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“IT’S A MUCH SAFER, HEALTHIER PLACE TO BRING UP CHILDREN”


Joe Cawley (47) author of More Ketchup Than Salsa: Confessions of a Tenerife Barman. www.joecawley.co.uk


I came over here with my partner, Joy, and brother to open a bar and escape the fi sh giblets of Bolton fi sh market, where we used to work. We imagined it would be like being on holiday with our own beer on draught, happy people surrounding us, the beach on the doorstep… Fortunately, ignorance was bliss, as it was a stressful few years in a small, hot kitchen. When we sold the bar nine years later, we were going to go back to


Bolton. We had already sent our furniture, when we looked at each other and said: “What the hell are we doing?” So we got the furniture back and stayed. We now live in a little village up in the hills, called Acojeja, and we have two kids aged eight and ten, at the local Spanish school. They’re bilingual, like two little walking, talking, translation machines. We think this is a much safer, healthier place to bring up children. I managed to get the book published in 2006, and now make a living as a freelance writer here, having built a reputation as “Our Man in Tenerife”, and the local expert on the Canary Islands. I spend a lot of time island-hopping. The sequel to More Ketchup Than Salsa comes out in October. I very rarely go down to the bars and nightlife of Playa de las Américas now – too old! But I go down to the beach with the kids, and we have barbecues and pool parties, and I play football in a fi ve-a-side team that’s like a mini United Nations.


restaurants and beach bars serving English breakfast in the morning and showing Barclays Premier League football matches in the evenings.


WHERE TO LIVE For a permanent move or early


retirement: try Chayofa, a little village of housing developments, two to three minutes by car from the tourist centre but with nice restaurants and shops. It’s higher up from the coast, so a little cooler and greener. San Eugenio Alto is popular due to its tremendous views and position just fi ve minutes’ drive from Las Américas and Los Cristianos. El Duque is a chic new development, the face of new, classy Tenerife and a real fi ve-star build. For younger families and holiday homes: Your best best is Las Américas and Los Cristianos, because that’s where the main buzz and the beaches are. A property here will also be easier to rent out, and will suit a family as the kids get older and want to start partying. Costa Adeje is a good compromise, part of Las Américas but more family-orientated. For the best expat scene: the town of Adeje is a great cosmopolitan hub, with more than 70 nationalities. There are many expats in Las Américas and Los Cristianos, and Costa del Silencio is popular too, though slightly less attractive. Many other British people choose to buy further out in the countryside, with small farmhouses (fi ncas) a popular choice, offering the chance to have a little parcel of land for crops and chickens, perhaps. Authentically Canarian: there are


many more lovely villages inland from the tourist hotspots that seem a world away from the excesses of the coast, with properties that are older, but larger. The most attractive are Valle San Lorenzo, San Miguel, Vilafl or and Los Menores.


GETTING THERE There are no shortage of fl ights to


Tenerife, with most major scheduled and charter airlines offering year- round fl ights from all over the UK, including easyJet and Ryanair. The fl ights takes around four hours, and generally costs from £50 each way if booked in advance. From Tenerife South airport, the trip to the southern resorts takes less that 30 minutes.


CLIMATE


The Romans knew the Canaries as the “fortunate islands”, for their year-round mild climate. Tenerife’s climate varies, however, with snow on Mount Teide and more rain on the north-west coast than elsewhere. The south-western coast has about the best climate. Winter temperatures are 18ºC to 20ºC in the daytime, and 12ºC to 13ºC at night, with low chances of frost. Summertime maximum temperatures are around 24ºC to 26ºC, and 18ºC to 19ºC at night. Rain is rare in the summer months, mainly falling from November to February with occasional deluges.


PROPERTY MARKET Agents report a reasonably buoyant


property market in Tenerife, especially at the cheaper end of the market. Prices dropped 25 per cent over the


ON THE MARKET IN TENERIFE


Where: Los Cristianos Price: €118,950 (£95,200)


One-bedroom apartment, fully equipped and furnished, with open-plan kitchen, sun terrace with mountain views and spacious double bedroom. Communal pool, pool-bar and café.


www.premierproperties tenerife.com, 0845 862 0892


Where: Playa de las Américas Price: €150,000 (£120,000)


Spacious one-bedroom 11th- fl oor apartment of 45m2


, with


a superb view. It comes fully furnished and with a fi tted kitchen. There is a communal pool and the beach is just a short stroll away.


www.clearbluetenerife.com, 0034 922 714 772


Where: Chayofa Price: €190,500 (£152,400)


Two-bedroom townhouse in a quiet estate at the heart of Chayofa, with a spacious lounge, terraces front and back, communal pool and designated garage parking. Los Cristianos is a fi ve-minute drive away.


www.clearbluetenerife.com, 0034 922 714 772


Where: Callao Salvaje Price: €559,950 (£448,000)


Four-bedroom, four-bathroom villa, with private pool and double garage on a 320m2 plot. New fully-fi tted kitchen. Just 10 minutes from Los Cristianos and 20 minutes from the airport.


www.premierproperties tenerife.com, 0845 862 0892


past two years, but there are lots of cash buyers taking an interest now, fed up with earning so little interest in the banks, perhaps. Although Spanish banks have an inventory of older, repossessed properties to sell, there are some new developments attracting buyers, too, such as Leonardo da Vinci in Los Cristianos, which has a few one- to three-bedroom apartments left. Costa Adeje is a fi ve-star area, and Baobab is a luxury development within it, with some modern and beautifully designed apartments overlooking the sea. It’s been attracting buyers from as far afi eld as China. As a general rule, the entry-level


budget for a two-bedroom townhouse is €170,000 (£136,000) for a good-sized property that you could live in all year, reasonably close to the attractions.


With help from Judith Watkins, Premier Properties Tenerife, www.premierpropertiestenerife.com


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