Caledonian Classic Cars
Father's Day Gift Vouchers

Porsche 912 restoration project


We have been featured in:

Scotland the best
Guardian
SundayTimes
BBC Olive magazine
The Scotsman newspaper
The Sunday express newspaper
The Times

 

 

Members of the Historic and Classic Car Hirer's Guild
Visit Scotland

Sunday Times

ECOSSE ALIVE : escape

A classic Jaguar makes a road trip along the winding roads of the Trossachs one to remember, writes
Claire Prentice

The obvious technical differences aside, driving a classic car is much like pushing a pram in Italy. Everywhere you go you are the subject of admiring glances, crowds gather to coo and everyone. wants to know how old she is and whether she gives you any trouble. Taking her out is by its very nature an event rather than a simple matter of getting from A to B.

Bessie, as the 1962 Jaguar Mk II we have hired for the weekend has been nicknamed, gives little cause for concern, provided you do things her way. Her preferred speed is 50mph, ideally done on quiet, meandering country roads. Which makes the Trossachs ideal for a day trip. more/less...


BBC Olive Magazine

Lowdown A fresh, stylish gamekeeper’s cottage with white walls, white sofas, beiges and creams and the odd flash of gold. There’s a Buddha in the fireplace, books, modern paintings and no dutter. Bedrooms and bathrooms are spotless, bright and designed for comfort with huge towels and gorgeous linen.

Breakfast Locally sourced breakfasts include organic smoked salmon and scrambled eggs, poached eggs with bacon, homemade Scottish pancakes with fresh fruit and, in winter, porridge with organic oats and cream. There’s a new chicken run so there will be on-site egg-layers soon, too, and meat comes from Puddledub Pork, a local farm that makes its own sausages. Price Doubles from £60

Whereto go for dinner Owners Tanya Worsfold and Alex Stewart recommend: ‘The Castle Campbell Hotel is a small, friendly hotel that serves local food in the bar or restaurant. A favourite is Aberdeen Angus fillet with flat mushrooms and black pudding made in Inverness Nov 2006

Saturday Times

Beyond the B&B: rooms with added vroom

KENNELS COTTAGE, CLACKMANNANSHIRE

Take the high road through Scotland when you bunk up at this former gamekeeper’s cottage near the town of Dollar. The owners of the pretty four-star B&B offer guests the use of a classic car for the weekend, and will provide maps, itineraries and suggest good places for an overnight stop. Take your pick from six little beauties including an E-Type Jaguar, a Porsche 911 and a Jensen Healey, each worth up to £18,000. Guests arrive in Edinburgh on Friday evening stay two nights at the cottage and hop in the car for two day tours of Scotland, taking in lochs, glens and mountains.

 

Scotsman Motoring

It's your big day - so pick a wedding car with the vow factor - PETER EVANS

THE bride's dress is bought, the groom looks the business in his kilt, the cake's on order and the reception's booked. Now what about the car?

Weddings are costly occasions, with brides in particular wanting everything to be just perfect so treasured memories can be preserved for years to come, when the photo album is thumbed through.

The right transport completes the picture, and many couples are moving away from the traditional white limo and going in search of something out of the ordinary. It's their way of stamping the day with individuality. So it's out with the white Roller or Mercedes and in with a Beauford, an E-Type Jag, or even a convertible Beetle. more/less...


Scotsman

Karma collected - LYNN COCHRANE

TANYA Worsfold should write a book: The Stress Free Guide to Refurbishing Your Home. Rule number one would be to direct proceedings from Hong Kong while your trusted partner, Alex Stewart, deals with the dirty jobs in Dollarbeg, by Dollar. Rule number two would be to time your arrival perfectly. "They were putting the carpets in as the furniture and I pulled into the drive," says Tanya.

Kennels Cottage is testament to her relaxed approach. A very stylish B&B, the place is a haven of white walls, crisp bed linen, fresh flowers and some rather beautiful (and highly polished) Asian furniture. Most people, she says, could run a perfectly acceptable B&B. However, she wants to offer guests something a little more special.

"I think living in Asia you learn about customer service," she explains, relaxing on one of the pristine cream couches in the guest sitting room. The view from the house, all rolling hills and green pastures, could not be more different from the dramatic urban landscape of Hong Kong.

Tanya and Alex spent 11 years there. Tanya had her own business as a relocator, with clients including businesses such as Motorola and Shell. It was her job to help staff recently arrived off the plane to find everything from a house to a good school for their children. Alex, meanwhile, was working in the construction industry. Although they had talked about returning to Europe, Scotland was not top of their list of places in which to settle. Having lived in Cyprus and Minorca, mainland Europe seemed, at least initially, rather more appealing. more/less...


Sunday Express

Tanya Worsfold, 42, used to own a relocation consultancy in Hong Kong. Now she runs a b&b in the Scottish Highlands with her partner, Alex Stewart, 45. They are in their second year and also offer guests a range of classic cars to tour the surrounding countryside.

Tanya says: We dreamed about living the country life and Alex was brought up here so that’s why we chose Clackmannanshire. It’s only about 30 minutes from Edinburgh airport so it’s an ideal spot to tour anywhere in Scotland.

We decided to buy somewhere fairly small but make it as stylish as we could, and when we found this beautiful gamekeeper’s cottage on an old estate we knew it would be perfect. We gutted it completely and now have five en suite bedrooms, We’ve tried to be different by decorating them in a very contemporary way, and I’ve used some of the Asian artefacts I brought back from Hong Kong. There’s definitely no tartan here.

I didn’t worry too much beforehand about whether we’d enjoy the job. I like people and we were always having people over for dinner and always had an open house, but I don’t think I was really prepared for what it would be like to have strangers in our home. I’m also quite a quiet person and having paying guests is very different to having your friends to stay, when you can tell them to shut up and walk around in your jogging bottoms and it doesn’t matter. We’ve converted the attic space into our own flat and was very conscious of making a noise at the beginning and found it hard to relax. I’m a bit better about that now.

It’s also a much bigger tie than I’d anticipated. You have to be on call all the time in case someone wants something. I’m rarely more than 15 minutes away and you can never really leave the area, which can be hard. In my old job I worked 10 hours a day, six days a week but at least I knew at night I could have a glass of wine and put my feet up and forget about it. Living and! working in the same place you never feel you are away from the job. At 10pm you’re conscious of the computer and you never let go. You’re always checking in case there’s another booking

I suppose I thought it would be up at 7am to do the breakfasts and then by 1pm I’d have the rest of the day off to write and paint, which is my dream, but I haven’t written a word yet.

Sometimes I’m on my hands and knees, cleaning the loo, and the idyllic life I imagined seems very far away. But things are starting to work out now - we went into Alastair Sawday’s guidebook British Bed and Breakfast last year, which was fantastic and worth all the hard work, and I feel much more optimistic. We’re beginning to see money going into the bank, too, rather than live on our savings, we have a beautiful home, we are both together and now we’ve got two Labradors. I can go and spend an hour in the garden when I want to, and it’s great not having to commute to work.”

See www.guesthousescotland.co.uk or call 01259 742476.

July 2006

Guardian - 25 cracking breaks

Compiled by Tim Bryan

Go touring in a classic motor... For the Highlands, pick up a Morgan 4/4 (£180 a day) or VW Karmann Beetle convertible (£140) from Caledonianclassics.co.uk (they will pick you up at any station/airport). The company also books hotels and suggests routes.

Full article: http://travel.guardian.co.uk/article/2007/mar/24/saturday.familyholidays.shortbreaks

Saturday March 24 2007

Gurdian: Life and Style - Activities: Scotland

This former gamekeeper's cottage is 13 miles from Stirling and has four bedrooms with double beds and en suite bathooms. Classic cars such as an E-Type Jaguar, MKII Jaguar, Austin Healey, Morgan, Triumph TR6, MGB Roadster and a convertible Beetle are available to hire for the day or weekend and two-day packages that include transfers, accommodation and details of driving routes costs about £500.

http://lifeandhealth.guardian.co.uk/bedandbreakfastdirectory/story/0,,2280357,00.html

Saturday May 17, 2008