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- Swap your home and travel free
-
- You want to spend a few months or more
- somewhere exotic, beautiful, and culturally
- different, but you don't think you can handle the
- cost.
- What if you could arrange it free?
- The answer is a home exchange. Exchange your
- home for a comparable residence in a foreign
- country. It's free, except for the minimal cost of
- finding someone who wants to trade.
- William G. Thomas and his wife exchanged their
- home in California for a 500-year-old rectory in
- English farm country, a small, austere, Gothic
- church situated on a knolled horizon. It stood
- alongside a moss-covered cemetery and was
- surrounded by ancient, thick-trunked trees and
- ringed by six handsome and rustic English houses.
- This tiny English community about 40 miles
- north of London has a population of 17. The
- residents are hard-working farmers and the families
- of three business executives who chose country life
- over the rigors of urban living. One of these
- executives, John Morris, and his wife Mary decided
- they wanted to venture for a while beyond their
- English village. They wanted to see the United
- States.
- So the two couples arranged a home exchange.
- The three-week swap was total. The Thomas' and the
- Morris' exchanged homes, pets, and cars.
- William and his wife had visited London on
- several occasions before investigating the idea of
- a home exchange. They wanted to return to the
- London area, but not simply as tourists running
- hurriedly from site to site. So they wrote to
- English friends, applied for home-exchange
- brochures, and reviewed ads in the London Times.
- Their inquiries yielded several alternatives:
- a house at Wimbledon; an apartment near Kensington
- Gardens; and a bedroom in the home of a friend in
- Whitchurch, Hants. Then the letter came asking if
- they would be interested in a home exchange with a
- family living in an old rectory near the ancient
- town of Hitchin. They jumped at the chance.
- The swap was arranged over the telephone. The
- couples discussed departure times, instructions on
- how to operate household appliances, trash
- collection, and what to feed each other's pets. It
- took several months to make all of the
- arrangements.
-
- How to arrange a swap
- You can begin your search for a home exchange
- partner by asking around or by placing an
- advertisement in an international publication, such
- as International Living, 824 E. Baltimore St.,
- Baltimore, MD 21202, or the International Herald
- Tribune, 850 Third Ave., 10th Floor, New York, NY
- 10022; (212) 752-3890.
- The alternative is to contact a home exchange
- organization. These companies publish directories
- several times a year listing people interested in
- trading homes, when they want to travel, and where
- they would like to go.
- Agencies to contact include Better Homes &
- Travel, 185 Park Row, P.O. Box 268, Suite 14D, New
- York, NY 10038; (212) 349-5340. This is the only
- home exchange organization that screens
- participants and negotiates arrangements for you.
- The registration fee for first-time participants is
- $50. The closing fee ranges from $150 to $600.
-
- Also try Loan-A-Home, 2 Park Lane, 6E, Mt.
- Vernon, NY 10552; (914) 664-7640. This group deals
- primarily with members of the international
- academic and business communities. You can list
- your home in Loan-A-Home's directory free.
-
- Intervac, P.O. Box 3975, San Francisco, CA
- 94119; (415) 435-3497, is part of an international
- network of 22 home exchange companies representing
- 30 countries. For $35, you can list your home and
- receive a copy of the club's directory.
-
- Vacation Exchange Club, in Honolulu,
- Hawaii,(800) 638-3841, is affiliated with 22 other
- exchange companies and represents 42 countries. For
- $24.70, you can list your home and receive a copy
- of the directory.
-
- The more people you contact, the more likely
- you are to find a successful match. Send out as
- many as 50 letters, telling prospects about your
- home, your community, and the local attractions.
- Give references. And be flexible. It can take as
- long as a year to arrange a successful exchange.
- Once you have found a partner, clearly define
- all terms. It is best to do this in writing.
- Details to clarify include:
-
- * Gas and electric bills. You can trade bills
- or settle up later.
- * Telephone bills. It is best to exchange
- bills, so that everyone pays for his own calls.
- * Cars. If you exchange use of vehicles, make
- sure insurance, licenses, and permits are in order.
- * Dates. Make sure of the exact dates of
- arrival and departure.
- Most home exchange companies do not screen
- participants. That's up to you. Ask potential
- partners for references and photographs of their
- homes.
- * Potential damages. Who is responsible for
- paying for repairs?
- * Yard work. Do you expect your guests to mow
- the grass or weed your rose beds?
- Contact your home insurance agent and tell him
- you will have visitors living in your home. For
- your own peace of mind, put away valuables and
- fragile ornaments.
- If you don't plan to meet your guests when
- they arrive in the United States, have a friend or
- family member meet them and give them the keys. Ask
- your neighbors to welcome your guests, perhaps
- inviting them over for dinner or drinks.
- Leave a note explaining where essentials can
- be found, a schedule for trash collection, and a
- list of important telephone numbers (police, fire,
- and hospitals).
-
-
- For more information...
- For more details on home exchange how-
- to's, read Your Place and Mine by Cindy Gum.
- It is available from Gum Publications, 15195
- El Camino Grande, Suite 100, Saratoga, CA
- 95070. The cost is US$5.95.
-
-
- Let your tenant pay for your trip
- If you're unable to arrange the home exchange
- of your dreams, take a new tack. Put your house up
- for rent for the week (or weeks) that you want to
- travel. If you're able to get US$700 or US$800 a
- week for your home in rent, you surely can afford
- to spend two weeks sunning yourself in Montserrat.
- It's not as foolhardy as it may sound. Ask for
- references -- and check them carefully -- before
- you accept a tenant. Also request a security
- deposit, which you can keep in case there are any
- damages.
- Some home exchange organizations will also
- list houses or apartments for rent (refer to the
- list given above). Another good contact is
- Hideaways International, 15 Goldsmith St., P.O. Box
- 1270, Littleton, MA 01460, which lists rentals in
- its annual directory.
- When writing the ad for your house, think like
- a salesman. List all the features and comforts of
- your home, as well as all the nearby attractions.
-
-