Raffle Rules


"A simple, brilliant, original idea ...
and for once it seems that everybody wins."

Trevor Sheffield, The Chronicle

Scott's Raffle

Home
What Our Winners Get
Questions People Ask
Why House Raffles?
Our Hotel
Our Charity
About Our Island
Reasons Why
About Us
Contact Us
Sign up for our newsletter
Everything Else
Free book download
Order Page

Mallorquin Values

"Old fashioned" at its best. In our town you can walk the streets after midnight and if you were to push on all the doors, every fourth or fifth one might open. You see cars parked with the lock buttons up. You see tiny children playing in the church square day or night with no parent in sight because they know and trust that any adult within range will look out for their progeny, even unto remonstrating with them to behave better. It's all blessedly familial and non-PC. If you like warm people, honesty, good manners and human values over fake hype and plastic ethics, you'll love the island, especially the interior, away from the touristy coasts.

Rafa Nadal, our not quite near neighbor (and holder of a ticket and voucher) is a case in point. Reporters constantly remark on his dignity and modesty and lack of vanity. In spite of his huge monetary success, he lives at home in a sort of family compound, hangs out with childhood friends, doesn't parade models on his arm in chi-chi nightclubs and even calls me "Sir" when we speak (which isn't often anymore). He's a local boy with local values and hats off to him and to those values.

 

 

 

Aren't We Fashionable!

Look who you just might spy having a coffee near us: Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones, Annie Lennox, Claudia Schiffer, Boris Becker, Michael Schumacher, Antonio Banderas, Andrew Lloyd- Weber, Katherine Hammett, all of whom have houses nearby. As to visitors, the list is endless. As I write this, Sting, Pierce Brosnan and Rod Stewart are here, and of course the King, who spends a month at his island palace every year, usually taking part in the yacht races that bear his name. And 300 feet from our front door, Tony Curtis used to have a house, though that was some years back when Faye Emerson was also in residence. Still, for those who watch celebs, they're always underfoot everywhere, and more than a few of them stay with us to try to avoid the paparazzi.

 

 

Mallorca Is Spain In a Teacup

Spain is big. A great vacation destination, but unless you've a lot of time, you'll only ever see a tiny slice of it.

But Mallorca, 120 miles off the coast from Barcelona (and only a 25 minute flight), has everything peninsular Spain has, just pushed closer together. You'll find mountains, plains, caves, coves, forests, marinas and the long sandy beaches that first made it famous, all on an island that's only sixty odd miles top to bottom and side to side.

It's also got Palma, a two-thousand-year-old Mediterranean capital that reminds me of the way Barcelona used to be years ago before it got developed and trendy.

 
 
 
  

Palma has become a favorite destination among the cities of the Mediterranean, small enough to walk across in an hour, big enough and sophisticated enough to support a dozen Michelin-starred restaurants, boutiques and art galleries, a thriving musical scene that embraces jazz, folk, rock and classical, and festive activities enough to keep anyone busy all day, all year.

If you like boats, or looking at them, a long stroll along the quayside will take you past several billion's worth of them, from sailing dinks to monster destroyer-sized megayachts and classic sailing ships from the 19th century. Put on your boots for walking through a shore awash with money.

 
 
 

And consider this for diversity: From the craggy coves of the Costa Brava to the long, white sand beaches of the Costa del Sol is about 930 miles, a fair piece of distance to cover to change beach scenery. On Mallorca you can do it in twenty minutes, and I'll put the Mallorca beaches up against anything anywhere else in Spain can offer.

Mallorca ("Majorca" to many) is Europe's most popular tourist destination. Can twelve million visitors a year be wrong?

But no, the island doesn't feel crowded, except in the big resorts in July and August. In other areas (like the ones our hotels are in) you can count on not seeing anything touristy. In fact, huge areas of the island are still authentic, still safe, still full of the charm that first brought people here, and caused many of them (us!) to stay to live.

So why do people come to Mallorca? Because there's so much on offer in a relatively small place – stunning rugged mountains and dramatic sea cliffs, over a hundred beaches and hidden coves, historic valleys with ancient Roman olive terraces, citrus groves and almond orchards, picturesque villages with authentic Spanish life and a capital founded by the Romans in 276 B.C.

Do you want activity? Hike or walk, climb or cycle, paint or potter, sail or scuba, swim or sunbathe, go admire birds of all varieties or whack a golf ball on twenty-two courses, from club to championship level.

Tennis anyone? Rafa Nadal is building a tennis center in his home city of Manacor, and Boris Becker built one ten years ago.

And there's nightlife – lots and lots of nightlife.

Best of all, there's a solid infrastructure, built over four decades of taking care of visitors. This is something all the new destinations of the Med are struggling with, and something even fine old Spanish cities don't have. What does it mean? It means you can get here on a choice of hundreds of shoestring-cost flights, that there are hotels and restaurants and activities for every wallet, from student to private Gulfstream owner.

It means you can sup with the cognoscenti who count their Michelin stars, drink in star bars where the paparazzi lurk, sidle into places where the king hangs out (and he does, no foolin') or you can come here on small change, take advantage of all that's free and go home having had a smashing time for next to nothing.

  
 

For those of a more spiritual nature, and especially Californians with a sense of history, our island was the birthplace of Junipero Serra, many of whose missions up and down the state became modestly well-known cities: San Diego, San Francisco, Monterey, Carmel, San Juan Capistrano, Santa Clara, San Jose and more than a dozen others. Only in Santa Barbara was he turned away by the then governor. There is a fine statue of him in Golden Gate Park.

Mallorca is being called the new Riviera, not without reason, though with less pretension and more authenticity.

It's a wonderful place to own a holiday home.

If you would like lots more information about the island – dozens of pages of it – we have set up a noncommercial website about Mallorca at: http://www.allaboutmallorca.com.

 

To return to the main page, press HERE

To get a voucher and raffle participation, press HERE

 


 

 
 
Copyright © 2009 Scott Properties, Inc. All rights reserved.

LEGAL NOTIFICATION: The Scott's Hotels Property Raffle and Hotel Voucher Plan is a registered copyright and trademark name reserved for use by Scott Properties, Inc., Scott's Hotel, Scott's Galilea or Scott's Hotels. It is not associated with any other property raffle, house raffle, property lottery, home raffle, or house raffles, property raffles, charity raffles or sweepstakes, house lotteries and property lotteries, registered or otherwise.