We have been selling and renting vacation properties for many years. At Timeshare Sales Team we advertise our ads widely through a range of media outlets including the Internet, major national newspapers, PPC campaigns to a targeted audience, and a network of local and trade publications. Tens of thousands of people see our portfolio every month. And they will see your Timeshare property. Because your property needs exposure if you want to sell or rent it out. Exposure to a targeted demographic who take vacations in exotic locations. High-income earners who buy holiday homes.
Or if you’re thinking about where to go this year, think Bermuda and Timeshare Sales Team. We can rent you a fully equipped Bermuda beachfront condo in a luxury resort for less than you might think.
For much less than it would cost for hotel accommodation. Hotel accommodation with far fewer amenities and decidedly less comfort. Or maybe it’s time to think about the convenience and economic advantages of buying your own Timeshare condo in Bermuda. It isn’t such a radical idea. You would be joining the more than 2 million American families who have made the choice to purchase a timeshare property. It makes sense. For a one-time cost of under $10,000 you can purchase a re-sale Bermuda Timeshare condo. The only ongoing cost is an annual maintenance fee of $500 to $800. And you get a lifetime of vacations. There are real bargains to be had at one of the many world-class resorts on this island in the sun.
BERMUDA --- RIGHT NEXT DOOR, YET A WORLD AWAY
You can have the time of your life here and never leave your resort. Many of Bermuda’s Timeshare developments front palm-fringed pink sandy beaches and nearly all are equipped with every amenity to make your stay a thrill-a-minute whirl of activities. You can swim, sail, snorkel, scuba dive, surf, fish, kayak, body surf, parasail or stroll along the seashore picking up seashells. Or you can just relax and enjoy spas, poolside lounging and sleeping in hammocks strung between coconut palms, looking across pink sands to turquoise waters and fritter away seven-days doing nothing more strenuous than reading a menu or ordering a drink. It’s up to you. But if you want to explore, and most who come here do, this is a place with a fascinating past and a vibrant mix of cultures that will enchant even the most jaded traveler. It moves to a reggae rhythm, a different beat, so be ready for the unexpected.
Bermuda was crashed into rather than discovered when 16 th century European sailors repeatedly ran aground on the reefs that encircle the island. So many voyages ended on these reefs that today they are a museum of maritime mishaps and a haven for scuba divers. Settlers, on their way to Virginia, were Bermuda’s first permanent English inhabitants, albeit unintentional residents who, following the Spanish tradition had run aground on one of the island’s many reefs. However, if you are destined to be shipwrecked, Bermuda, as it turned out, was a good choice. These first residents describe the island as well watered, covered in cedar and palmetto trees, and blessed by an ocean teeming with turtles, oysters and fish. The fish are so trusting wrote one early settler, “they can be scooped up by hand.”
And the island remains distinctly British. The judges wear powdered wigs, cars are driven on the left hand side of the road, cricket is the national game and old chap, we take tea at four in the afternoon. That’s the way the residents like it. There is little crime and one thing seasoned travelers will notice straight away is the absence of aggressive vendors.
The island, after some earlier exploitation of resources now looks like a manicured botanical garden and those lush colored photos you see on postcards don’t do the scenery justice.
The golf courses alone are worth the visit. Many visitors come year after year to play the championship courses, set amidst tropical flora that will take your breath away. Play the same layouts that charmed President Eisenhower, President Truman and the Duke of Windsor, who was the British Governor here during the Second World War.
Pale pink sands, turquoise waters and the world’s best climate. This is Bermuda. |