THE HOLLYWOOD rom com  The Holiday, starring Cameron Diaz and Kate Winslet, may be  something of a turkey, but it certainly makes the notion of house  swapping most attractive.
The movie saw Diaz’s character swap her  slick LA pad for Winslet’s Cotswolds cottage with, of course, each  having the holiday of a lifetime as a result.
The idea of having a  holiday in someone’s home while they have one in yours seems to be such  a no-brainer you have to wonder why more people don’t do it,  particularly now when we’re under the cosh of recession.
A desire  to get value for her holiday money was certainly a part of Aisling  Finucane’s decision to undertake her first house swap this year.
The  36-year-old speech and language therapist and her husband Alan had  spent their previous summer holiday on a campsite in France, with their  two small toddlers.
“That holiday cost us €3,000 and we weren’t  happy that we got value for money. We felt very cooped up in the mobile  home,” says Finucane.
This year she changed tack. “We still wanted  to go to France, still wanted to go on the ferry and bring our car, but  this time round we decided to do a house swap instead,” she recalls.
She  signed up with Homelink, an international home swap agency with an  office in Ireland, in March. By June she had found a family that wanted  to swap their holiday home in St Nazarre, a quaint fishing town near  Nantes, for her three bedroom semi-D in Raheen, Limerick.
“At the  time people said to me, ‘Why would anyone want to holiday in Raheen?’,”  she recalls. “But the way I looked at it, our house is half an hour from  Shannon airport, an hour and a half from Cork airport and is on the  gateway to Connemara and Kerry.”
Which is precisely how her French guests viewed it, using her home as a base from which to explore.
The  Finucanes, meanwhile, had a fantastic two-week holiday in France. “The  weather was lovely, the house was lovely and we were close to a  beautiful beach,” she says.
“We also had an enclosed garden, so the kids could run around and I didn’t have to worry about them.”
They  travelled with Celtic Link for €739. If you exclude the odd night out  in restaurants, plus diesel, that’s just about what her fortnight in  France cost her.
“The entire holiday cost us less than €1,000, a  €2,000 saving on the previous year, yet for much more space and the  comfort of a house,” says Finucane.
She’s now looking at swapping  with families in Spain and Germany next year. Given the kind of savings  involved, she might very well visit both.
THE FINUCANES’  experience backs up research from Love Home Swap, a new online home  swapping company based in the UK which estimates that home swappers save  an average of €2,500 by home exchanging instead of holidaying.
“In  tough economic times, travel becomes a ‘nice to have’ and is often one  of the first things people cut from their budget,” says Debbie Wosskow,  founder of Love Home Swap.
“Nearly one third of Love Home Swap members tried out home exchanging because of the savings they could make.”
The good news for anyone considering it is that Ireland is already one of Love Home Swap’s top requested swap destinations.
Marie  Murphy, who runs the Irish office of Homelink, is also seeing increased  demand for swaps. She currently has a database of 500 active Irish  users.
“Membership numbers dipped the year before last as a result  of the start of the recession. People told us they wanted to stay local  and couldn’t afford the air fares,” says Murphy, who is herself just  back from a three-week swap in San Francisco.
“But last year our  numbers came back up again as people told us they just couldn’t face  staycationing two years in a row,” she says.
The couple she  swapped with were travelling Europe, but didn’t even want to stay in her  house. Instead, they simply wanted someone to mind their dog while they  were away.The result was a Stateside holiday, touring California’s  winelands, for a €650 air fare.
“We have so much demand for  exchanges with Ireland right now that we just can’t match it. Demand is  particularly strong from swappers in New Zealand and Australia,” says  Murphy.
When you think of all the Irish people who must now have  family that have emigrated to that part of the world, home swapping  could be a terrific way to go and visit them,” she says.
All kinds  of homes are required for swapping. “A guy just rang me, worried that  his apartment in Dublin wouldn’t be of any interest to anyone. But the  fact is that, if it is in a good location or close to transport links,  lots of people will want it,” says Murphy.
“Families coming here  tend to like to stay in family homes in the countryside or close to the  coast, but couples and singles like to stay in cities,” she says.
However, there are downsides. In Murphy’s experience, problems typically arise where differing standards of cleanliness clash.
“It  is very important that your house be clean and tidy. You don’t have to  repaint, unless it is really grubby, but the kitchen and bathroom in  particular have to be spotless,” she says.
Aisling Finucane came  up with what seems like a very good solution. “I didn’t want to spend  the run-up to my holiday running around cleaning up,” she says.
“Instead,  I cleared everything into black sacks and put them in the attic and  then hired a cleaning company to come in after we had gone to blitz the  place for two hours, at €10 an hour,” says Finucane. “It meant I came  back to a pristine house too, which was nice.”
HOUSE SWAPPING  isn’t only about cheap holidays however. “If you have kids it can become  a family affair,” says Frank Kelly, Irish boss of Intervac, one of the  two big house swapping agencies in this country with about 300 members.
“My  own first house swap was to a family in Sweden in 1973 and we still  visit to meet one another’s grandchildren,” he says. “The people you  swap with often become friends.”
The biggest demand Intervac has  for Irish swaps has traditionally been from the US and Scandinavia. That  said, swappers from European sun spots such as Portugal are on the  increase too.
“They tell me they like a bit of rain for a week or  two during their own hot summer, so the Irish weather is not a problem  for them,” says Kelly.
He too believes the recession will  encourage more people to consider swapping, but urges those considering  it for the first time to take a flexible approach.
“Be open to  going to places that you hadn’t considered. You are more likely to get a  swap if you opt for something ‘in the region of Nice’, for example,  rather than in Nice,” he cautions.
Equally, be aware that things  can and do, if only sometimes, go wrong. “We had one lady last year who  went to an apartment in Paris only to find it was already let out and  the guy hadn’t bothered to tell her.
“When that happens the important thing is to contact us straight away and we will pull out all the stops to get you sorted.”
Intervac  is considering establishing a fund to cover just such emergencies. In  the main, however, house swapping works well precisely because it is  based on trust.
Liam Harkin, a 47-year-old teacher from Donegal,  learned all about the level of trust involved very early on. He went on  his first house swap in 1996, six months after getting married.
“At  first my wife wasn’t keen and was wary about having strangers in our  home,” he says.Still, he won her over and the couple prepared for the  big swap.
“I still get embarrassed when I think of it, but we took  everything we thought was of value, which, of course, being so young,  wasn’t of any value at all, and locked them into the box room,” he  recalls.
“When we arrived in our 17th-century French villa to find  it full of antiques and valuables, with even the computer still turned  on for us, we were mortified.”
Since then the couple have  travelled the world house swapping. They now have 18 swaps under their  belt, three of which were in the one year.
“Once you house swap, you won’t travel any other way. In fact, you come to hate hotels,” says Harkin.
Interestingly, some of his family’s (he now has two children under 10) best swaps have been in Ireland.
“You  simply pick a part of the country you want to see and you jump in the  car. All it costs you is the petrol it takes to get you there.”
If that isn’t an Oscar winner of a recession-proof holiday, what is?
* homelink.ie
* intervac-homeexchange.com
* lovehomeswap.com
* homeexchange.com
* exchangeaway.com
* homebase-hols.com
* profvac.com
* exclusiveexchanges.com
Homing in make the most of it  
* Be open to going off the beaten track
You’ll  have more chance of success if you widen your sights. “We found Lake  Constanz on the German and Swiss border by accident, just by being open  to swapping there. It turned out to be a little piece of heaven totally  undiscovered by the Irish. There wasn’t a pair of black socks or an  eircom T-shirt in sight,” says Marie Murphy of Homelink.
* Communication is key
Take  the time to discuss precisely what’s being swapped, and what is not,  including cars. “The only difficulty we ever experienced was over cars,”  says Liam Harkin. “We went to Italy and found we had been left the  owner’s Fiat Cinquecento. Unfortunately, I’m 6 ft 4in and so that didn’t  work very well. What’s more, when we got home we found our visitors had  clocked up 4,000 miles on our own car.” These days he always checks  what kind of car he is swapping for and agrees a mileage limit.
* Put the effort into the blurb you post about your house
“I  made sure to sell our three bedroom semi-D in Raheen very well,  pointing out four or five well-known tourist sites in the region,” says  Aisling Finucane. “Overseas visitors will check these out online and  it’s what makes them choose your house.”
* Be open to the additional cultural experience
“There  is almost always a neighbour or a family member who will call in and  show you the ropes, and on whom you can call if something goes wrong.  What this also means is that you almost always get invited to dinners  and barbecues too, which adds to the experience,” says Harkin.
Source www.irishtimes.com/
Saturday, 26 November 2011
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