Spend the Night in a Historic British Home

Elizabeth slept here: You could stay at any old B&B or you could be the temporary lord of a famous building.

For pretty much the same price as any back-roads inn, country ramblers of England and Scotland can get an upgrade. The Landmark Trust was initiated in 1965 to rescue, refurbish, and rent out some of Britain's most dramatic ruins. Its growing stable of renewed properties--more than 200 now--means you can enact almost any time-warped fantasy. Think windmills, lighthouses, stone castles--in any part of the country, with modern electric and heating systems. You don't get breakfast, but you do get an equipped kitchen, modern bathroom, and linens. Presenting the best of the bunch, priced per property (not per person) in low season, working south to north, from the toe of Cornwall to Scotland:

The Egyptian House

In the tweedy Cornish village of Penzance, this 19th-century town house can't keep a stiff upper lip. Breaking loose with a circus facade, it looks more Coney Island than Cairo. Inside, though, the three compact rental spaces are eminently cozy and offer a view of the harbor where the town's fabled pirates pillaged between arias. From $52/night; its least expensive apartment sleeps three.

Anderton House

Built in 1972 (with original furniture to prove it), this unusual property in the village of Goodleigh is for people suffering from quaintness overload. The streamlined, glass-sheathed house--designed, in a nod to Frank Lloyd Wright, to embrace the view of North Devon's rolling green hills--is as much an architectural landmark as any manor. From $96/night; sleeps five.

Gothic Temple

The kind of flamboyant folly that makes other follies look humorless, this ostentatious edifice about 20 miles north of Oxford is part Camelot and part Anne Rice crypt. Witness the high-vaulted ceiling of the 18th-century lodge, painted with heraldry; the two circular, Rapunzel-ready bedrooms; the stained-glass bathroom. The surrounding "Capability" Brown--designed Stowe Gardens are usually closed to the public, but they're open to Trust guests. They're also sprinkled with enough neoclassical statuary and temples to resemble a high-class miniature-golf course. From $158/night; sleeps four.

East Banqueting House

One of the few remnants of the 17th-century Old Campden House, which was torched centuries ago by Royalists, the property still conveys a whiff of the Restoration lush life. In the long, airy parlor lined with arched windows, aristocrats dined on sweetmeats; its view of gamboling lambs and the local church spire hasn't changed in 300 years. Neither has the village of Chipping Campden, which may be the definitive Cotswolds hamlet. The two bedrooms and kitchen are comfortable, and if you want to cram the place with friends, there's an additional bedroom and a very chilly bathroom in the neighboring gatehouse. From $150/night; sleeps six.

Lock Cottage

Twenty miles northeast of Stratford-upon-Avon, the cottage is a handsome, slope-roofed, whitewashed abode--the kind a kid would draw--between locks 31 and 32 of the Worcester & Birmingham canal. That means you can watch holiday barges float by your bedroom window. Or, if you have the urge, you can rent your own boat. From $81/night; sleeps four.

Tixall Gatehouse

This ghostly Elizabethan structure once imprisoned Mary, Queen of Scots, for a fortnight (granted, there isn't an Elizabethan structure in Britain that didn't). A roofless wreck when the Trust bought it in 1968 for £300, the Gatehouse, about 15 miles north of Birmingham, now has a ground-floor gallery embellished by voluptuous sculpted angels, and two bedrooms have been tucked into the turrets. You can even picnic on the roof, which overlooks a lake. From $177/night; sleeps six.

St. Winifred's Well

Here's the romantic sort of property that separates the Trust from your everyday rent-a-villa outfit. Who else would track down the pilgrimage site of a decapitated 7th-century Welsh saint and rent out the one-room Tudor chapel that was built at her shrine? In medieval times, rowdy pilgrims took over the deep well in front, which was widely believed to have healing powers, and turned it into a sort of holy water park-cum-swingles hot tub. It was sealed long ago, leaving behind a cozy, beamed retreat surrounded by dense Shropshire woods. From $76/night; sleeps two.

Swarkestone Pavilion

Another romantic retreat for two, this majestic pavilion, marked by two perfect towers, was constructed in the 1600s to provide the owners of the long-gone Swarkestone mansion, 20 miles northwest of Leicester, with a grandstand view of something--conjecture ranges from jousting to bear-baiting. An enclosed garden contributes to the dreamscape. However, guests can only visit the loo by crossing an outdoor widow's walk, so in the middle of the night, that grandstand view may be of them. From $63/night; sleeps two.

The Pineapple

The Trust handbook calls it, with British understatement, "an eccentric work," which is like calling Carrot Top excitable. You can't miss the epic-size tower, erected in 1761 in the shape of a pineapple, when the fruit was considered impossibly exotic. It's like living inside Carmen Miranda's headdress--in central Scotland--but the two subdued bedrooms overlook a tranquil walled garden designed with far more restraint. From $87/night; sleeps four.

Note:This story was accurate when it was published. Please be sure to confirm all rates and details directly with the companies in question before planning your trip.
 
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Travel soap dishes--the colorful plastic ones that have hinged lids--stop small, fragile items from getting damaged or lost in your bags. I can easily label and use them again and again and again.

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Don't settle for the first answer to your travel question. If you need flight information, it's a good idea to phone the airline more than once and ask the same question. Recently, I wanted to see if I could fly standby on an earlier flight the same day. The first time I called, I was told that the earlier flight was booked. The second time, however, an agent said there were in fact seats available, and I could certainly fly standby. In the end, not only was I able to get on the flight, but I was upgraded to first class.

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When my husband and I travel, we take at least three different credit cards. I carry one he doesn't have, he carries one I don't have, and we both bring our primary card. If one of us has our wallet stolen, we can cancel two cards and still have one to use. We each have different ATM cards, too--useful if a machine doesn't honor one of the cards, or if we need more cash than our daily limit allows.

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Lightweight, washable, and multifunctional, a cotton sarong is an easy and practical addition to every traveler's don't-leave-home-without-it bag! I've used mine as a swimsuit cover-up, as a picnic blanket on the grounds of a château in the Loire Valley, as a temporary skirt (over my shorts) in a Bangkok temple, and as an extra pillow while hiking the South Rim of the Grand Canyon. It's also handy as an airplane blanket, emergency towel, or tablecloth.

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I always try to work out before heading to the airport. It usually gets me tuckered out enough that I can relax and sleep on the plane. If I don't have time for pre-travel exercise, I take a brisk walk through the terminal before boarding or find a quiet spot in an empty gate for a little yoga.

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Pack a power strip and extension cord for your next cruise. Many cruise-ship cabins have only one out- let, but you'll definitely need more if you want to power up your laptop, iPod, cell phone, electric razor, hairdryer, or any other gadgets you bring on board.

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