire Search - Travel News Tuesday 22nd of July 2008 EasyJet becomes fastest growing discount airline (No Ratings Yet)Loading ... EasyJet’s load factor exceeded 85 percent, while Ryanair was able to sell an average of 84 percent of places on its flights. EasyJet, however, gets to enjoy small monopolies in continental Europe, when it comes to low-cost travel. For example, in the absence of Ryanair flights, easyJet is the undisputed largest discount airline in Bulgaria, Greece, Estonia and Slovenia. Posted on: July 17th, 2008 by Dave Anderson EasyJet can now boast that it has become Europe’s fastest growing low-cost carrier, and also the one with the highest load factor, according to the most recent statistics. Registered office address: 1 The Square, Lightwater, Surrey, GU18 5SS. This advantage, however, is largely balanced by Ryanair’s own dominant position in Slovakia and Finland, where easyJet does not operate flights.  Yet Anna.aero, an internet-based news site, which focuses on the commercial airline industry, noted that these carriers still do best when they compete within the UK market, which continues to provide these carriers with the largest number of departures. Yet easyJet’s stiffest competitor is still Ryanair and the two have launched more flights over the course of a one year period than any other carrier in Europe.

Overseas Property And Investment News - Bulgaria's Investment Potential Highlighted


Bulgaria's investment potential highlighted - Overseas Property and Investment News


Overseas Property and Investment News

Bulgaria's investment potential highlighted
Overseas Property and Investment News, UK - Jul 14, 2008
Homes Overseas magazine said that even though interest in the country among Britons is falling, it remains one of the strongest-performing markets in Europe ...
Bulgaria's investment potential highlighted - Overseas Property and Investment News
The Global Property Guide revealed that last year, property values increased at a higher rate than in any other country. View News ArchivesMedia/Press Section Are you a Press or Media professional? We have access to a wide and varied collection of data and statistics which may be of interest to you.Journalists click hereSee Your News Here Submit your news feed for spidering by our news robot.

Overseas Property And Investment News - Eastern Europe 'Offers Good Exchange Rates'


Eastern Europe 'offers good exchange rates' - Overseas Property and Investment News


Overseas Property and Investment News

Eastern Europe 'offers good exchange rates'
Overseas Property and Investment News, UK - Jul 21, 2008
... already taking exchange rates into account when booking a trip, hence the growing appeal of places such as the Bulgarian capital Sofia among Britons. ...
Eastern Europe 'offers good exchange rates' - Overseas Property and Investment News
View News ArchivesMedia/Press Section Are you a Press or Media professional? We have access to a wide and varied collection of data and statistics which may be of interest to you.Journalists click hereSee Your News Here Submit your news feed for spidering by our news robot.

Fadesa - Times Online - Britons See Returns Vanish With Spanish Property Firm Martinsa


Britons see returns vanish with Spanish property firm Martinsa-Fadesa - Times Online


RTE.ie

Britons see returns vanish with Spanish property firm Martinsa-Fadesa
Times Online, UK - Jul 19, 2008
... Portugal and Bulgaria, filed for bankruptcy last week after failing to secure a refinancing package of £3.1 billion. Britons who put down 30% deposits ...
Risk of Serious Meltdown in Spanish Economy Seeking Alpha
all 204 news articles
Britons see returns vanish with Spanish property firm Martinsa-Fadesa - Times Online
Complaints to Martinsa-Fadesahave gone unheeded.Last week Dawson said that 125 homes in the area had suffered power cutsbecause the company did not refill their generators with diesel.“How will the shopping centre get completed and what will happen to the golfcourse? It's a wonderful place with the best weather and way of life in Europe! News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. Please report more objectively.r.martin, London, UKno consequences on Morocco to be signalled as 50% of Fadea Maroc is owned by a Morrocan Giant in Real Estate, ADDOHA. The finish is excellent and the necessary works have always been done promptly. There are no bulldozers in Marbella, only one building is in danger. Two years ago they put downmore than £140,000 as a 50% deposit on a 32,000 sq ft plot at Costa Esuri tobuild a 6,500 sq ft holiday home to enjoy with their five children.“You don’t know where you stand,” said Shaun Pollitt last week. Use our dating service, read our births, marriages and deaths announcements, or place your advertisement.Copyright 2008 Times Newspapers Ltd.This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions.

The Press Association - Britons Blame Hotel For Sickness


Britons blame hotel for sickness - The Press Association


Britons blame hotel for sickness
The Press Association - Jul 16, 2008
More than 70 British holidaymakers have complained of an outbreak of gastric illness at a hotel in Bulgaria. Irwin Mitchell Solicitors has reported the ...
Britons blame hotel for sickness - The Press Association
Hosted by Copyright © 2008 The Press Association. The entire hotel complex smelt of sewage, the food on the buffet by the bar was left out uncovered and chicken was pink in the middle and glasses in the bar never appeared to be clean."So many families were complaining to staff and we felt like nothing was being done. The Press Association: Britons blame hotel for sickness var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ?

Sofia Echo - UK Estate Agent Working In Bulgaria Wins Court Case Against Newspaper


UK estate agent working in Bulgaria wins court case against newspaper - Sofia Echo


UK estate agent working in Bulgaria wins court case against newspaper
Sofia Echo, Bulgaria - 58 minutes ago
... estate agents in Bulgaria. Wilson said, according to pressgazette.co.uk: “To illustrate the generalisation that scores of Britons attempting to buy ...
UK estate agent working in Bulgaria wins court case against newspaper - Sofia Echo
Any unauthorised reproduction or use of it is strictly forbidden. Reproduction of this website's content is permitted only with prior written permission from the Editor-in-Chief, should be propertly acredited and provide an active link back to our site. They are also seeking damages after the original allegations were repeated on the internet”.

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