The only lessons you could give me is how you managed to look like bambi on ice. Apart i am fine looking at the snow forecast with fingers crossed, still not booked going to be a last minute thing with daughter, son and his girlfriend and maybe neice and her fella better warn the happy duck we are on are way.
I will drop you a line
2 adults and 3 kids here, 7 nights self catered but never ate in. We like our food and drink but we shopped around and tried to avoid the main high street tourist traps as we felt they were not such good value for money.
Breakfasts cost £25 total for the week - good old Snezhanka!!
Lunches - absolute tops £30 per day including hot choc break mid morning or afternoon.
Evening meal absolute tops £40 per night including bulgaria wine (no probs with bulgarian wine - had some lovely ...
2 adults and 3 kids here, 7 nights self catered but never ate in. We like our food and drink but we shopped around and tried to avoid the main high street tourist traps as we felt they were not such good value for money.
Breakfasts cost £25 total for the week - good old Snezhanka!!
Lunches - absolute tops £30 per day including hot choc break mid morning or afternoon.
Evening meal absolute tops £40 per night including bulgaria wine (no probs with bulgarian wine - had some lovely bottles)
We didn't go clubbing or round the bars, but popped to the supermarket for a couple more bottles before heading back to apartment and bed (kids are all under 10)
This comes to £490. With the pound vs Euro as it is now, we'd probably look at taking at least £600 this year.
Hope this helps
To those who are saying "I spend that much last February", do not forget that then £1 was worth €1.45, now it is worth €1.10 or even €1.00. Or 2 Leva.
Just read the article below (from today's Times) and weep...
Banks under the cosh as £1 tumbles towards €1
Gary Duncan, Economics Editor and Philip Webster, Political Editor
The pound is on the verge of parity with the euro as concerns grow over the state of the British economy.
With sterling slumping yesterday to its lowest ...
To those who are saying "I spend that much last February", do not forget that then £1 was worth €1.45, now it is worth €1.10 or even €1.00. Or 2 Leva.
Just read the article below (from today's Times) and weep...
Banks under the cosh as £1 tumbles towards €1
Gary Duncan, Economics Editor and Philip Webster, Political Editor
The pound is on the verge of parity with the euro as concerns grow over the state of the British economy.
With sterling slumping yesterday to its lowest level yet, £1 was buying just €1.03 at a bureau de change near the Eurostar terminus in London – meaning that an €80 meal for two in Paris now costs more than £77, compared with less than £59 a year ago.
Ministers were piling pressure on the banks to increase lending before a meeting with the banking industry today. Alistair Darling, the Chancellor, held out the prospect of wider taxpayer guarantees beyond the £100 billion already subscribed, but only if there were an absolute assurance that more loans would be made available to families and businesses.
He was speaking after an angry Commons clash between Gordon Brown and David Cameron, who said that the continuing lending drought showed that the Government’s bank recapitalisation plan was not working.
Mr Cameron urged the Government to adopt Conservative plans for a national loan guarantee scheme and later published a draft Bill to implement the plan. It would provide £50 billion of guarantees for new lending to businesses of all sizes.
Mr Darling said that he had always intended to keep the October bank bailout programme under review. He said: “The banks have to understand that we have put substantial sums of public money in to support them. They, in turn, need to play their part.”
The economic situation has become so serious that last night the Treasury was not able to rule out the prospect of extraordinary measures being taken to pump billions of pounds into the economy. The Bank of England was reported to be looking at a crisis strategy known as “quantitative easing”. This would involve the Bank buying up either government or commercial debt using bonds and securities. It is the direct modern-day equivalent of printing money.
The Chancellor said that such measures would be considered only if further cuts took the base rate close to zero –the point at which the Bank of England would run out of “firepower”.
Treasury sources said that while it was prudent for the Bank to consider all options the chances of quantitative easing being used remained slight.
Earlier this week there were warnings that the economy would shrink by 1 per cent this winter. Sterling fell to just €1.1397 on foreign exchange markets at one point yesterday and closed at €1.1411 – dramatically down from its peak of more than €1.40 set only a year ago. A euro cost 87.74p.
Peer Steinbrück, the German Finance Minister, described Britain’s switch from financial prudence to heavy borrowing as crass and breath-taking. In an interview withNewsweek magazine, he criticised the decision to cut VAT. “All this will do is raise Britain’s debt to a level that will take a whole generation to work off,” he said.
British officials said that the intervention was a reflection of struggles within German politics. Banks under the cosh as £1 tumbles towards €1The pound is on the verge of parity with the euro as concerns grow over the state of the British economy.
This is simple people...take £500 per person and then if you have anything left at the end of your holiday then it is a bonus. Personally, I have never spent as much as £500 in Bulgaria for a weeks ski holiday.