Archive for December, 2008

Being Creative and Self-Critical

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

Healthy criticism can help refine our talents and creative projects in the pursuit of excellence. But when it is based on a excessive perfectionism or an unrealistic self concept, criticism can be destructive and self-limiting, eroding our creative assurance and vitality.

Many creative people, even when they have achieved recognition for their talents, may experience self-critical thoughts and insecurity.

Irish writer John Banville, just before receiving The Booker Prize, considered the world’s most prestigious award for new fiction, was sure he would not win; “I tend to think all my books are bad,” he said.

Many talented film actors report they don’t watch their own movies. When you can be seen in close-ups on twenty foot high theater screens, it may be especially hard not to criticize your appearance and performance. Joaquin Phoenix has said he doesn’t like how his teeth look, or his lips. Kate Winslet has admitted that before going off to a movie shoot, she sometimes thinks, “I’m a fraud, and they’re going to fire me… I’m fat; I’m ugly.”

Highly creative and talented people are, according to research on giftedness, often susceptible to perfectionism and unreasonably high standards and expectations that can lead to exaggerated criticism.

Lesley Sword, director of Gifted and Creative Services, in Australia, finds that gifted children are “highly self critical and over reactive to the criticism of others. They express dissatisfaction with themselves; they see what ‘ought to be’ in themselves… They have a vision of perfectionism that they measure themselves against and they can become despondent sometimes even depressed, at their perceived failure.”

Children who have strong abilities may get praised for their creative projects, but miss out on learning that criticism may be helpful, or that perseverance and time are needed to develop talents fully. Then as adults, when their painting or book or movie does not come together quickly or “perfectly” enough, they can be harshly critical of themselves.

And standards for what is “good” creative work have typically been developed by males, based on male values and male artists, rather than recognizing women as having equal, though perhaps different, creative sensibilities.

Impostor feelings can also accompany or lead to self-criticism. Jonathan Safran Foer, author of the novel Everything Is Illuminated, said, “I can be very hard on myself. I convince myself that I’m fooling people. Or, I convince myself that people like the book for the wrong reasons.”

Ideas about identity can also be limiting. Director Jane Campion, praised for “The Piano” and other films, once commented, “I never have had the confidence to approach film making straight on. I just thought it was something done by geniuses, and I was very clear that I wasn’t one of those.”

Another example is Nobel Prize winner poet and writer Czeslaw Milosz, who once said, “From early on writing for me has been a way to overcome my real or imagined worthlessness.”

These are not unusual cases, according to researchers. Many people with exceptional abilities experience complex feelings including inadequacy and inferiority, and critical self-evaluation.

In her book The Gifted Adult, Mary-Elaine Jacobsen writes about common judgments people often hear from others – disparaging comments that over time can be taken on as self-criticism: “Why don’t you slow down?”; “You worry about everything!”; “Can’t you just stick with one thing?”: “You’re so sensitive and dramatic!”; “You have to do everything the hard way!”

One way to counter such criticism from others, and yourself, may be to use some humor. In the witty tv series “Bones,” cocky FBI Agent Seeley Booth (played by David Boreanaz) often makes snide remarks about forensic anthropologist Dr. Temperance ‘Bones’ Brennan (Emily Deschanel), such as “We call you people ’squints,’ because they’re always squinting at things.”

And she retorts, “You mean people with high IQs and basic reasoning skills?” In another scene, he expresses impatience with her self-assurance: “You are such a smartass,” and she comes right back with, “Yes, I am smart, but it has nothing to do with my ass.”

This is a form of the approach used in cognitive behavioral therapy to help people overcome depression, anxiety and other challenges: becoming aware of self-critical and negative thoughts, examining them carefully and logically, then editing or rephrasing them.

These thoughts are often irrational beliefs about how life is or how we “should be” and they can become habitual responses to stressful situations, and often too broad to be accurate.

For example, you may think, “I’m too sensitive.” Well, what does that really mean? Too sensitive for what? Maybe it’s just there are situations that cause you more discomfort than you want to put up with. Amy Brenneman [star of "Judging Amy"] was once said, “I’m too sensitive to watch most of the reality shows. It’s so painful for me.”

But that is a much more concrete and specific, and therefore real, statement than simply “I’m too sensitive.” And being sensitive, after all, can be a virtue for anyone.

Some people find carefully crafted affirmations placed where you can regularly read them can counteract unrealistic and self-limiting criticism and thinking.

One way to modulate self-critical statements is to ask, If you made this kind of comment to your friend or child, would it be helpful to them? Would it encourage and support them?

And some critical thinking can be positive, when it isn’t extreme, compulsive or unreal. As actor Will Smith noted, “I keep going because I doubt myself. It drives me to be better… It makes me excel.”

Geena Davis, playing the lead in the tv series “Commander in Chief” thinks “you could scratch the surface of most actors and find insecurity played a big part in their drive to become successful.”

Douglas Eby writes about psychological and social aspects of creative expression and achievement. His site has a wide range of articles, interviews, quotes and other material to inform and inspire: Talent Development Resources
http://talentdevelop.com/

Business Writing: 10 Great Authors

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

Great business writers combine narrative skills with sound judgment to create classics that help both the beginner and the mid-career professional.

Writing’s completely subjective. What interests you may not interest me. But if somebody told me I could read the wisdom of only ten business writers, these are the ones I’d choose:

1. Socrates – He was likely history’s first “self-help” writer. He taught people to seek ultimate truths by questioning conventional wisdom and examining their own beliefs. He said folks shouldn’t accept opinion as fact.

2. Sophocles – Another guy with no last name. He created plays that usually centered on a single heroic character who chose an unpopular course of action. This dramatist may have been the first “niche” marketer.

3. Benjamin Franklin – This multi-talented American championed succinct writing, and his epigrams became part of our national heritage. Ben warned, “He that speaks much is much mistaken.” Franklin succeeded in multiple business ventures.

4. Mark Twain – He’s been called America’s finest author because he wrote in American dialect, using phrases and speech unique to the United States. He punctured pompous prose, and laced his stories with regional references. (Many say Twain was also America’s greatest lecturer.)

5. Claude Hopkins – This researcher wrote “Scientific Advertising” in 1923. He’s among the first to discuss the use of product samples and demonstrations.

6. Edward Bernays – This nephew of Sigmund Freud is called the “father of public relations.” He authored the classic book “Crystallizing Public Opinion” in 1923.

7. Dale Carnegie – His book “how to Win Friends and Influence People” is one history’s greatest guides. He discussed the value of developing one’s personality, and wrote beautifully.

8. David Ogilvy – This brilliant copywriter and ad agency executive believed in the value of brand image, and valued advertising research and testing.

9. John Caples – His wonderful books like “Tested Advertising Methods” serve as a great source of information on powerful words, phrases, sentences, headlines, and much more.

10. Al Ries and Jack Trout – They wrote the classic “Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind,” which discusses ways to get your product or service remembered. (It’s my favorite business book.)

EzineArticles Expert Author Rix Quinn

Rix Quinn wrote “Words That Stick: A Guide to Short Writing with Big Impact.” It’s a writing book to help people who hate to write. It’s available from your local bookstore, or from http://www.tenspeed.com/catalog/all/item.php3?id=1661

Online Writing and Beyond: Writers Will Lead the Content Revolution

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

Introduction

It is often thrown around loosely on the web that “Content is king.”

If content is king, then what is a content writer?

Unfortunately, we are not yet royalty. We’re never paid as well or considered as skilled as a web designer or our more technical counterparts. This is changing, however, with an influx of writing for the web courses and the frenzy of corporate training in writing for the web. Training an already overworked, understaffed web team to write specifically for the web is costly and distracts technical workers from updating their ever-changing, ever-evolving techie skills. And then there is the whole left-brain, right-brain trap. Technical workers usually work from the left side of their brain, programming ASP and javascript. Designers use the right side of their brain to apply design elements to the technical aspects, such as forms and web sites.

Good writers are already gifted in using a voice that reaches their audience clearly and effectively. Content writers work behind the scenes to help websites retain and expand their readership, sales, and visits by offering articles, sales copy, email outreach, and other types of writing to enhance a web site’s overall “stickiness”. The basic premise behind content writing is that without content, a website creates no reason for a customer to return. And it’s much easier to get a customer to return than to visit the site in the first place. The web is still referred to as the “information superhighway”, and millions of users expect their information for free.

Where Writers Fit In

Ultimately, it is not “Content is King.” As readers adapt and change their uses and needs on the web, it is clear that really, the users are king and queen. Providing fresh and interactive content is simply the role content writers undertake. This is similar to the role of jesters, caterers, tutors, and playhouses to our royal readers. (Online books have failed thus far primarily for this reason; much of the content isn’t uniquely informing and the format doesn’t make an enjoyable read. How can somebody enjoy reading over 50 pages of boring, painful-to-read Adobe- Acrobat text?)

Content writers entertain, refresh, inform, educate and expand the world of their readers through writing. Those of us who write and love writing understand that the essence of writing is invoke emotion, take your reader “another world”, inform them or prompt them to action. Combine the passion for writing with the need for content on the web, and a writer can have it all. Not only can a writer fulfill these needs, but also the web writer can achieve a coveted, long-lasting goal for every website; compel the reader to interact.

Writers Engaging Readers

As more forms of entertainment move online, more unique ways of fulfilling their goals will surface. Some of the most popular websites today begin with a little content and build a community. Community-based websites not only have online writers, but also provide a forum for their users to interact to the content. Building conflict and community can engage your readers in such a way that they no longer feel like readers, but an audience. Members of an audience can applaud, converse, heckle and cheer when appropriate. By encouraging the use of a message board or other interactive media, readers return to see what the next day, week, or month will bring. They “get in on a piece of the action”.

More and more websites are creating audiences rather than readers, and writers are helping them through polls, feedback forms, and message boards. However, it seems that the web has not completely transformed the web into a completely interactive medium yet. Content writers will create a way to force the reader not to be an audience, but a part of the play. As a writer, I think that we’ll give audiences more and more room to interact and influence actual events and mediums.

Where We’ll Take Content Writing

In the future, I see nonfiction e-books allowing readers to pick and choose chapters based on their skill and knowledge levels. Students will be able to skip the grammar review in an online textbook if they feel their skills are up to par or took an online skill test to “test-out”. Web designers will skip the HTML basics and move straight to HTML 5.0 new features and XML. Writers will be writing both for a general audience and a skilled audience, and readers will participate in the process by choosing the specific information they need. “Take what you need and leave the rest” will be the new online writing mantra. Contentville.com already did this (although they are now defunct) with a huge database of articles, thesis papers, and other formerly print media that readers pay a small fee to read. Others are following this pattern. This market will expand and readers will only pay for what they get.

In the fiction market, readers will be taken to the next level of participation by finding not only a choice of characters, plots, and settings through interactive websites and media, but through a Choose- Your-Own Adventure type of structure. Similar to online games, users will be able to choose Jane’s physical traits and John’s personality, and set the story into sequence at a setting of their choice. They will choose their favorite outcomes in their online soap operas. (No more, “No! John! You should have married Mary, not left her for Margaret! She’s evil!”)

As for the writers? We won’t have to choose the perfect beginning, middle, or end anymore. We won’t have to decide on one specific audience. We’ll be writing for all cultures, all ages, and all interest levels. Where content is king, we’ll be the knights in shining armor, rescuing the reader from the boring, redundant, or irrelevant web reading and the writing of yesteryear.

Oh, yeah, and we’ll be paid as well as the Duke of Earl.

*This article originally appeared in Web Writing Buzz Newsletter in April of 2000.

Standard Questionnaire/ Mystery Shopping | Get Paid for Your Opinion/Survey!

Saturday, December 20th, 2008


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Doing surveys for legitimate paid survey sites online is the quickest way to make money. Advertisers of legitimate survey sites will pay you for your opinions on their products or to complete trial offers after you complete offers and surveys. I believe you won’t get rich doing this but you sure can make a good second income.Following is the way how to make money from legitimate survey sites ,let’s share it. Getting Standard Questionnaire/ Mystery Shopping is simple. The occasional survey that is worth 20 dollars will generally require you to purchase something in order to eligible to even take the survey, read on more about Standard Questionnaire/ Mystery Shopping. Believe it or not but some surveying companies will not pay you in money. Also see Survey Done On Employee Satisfaction Among Nurses. Most of them are more than happy to pay you money to do it.

These big industries need you and me to willingly, easily and conveniently offer them the opinion of everyday people. When you make money taking paid surveys you can purchase the items you need and want to make your life easier. Imagine being able to pay off your debts, start savings accounts and enjoy the luxury of all those little extras that make your life fun and exciting as well as comfortable and happy. Perhaps you can spend some of your extra time taking that long deserved vacation. Can this be reverse? Yes it can and I will show you exactly how to do it with minimal effort. Find out more about Standard Questionnaire/ Mystery Shopping and Survey Done On Employee Satisfaction Among Nurses. The average person is going to spend all of there time taking low paying surveys while not even knowing that there are better higher paying websites available to them. See the top 7 paying surveys at http://www.surveys-bestpaid.org

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A Hard Luck Mom

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

A mother sets silently in her room Watching the reflections of the light off her broom Waiting for her day to begin Waiting for the kids to come in She starts her day by giving them something to eat Making sure their dressed from their head to their feet With that she tells them to have a nice day Then she smiles and send them on their way Then she spends all day washing their clothes out by hand Then they come home and she cooks them supper the best she can She lights their home with broken candles that she has found Then she gets them ready for bed in their torn bed gowns Then she covers them up so they are warm when they sleep Then she goes to bed covering up in sheets She gets food where she can and tries to keep them clean and warm She has been doing the best she can since that last big storm It took her some of her house, all but three rooms It took her lights and left her home like a tomb It took her husband and she has no one else Its just the kids, the dog and her and half the family house She struggles to make it day by day But she keeps going to for her kids to make it ok She knows that things will get better soon And that she just has to keep going till they do

http://www.originalpoetry.com/a-hard-luck-mom

Avoid Computer Phone Nightmares aka VoIP

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

Although computer phones, aka VoIP (voice over internet protocol) offer the most optimal means of communicating when considering quality and cost, free computer phones cause countless problems when unsuspecting victims download their “free” software.

90% of current computer phone providers, whether free or charging you for service, do not have secure lines or patented technology.

What does this mean to you? A lot of money out of your pocket.

On unsecure lines, when you place calls from your PC (IP address) to another PC (IP address), there is nothing in between the calls to protect you. This leaves you vulnerable to terminal viruses, worms, Trojan horses, unscrupulous hackers, or other uninvited guests who can listen in on your conversations. Anyone in the world can access your name and phone number.

Why is that important to you? Ultimately, your computer may become corrupted, causing a costly computer crash, in addition to violating your privacy.

Secure lines that include a provider’s own patented technology simply means, calls from PC to PC go through the provider’s own server or platform, which incorporates its own security protection, thus enabling you to talk privately and with peace of mind.

What can you do? If you currently use a free computer phone or pay for a service, find out if the provider operates from a secure server that includes patented technology. Request a detailed, written description relative to what their service provides. If the service includes an open server and/or they cannot give you the needed assurance or requested information, then discontinue the service and immediately remove the software from your computer. You can analyze your computer’s security for free by going to http://www.Symantec.com/SecurityCheck/

To contact the author: deescrip48@comast.net

About the Author

As a 3WTel VoIP Solutions Provider, Dee Scrip is a well known and respected author on VoIPs. A mother of 5 and grandmother of 12, she truly enjoys helping others succeed financially so they, in turn, can do the same for others.

Creative Writing Tips – Have You Established Your Main Character At The Start?

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

In the beginning of your story you have to grab your readers’ interest and sustain it till the end. Our hook is our character. Readers keep on reading to find out more about the character. To see what he’ll do in the story; how he’ll solve his problems. What his goals are and whether he’ll achieve them.

And because our character is the reason readers become hooked on our stories, establishing him at the start is a must in a short story. And it is essential to establish him at the start because we don’t have the capacity in our limited word length to introduce him at our leisure.

The bond between readers and character has to be developed almost immediately.

You might have a few characters though. How do you decide who your main character will be? A main character is one that drives the story.

Think of it this way… If we were to take him away, there will be no story because it’s his story we are telling. The story will unfold by what is happening or what has happened to him.

When you establish who your main character will be, the next thing to do is to find which of your characters is in the best position to tell the story. Will your main character tell his story or will you give that role to another character?

This is what we call Viewpoint and what we’ll see in more detail in proceeding chapters.

Your main character isn’t necessarily the one who is telling the story; he might not even appear in our story ‘physically’ but will be there through the thoughts of others. So the viewpoint character might be a secondary character.

Whoever is telling the story is the viewpoint character.

The viewpoint character gives the coloring of the story. Whatever this characters says, we will believe. It may or may not be true, according to the main character, but because he isn’t there ‘physically’ to voice his opinions, we will have to take the viewpoint character’s word for it.

In a novel you can play around with viewpoint. You can have several viewpoint characters. In a short story it works best with one.

So your main character, whether he’ll be telling his own story or someone else will be doing it for him, has to be established at the start of your story.

Having said that, let’s see the reasons why the main character may not be telling his own story…

•Perhaps our main character is one that readers won’t sympathize or empathize with.

•Or the main character will not view highly with our readers

•Or the viewpoint character knows all the facts and can tell the story better

•Etc.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Let me give you an example of a secondary character telling the story of a main character…

Let’s say your secondary character is a psychiatrist and the main character is the patient. Depending on what’s going to go on in the story, we’ll have to choose who’s in a better position to tell it. In this case, I will choose the psychiatrist.

I’ve done this because the patient is confused, being the one with the problems. The psychiatrist knows all the facts and his opinions will make things clearer to readers.

So, as the secondary character (the psychiatrist) unravels the story, we’ll become involved in the main character because it’s the main character’s story that is been told.

This may get a little confusing to the beginner writer. As they write they will have to keep in mind that the secondary character, although he’s telling the story, is NOT our main character.

The secondary character is there to do perform a task. He’s only the voice. It’s the main character we’ll become involved with.

A secondary character doesn’t play such an important role as a main character does. Therefore, information about secondary characters should be kept to a minimum. It’s not his story – it’s the main character’s story and the spotlight must, most times, be kept on the main character.

Take the above example for instance. It’s no relevance to the story how the psychiatrist started his career or where he received his diploma – what’s important, is what he has to say about the main character, his patient.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Introduce your main character straight away, as close to the beginning of the story that’s possible. Enable your readers to form a bond and that will keep them hooked.

Is your main character established at the start of your story?

Help to the writer by a judge of several major TV script and screenplay contests. Advice and tips on

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

Introduction There are many screenplay contests available
to the aspiring screenwriter.These contests can be a good
avenue to getting one’s work noticed and/or make a sale.So,
it’s important to make certain that you have written your
screenplay to the best of your ability and according to industry
standards.

The most important thing to do for any aspiring screenwriter is
to first learn the basic techniques of screenwriting before
sitting down to write one.I come across many hopeful writers
who think that all it takes to write a script is a good story
idea and a lot of explosive special effects.While a good story
is important, with or without the special effects, writing that
story using proper industry standards is equally
important.(Please visit http://www.cover
script.com/education.html — Tips for Screenwriters link for
further information.)

There are specific techniques to the craft of screenwriting
involving everything from act structure to proper screenplay
format, which must be followed.It’s difficult to write
engaging characters, focused plots and entertaining screenplays
without having a solid framework in which to bring it all to
life.

Before any money is spent submitting your work to a
screenwriting contest, it would behoove the writer to first
educate himself in the “tools of the trade”.There are many,
many screenwriting books available as well as workshops and
seminars, both online and in live classroom situations.My
advice is to take advantage of them.Then, armed with the
basics, write, write and then write some more.

Then before submitting your work to any screenplay competition
have it copyrighted and WGA registered.(United States
Copyright office: http://www.loc.gov/copyright<
/a>. Writers Guild of America: http://www.wga.org.)

Advice and Suggestions I am a judge for many contests
and as such, have read thousands of TV scripts and
screenplays.I can assure you that the winners are chosen
because their screenplays or TV scripts contain great stories
and are written to industry standards.Therefore, putting your
best foot forward is a must.Below are some pointers to keep in
mind before you submit your screenplay.

  • If your purpose
    is to “break into the business”, make certain that the script
    contest you enter offers meetings with agents and/or producers
    as part of the prize for winning and not just cash prizes.Of
    course, if it is just the extra cash you’re after, then go for
    it!

  • Make certain, before you write that entry fee check and
    send in your material, that the screenplay contest or TV script
    competition is a reputable one and indeed has, in the past,
    delivered to its winners what it promised in its promotion.

  • Presentation of your screenplay does count so make certain
    your screenplay follows the accepted industry standards.This
    not only includes using the proper screenplay format but also
    such things as a typo-free screenplay and the correct binding.

  • Keep in mind that the industry professionals who sponsor
    some of these film and TV competitions do so in order to find
    good producible material, hopefully for lower rather than higher
    budgets.Therefore, entering a screenplay in a genre with a
    story that screams “high budget” lessens the writer’s chances of
    winning.This means that
  1. Sci-fi special effects
    stories taking place on purple planets populated with giant,
    paisley-skinned, seven-armed, Plasmanian Wooglegorps who
    magically float through the air using anti-gravity belts or

  2. a 1920’s Period Piece necessitating Model-T’s, Zoot suits
    and flappers or

  3. an action/adventure story that has the bad guys blown to
    smithereens, along with their Lear jet, over the ocean, followed
    by a high-tech nuclear submarine underwater search and rescue
    mission while the oil slicked water burns out of control, are
    not the best way to go.
  • Make certain that your
    story is told visually.Film is a visual medium.

  • Make sure you don’t have “on the nose” dialogue or too much
    dialogue and that all the dialogue sounds natural.

  • Check to make sure that your characters are interesting,
    engaging and have good character arcs.Nothing worse than
    having an unlikable hero, a wishy-washy bad guy, or a
    protagonist who starts out angry at the world and by the end of
    the story is still angry at the world having learned and changed
    nothing in his nature.
Conclusion Once you’ve gone
through your screenplay and are satisfied with it, have it read
by someone else.After all, your story is intended for a
movie-going audience so honest opinions from friends and family
members will give you a feel for that audience reaction.

Then do yourself a favor and have your screenplay read by an
industry professional that has experience and good credentials
in the area of script analysis.A writer can become too close
to his work and not be able to “see the forest for the
trees”.It is to your advantage to have any possible format,
story, character, dialogue and structure flaws found and
corrected before it is submitted to a movie or TV script contest.

While there is never any guarantee your screenplay or TV script
will be a winner, writing one to the best of your ability and
which meets industry standards is a must, as the competition is
fierce.

I wish you great success in your present and future
story-telling adventures.

Website:
http://www.coverscript.com

Email me at: lynnepem@aol.com

Lynne Pembroke Coverscript.com Los Angeles, CA. 323-953-5921
lynnepem@aol.com http://www.coverscript.com

Copyright 2003 Lynne Pembroke, Coverscript.com The
information on this page may not be reproduced, republished or
mirrored on another webpage or website without the permission of
the links site owner or webmaster.

How to Store Breast Milk

Monday, December 15th, 2008

Now that I am at home with the baby most of the time, feeding the baby is priority #1
Here is the best way to get the frozen milk ready for the baby to drink.

After the baby wakes up you have to feed the baby. Now, since Marley is still on breast milk, this means thawing out some of the frozen breast milk. The best way to thaw out breast milk is to hold it or place it in warm water. Just warm water. Hot water will ruin the milk and the good stuff in it. That is all you need to know about it.
Do not thaw it in the fridge… it takes too long. Do not put it in the microwave… too hot, so is the stove. Only thaw it in warm water.
You can put the bag or bottle of frozen breast milk in a bowl filled with warm water, then every few minutes, put more warm water in it. Or just put it in a container under the faucet of running warm water.
You can serve the milk when it is room temperature, but body temp is best.
Remember that the thawed out breast milk is only good for 24 hours.
Do not waste any milk! That stuff is precious, do not waste it!

Borgo La Fratta in Barberino Di Mugello

Sunday, December 14th, 2008

Borgo La Fratta is a Apartment in Barberino di Mugello, located in Via di Latera 40

The country building “La Fratta” has ancient origin from the Medicean time. It has been rebuilt in the traditionally Tuscany way. It is in Barberino di Mugello, it faces the Bilancino lake, a new attraction near Florence.

The comfortable appartaments, in the big building, are different for wideness, proper to give hospitality from 2 until 6 people. They are furnished in Tuscany way and provided with own garden.

A park is around the structure where the people can have relax, take the sun, walk, see wild animals of the Appennino’s mountain, cook with a hand made wood-burning oven and eat in the open air.

It is only 5 minutes far from the highway, 25 minutes from Florence, and one hour from the most important towns of art: you can have a peaceful holiday but also enjoy the beautiful historical towns nearby.

From the house you can take a large and wonderful view of the lake and the Appennino’s mountains.

swimming pool: Borgo la Fratta has a wonderful swimming pool 8×12 with the view of the lake, into the private park equipped with beach-umbrellas and deck-chair. Stone hand-made oven- and barbecue: The park has an area equipped with stone hand-made oven, barbecue and a sheltered gazebo, It is the right place for evening barbecue, relaxing and to eat outside.

Mountain bike: The guests can hire the mountain bike to make beautiful tracks near Borgo la Fratta around the lake and in the Appennino’s mountain. Park: A private park of 5 hectars surrounds everything, until a clean and fresh river.

Trekking: we are enviromental qualified guides and we offer our experience to help you to know Mugello and Tuscany.

Children’s playground: a fresh area where the children can have fun.

Golf Club Poggio dei Medici:
special rates for our customers.

We are located close to florence city (km 30) and easy to reach from A1 Motorway (Barberino del Mugello exit)

HOW TO REACH US FROM FLORENCE OR BOLOGNA:
After A1 highway Barberino del Mugello exit, follow road signs for Cavallina and San Giovanni in Petroio; drive along the panoramic road following the lake side; after you pass the junction for Latera, take the second road on the right.

Looking for budget Hotel in Barberino di Mugello? Pls visit our catalogue of Hotels, where you can find also a wide range of Tours in Pisa and compare price for double room in Barberino di Mugello.