Wednesday 30 April 2008

More Property Madness in Salcombe



Just when you think house prices can't go anymore loopy along come another rash of hugely priced houses! These are surely pushing the boundaries of what is possible!

Batson House

The most expensive one is in Batson, acorss the creek from Salcombe, so it's a good 30min walk into Salcombe town centre. The pictures look lovely but in reality you only get 2.5 hours either side of high tide so there are going to be long periods sat in your garden looking at mud!

Anchor Watch

I stayed in this apartment years ago when some relatives rented it, the views to the entrance of Salcombe Harbour are truly spectacular! Since then the current owner bought the top 2 apartments and knocked them trough into one huge open plan apartment...it's pretty special.

Monstrosity!!

And as for this ?!?!?! Who the hell is going to buy that and who the hell agreed the planning permission. What aspect of Salcombe does it actually fit in with? The Salcombe Town Council should be ashamed!

Friday 25 April 2008

Rugbt Great Martin Johnson to move to Salcombe?

I have from a reliable source discovered that none other than Martin Johnson is looking for a house in the Salcombe area!

He recently viewed this waterfront property on Curlew Drive near Kingsbridge. Nice if you can afford it!

He would join the local rugby list of Clive Woodward (old Methodist Church Salcombe) and Salcombe's own Julian White, who seems to own half of Kingsbridge!

It's also another great opportunity to show my favourite YouTube clip. It's what England have been missing since he retired....perhaps now we will get back that winning mentality!

Saturday 19 April 2008

Salcombe, Britains 6th Richest Town!

So we managed number 6 in the Telegraph's top 50 richest towns in Britain! Pretty amazing for a once sleepy fishing/boat building town in Devon. What is quite incredible is the average income for Salcombe residents can't be much over £12k a year! The boom in second home owners has bought wealth to the town but at the expense of local industries and people...I suppose the question is would Salcombe have survived without this injection of wealth??

Who knows....

Tuesday 15 April 2008

Salcombe, One of Britains Richest Towns

Salcombe is officially one of Britain's top 50 richest towns, according to a survey by Savills and the Daily Telegraph. The richest towns 50-41 were revealed today and by Saturday we will know the top 10.


I'll keep you updated and lets see where Salcombe comes out! With an average house price around the £400k mark it must be near the top, although, as yet we are some way off Sandbanks prices!

Tuesday 8 April 2008

Red Arrows Salcombe Bound!

The Red Arrows are due to perform in Salcombe this year! The date is the Saturday between Salcombe Town Regatta and Yacht Club Regatta week, which is the 9th of August - this is now confirmed.

This is what we have to look forward to:


It's about time we had a big event to compare to Dartmouth! We used to get the guy in his world war 2 plane doing stunts over the estuary but he seems to have disappeared, then we had a Chinook helicopter for a couple of years, which was quite good but lasted about 2 minutes and last year the Battle of Britain planes which were great but the Red Arrows are another thing altogether!!!!

So get booking your restaurant places now as I imagine it will be a popular night!

Also after last years disastrous fireworks from Snapes it has been confirmed that they are back on the barge this year - good decision.

Tuesday 1 April 2008

Salcombe Restaurant Review...

This Easter I managed to visit 2 of Salcombe’s restaurants; The Galley and Dusters.

The Galley:
I have to say I was surprised on many accounts! The interior is pretty basic but pleasant, unless that is you can get a window seat as I did. This transforms the entire experience. Even though it was dark the moon was shining over from East Portlemouth church across the water, lighting up whitestrand pontoon and the few moored boats that are on the water in March, and seemed to end when it reached my table! It was perfect!

The food whilst not being outstanding was pretty good. I had crab linguine followed by monk fish. The crab was landed at Salcombe and the fish at Plymouth so all very local. The linguine was average and could have done with a bit more taste but the monk fish was very good and worth every penny of the quite reasonable £17:95.

All in all 2 starters, 2 mains, 1 desert and a few glasses of wine was £63, a perfectly acceptable price for the food and view. Although I have to say had I been sat in the corridor part of the restaurant I would not have been impressed! Definitely worth a visit but check when you book that you are not going to be sat in the corridor.

Dusters:
Overall I was very disappointed with Dusters. Back in the heyday of “Dusters Bistro”, when it was owned and run by Mike Hicks, it was unthinkable that you didn’t go at least once on a Sunday night during the summer! The jazz was great, the lights low, the food simple but perfect bistro food, the whole placed buzzed with a relaxed but energetic atmosphere, the bottles of Sol flowed and the napkins were actual Dusters hence the name "Dusters" Bistro….

So back to the present…first of all let me just say the jazz was superb! Harry seems to get better with age! However it was more mainstream jazz and not the ragtime that Harry used to belt out at Dusters. I much prefer the new music but not at Dusters, it needs that energy and punch and not to blend quietly into the background as the new stuff does. Harry used to perform by the door and the music would carry out into fore street, now he is pushed to the back of the restaurant like he is just another part of the place and not the main attraction.

The atmosphere was awful, the lights were too bright and the tableware too silver service, which the actual service was far from! We waited an age for our starters, at least an hour and then we waited so long for our deserts that they had switched the coffee machine off! I was stunned……it was also more expensive than the Galley by at least 20%. The steak was £22……what’s the mark-up on that!

The food was good but not memorable; I had Spinach Risotto and Sea Bass for my main but I can’t actually remember what my starter was or my dessert for that matter. Although I do seem to remember that the ice cream on the menu said "Dusters home made ice cream" but the waitress seemed to think it was actually Salcombe Dairy! The risotto was above average and I have to say cooked perfectly and the sea bass was as sea bass always is, brilliantly tasty.

The wine list was a total joke, one bottle of wine form 5 different countries and the wines were at best average.

So all in all it was pretty disappointing to say the least and I wont be rushing back. Dusters needs to decide if it’s a posh restaurant or a bistro type restaurant, at present it is stuck in middle somewhere. This is a real shame as it has the prime location for a restaurant. If only someone had a video of Dusters how it used to be they could learn a thing or 2.

 
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