An Explosion of Beauty - the dicamillo companion

Transcription

An Explosion of Beauty - the dicamillo companion
An Explosion of Beauty
Historic Houses & Gardens of the English Midlands
Warwickshire, Oxfordshire, Bedfordshire, Lincolnshire,
Northamptonshire & Buckinghamshire
Friday, September 6 – Thursday, September 12, 2013
7 Days – 6 Nights
$6,500 per person, based on double occupancy
The Bridge at Cottesbrooke Hall, Northamptonshire
The English Midlands – the name conjures up images of a rural idyll dotted with historic houses and
brimming with history. And it’s all true! We’ll be seeing the very best of this special part of England
during September, the most glorious month of the year for English weather. From the luscious redbrick Cottesbrooke Hall, the reputed inspiration for Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park, to Burghley
House, one of the supreme examples of 16th century country house power architecture (built for
William Cecil, one of the closest advisors to Queen Elizabeth I), to Stowe House, which combines
the best in gardens – one of the most important landscape gardens in the world – and houses: the
soaring marble rotunda almost defies description. This and much more in the tour of a lifetime!
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a brief biography of tour leader
Curt DiCamillo
Mr. DiCamillo is an American architectural historian and a recognized authority on the British country
house. He has written and lectured extensively in the U.S. and abroad on the subject and has taught classes
on British culture and art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts,
Boston. Curt regularly leads scholarly tours that focus on the architectural and artistic heritage of Britain and
its influence around the world. Since 1999 he has maintained an award-winning database on the web, The
DiCamillo Companion to British & Irish Country Houses (DiCamilloCompanion.com). The database seeks
to document every English, Scottish, Welsh, and Irish country house ever built, standing or demolished,
together with a history of the families who lived in the houses, the architects who designed them, and the
history of the houses’ collections and gardens.
In recognition of his work, Curt has been presented to the late Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother and The
Prince of Wales. He is a member of The Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain and is an
alumnus of both the Royal Collection Studies program and The Attingham Summer School for the Study of
Historic Houses and Collections. In addition, he is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, is listed in Who’s
Who in America, Who’s Who in the World, is a Fellow of the Massachusetts Historical Society, a trustee of
Boston’s Nichols House Museum, a member of the Collections Committee for the Great House at Castle Hill
on the Crane Estate in Ipswich, and a member of the Advisory Board of Samuel T. Freeman & Co. of
Philadelphia.
Before going into private practice, Curt served for eight years (2004-12) as Executive Director of The National
Trust for Scotland Foundation USA, based in Boston, where he was responsible for raising over $6 million for the
Trust (he currently holds the position of Executive Director Emeritus). Previously he worked for 13 years for the
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. A native of the Philadelphia area, Curt grew up in Central Florida with his sister,
the award-winning children’s book author Kate DiCamillo.
Curt at the iconic Attingham Park, Shropshire, May 2012
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ITINERARY
An Explosion of Beauty
Mallory Court
B = Breakfast; L = Lunch
T = Tea; R = Reception; D = Dinner
Thursday, September 5
th
DEPART U.S.
Depart the United States no later than today.
DAY 1
Located in central Warwickshire near the historic
town of Royal Leamington Spa, Mallory Court is a
31-bedroom manor house hotel set in 10 acres of
luscious grounds. A Relais & Chateaux property,
Mallory Court is one of the finest luxury hotels in
the Midlands and, with award-winning cuisine, the
epitome of the quintessential English country
house hotel.
Mallory Court Hotel
Harbury Lane
Royal Leamington Spa
Warwickshire CV33 9QB
Friday, September 6
th
LONDON / WARWICKSHIRE
R, L, D
Arrive in London no later than today. Meet
Curt DiCamillo and fellow tour participants
at 10:30 AM at The Rembrandt Hotel in
Knightsbridge (11 Thurloe Place, London
SW7 2RS, directly across from the V&A).
We will board our private coach for the short
journey across town to St. James’s and the
Brian Haughton Gallery, one of the world’s
leading ceramics galleries. Brian and his
colleague Paul Crane will show us highlights
from the collection of English and European
porcelain, complete with a glass of bubbly the perfect start to our festive week!
Telephone – 011-44-1926-330-214
www.mallory.co.uk
Bedroom at Mallory Court
Brian Haughton Gallery, St. James’s, London
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After departing the Haughton Gallery,
we will stop by The Rembrandt to
collect anyone who was not able to
join us this morning, after which we
head north by coach (box lunches will
provided to enjoy en route) on our way
to Honington Hall. We will be
guided through this magical kingdom
(including a visit to the lovely Estate
church) by its owner, Benjamin
Wiggin, Esq.
After leaving Honington, we will head
by coach to Mallory Court, our Relais
& Chateaux home for the next week.
Each guest (or couple) will have a Master
Room with either a king size bed or two
double beds and an ensuite bathroom
with individual shower and bath.
Rooms overlook the grounds and herb
garden. All rooms are equipped with a
minibar, CD player, digital TV, hair
dryer, dressing robe, and free WiFi.
Contact Meg MacDonald at Travel
Muse to inquire about availability and
supplemental cost to upgrade to a Junior
Suite or Master Suite.
Honington Hall
Considered one of the most perfect late 17th century houses
in England, Honington is built of an exquisite, mellow red
brick with stone quoins and carved busts of Roman emperors
set into round-headed niches above the ground-floor
windows (the garden facade of Castle Hill, Ipswich,
Massachusetts, is based on Honington). The interior was
lavishly remodeled in the 1750s and features an
extraordinary display of early Georgian plasterwork,
particularly the breathtaking coffered domed Octagonal
Saloon. With luscious Rococo garlands on the walls,
Kentian doorways, and a ceiling painting attributed to
Bellucci, the Saloon burns brightly as the star of this
extraordinary private house.
After our arrival at the hotel there will
be time to unpack and relax before
drinks and dinner in one of the hotel’s
historic dining rooms.
The Octagonal Saloon
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DAY 2
Saturday, September 7
Compton Verney
th
WARWICKSHIRE / OXFORDSHIRE
B, L, D
The lands and manor of Compton were granted to the
Verneys by Henry VI in 1440 and remained in the family
until sold in 1921 by the 19th Baron Willoughby de Broke.
With work by Robert Adam and James Gibbs, and
landscaping by Capability Brown, Compton Verney is an
extremely important country house. Today’s Georgian
Neoclassical house was built around an existing Baroque
house, with modern additions to accommodate the art
gallery. The House went through many owners in the 20th
century, finally becoming semi-derelict in the 1980s. In 1993
Sir Peter Moores (whose fortune comes from Littlewoods, the
retail and gambling company) purchased the property and
spent £21 million converting the House into an art gallery,
opened by Prince Charles on March 23, 2004.
After breakfast we will board the coach for
the short drive to Compton Verney Art
Gallery. The Director, the noted scholar
and author Steven Parissien, will welcome
us and lead a before-hours tour of the art
galleries and the Georgian Chapel, a rare
example of an architectural work designed
by Capability Brown. There will also be
time to see the special exhibition, Turner
and Constable: Sketchings from Nature,
with some 60 works on loan from The
Tate.
After Compton Verney we’ll board the
coach and travel through the English
countryside to the hamlet of Ascott,
where we’ll have lunch at Yew Tree
Farm, the lovely country home of Susan,
Lady Hereford. After lunch there will be
time to see Lady Hereford’s divine
garden.
Compton Verney contains a fine collection of art formed by
Sir Peter Moores, including Neapolitan paintings, Northern
European works of art, British portraits, British folk art, and
Chinese bronzes. A recent acquisition, purchased from the
Albright-Knox Gallery, Buffalo, is a Shang dynasty vessel
(fang jia) decorated with the designs of an owl. Johann
Zoffany’s The Willoughby de Broke Family, which shows the
family in the Breakfast Room at Compton Verney, was sold
at Christie’s in 1989 for £3 million to the Getty Museum.
Yew Tree Farm
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After leaving Yew Tree Farm,
we head to Rousham House,
where we will have a guided
visit of the house and garden.
This Jacobean country house
has been in the ownership of
the Dormer family since it was
built in the 1630s.
After leaving Rousham we’ll
head back to the hotel for time
to rest and relax before we
depart to nearby Warwick for
dinner at The Rose and
Crown, twice named one of
the Top Ten UK pubs. This
gastro pub is famous for its
locally-sourced food.
Rousham House
“Rousham is ravishing in every way. It is William Kent’s masterpiece.
The best of England is rolled into one here at Rousham”
-Candida Lycett Green
In 1719 Colonel Robert Dormer began the huge transformation
in the garden that we see today. He employed Charles Bridgeman
to lay out the garden in the new, natural style that was becoming
popular. Colonel Dormer’s brother, General James Dormer,
called in William Kent to further enhance and carry forward the
garden created by Bridgeman. This Kent did with enormous
success, while simultaneously embellishing the house itself, most
especially his Painted Parlour, frequently called “one of the finest
18th century rooms in England.” There are fine collections of
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Jacobean and 18 century furniture, paintings, and statuary, all
displayed in the domestic setting of a family home, as the CottrellDormer family still live here and keep Rousham so that a visit
today is very similar to one enjoyed in the 18th century.
Garden at Rousham
The Painted Parlour
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DAY 3
Sunday,
th
September 8
Wrest Park
BEDFORDSHIRE
B, L, R, D
The Long Canal and the Archer Pavilion
After lunch in the Old Kitchen
at Moggerhanger, we head to
nearby Wrest Park for a
private tour of the sublime
gardens.
After decades behind
virtually closed doors,
its treasures overgrown
and largely unknown,
Wrest Park, one of
Britain’s largest and
most important
gardens, has been
gloriously reborn.
Noted for its many
statues, lakes, vistas,
and follies, most
particularly the Archer
Pavilion, the
wonderful 90-acre
historic landscape
garden and Frenchstyle mansion make
this one of the stars of
Bedfordshire.
This morning we head for
Moggerhanger Park for a tour
of the most complete surviving
work of Sir John Soane. One
of England’s greatest architects,
Soane designed Moggerhanger
in 1792 at the height of his
powers. A recent restoration
has gloriously returned the
house and garden (designed by
Humphry Repton) to their
original plans.
After leaving Wrest Park, we
head back to Mallory Court for
a rest, followed by drinks and
dinner at the hotel.
Interior of the Archer Pavilion
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Moggerhanger Park
DAY 4
Monday,
th
September 9
Boughton House
NORTHAMPTONSHIRE
B, L, T, R, D
Today will be one of the most
special on the tour; we will
have Boughton House all to
ourselves. One of the most
important houses in England,
this home of the Duke of
Buccleuch is called “The
English Versailles,” a richlydeserved sobriquet. We begin
with a tour of the house with
Boughton’s curator, Charles
Lister, and will be joined by
Dame Rosalind Savill, the
world’s foremost Sèvres expert
and former Director of the
Wallace Collection, who will
discuss the Sèvres collection at
Boughton.
After the house tour we will
have lunch in the Tea Room
Restaurant in the French-style
Stables, after which there will
be abundant time to see the
garden. With herbaceous
borders, walled gardens,
ancient lime avenues, and
immaculately edged canals,
the100-acre garden is
internationally famous,
particularly for Orpheus, an
inverted grass pyramid,
finished in 2010.
One of the most important treasure houses not just in England,
but the whole of Europe, Boughton House contains probably the
finest collection in Britain of 18th century French furniture. The
collection is also rich in the decorative arts – silver, Sèvres, and
vividly fresh tapestries and carpets, all complemented by
masterpieces by El Greco, Batoni, Gainsborough, and Van Dyck
(there are 40 Van Dyck sketches in the Drawing Room alone!).
This remarkable house is a blend of the intimate and the grand,
with its village-like Tudor courtyards fronted by the palatial
st
Versailles-style additions made by Ralph, 1 Duke of Montagu, in
the 1690s. The spirit of a family home goes hand-in-hand with
the magnificent formality of the Great Hall or the series of state
rooms, all virtually untouched for 300 years.
Some of the rarest Sèvres in the world: the Boughton potpourri vases
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In the late afternoon we will leave Boughton for the short journey to Deene Park, home of the Brudenell
family since 1514. After tea and biscuits, we will tour the house and have time to wander the gardens.
Drinks and an early light supper in the Dining Room will be hosted by Mrs. Edmund Brudenell.
The manor of Deene originally belonged to Westminster Abbey (an annual rent of £18 was paid until 1970!).
The original 16th century courtyard house has been repeatedly expanded; one of its noted later additions is the
early 19th century Bow Room, which contains the Brudenell Library. This important library was begun in the
16th century by Sir Thomas Tresham and his son-in-law, Sir Thomas Brudenell, 1st Earl of Cardigan. Though
no longer in the library, the collection was famous for its manuscript of Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales and the
last copy of the Magna Carta in private hands. Deene contains furnishings of different periods and important
portraits, including works by Joshua Reynolds and Thomas Gainsborough and relics of the Crimean War.
Seven of the Brudenell family were Earls of Cardigan – the most notable being the 7th Earl, who led the
Charge of the Light Brigade at the Battle of Balaklava during the Crimean War.
The Great Hall, Deene Park
Deene Park
DAY 5
Tuesday, September 10
th
NORTHAMPTONSHIRE
B, L, R, D
This morning we head for one of the most charming houses in England, Cottesbrooke Hall, the much-loved
family home of the Macdonald-Buchanan family. We will have this private Queen Anne house all to
ourselves, with a tour of the divine house (and its famous collections), followed by a tour of the exceptional
gardens (winner of the HHA/Christie’s Garden of the Year Award for 2000).
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The collection was formed principally at the end of the
19th and beginning of the 20th centuries and was
originally housed at Lavington Park in Sussex. It moved
to Cottesbrooke when Lord Woolavington’s
descendants, the Macdonald-Buchanan family, came to
live here in the 1930s. Other artists included in the
collection are Lionel Edwards, de Laszlo, and Zoffany.
In addition to the Woolavington Collection, there is
also a collection of notable furniture, including excellent
18th century English and French, as well as English,
Continental, and Chinese porcelain.
Cottesbrooke Hall
This sweet 1701 Queen Anne house is the home to one of
the finest collections of sporting paintings in the world
(and certainly the finest in Europe). The Woolavington
Collection was begun by Sir James Buchanan (later Lord
Woolavington), great-grandfather of the present owner. A
quintessentially British genre of art, the sporting collection
at Cottesbrooke includes works by Ben Marshall, Sir John
Frederick Herring Sr., Sir Alfred Munnings, John Ferneley
Sr., and George Stubbs.
The Library at Cottesbrooke Hall
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After leaving Cottesbrooke, we continue
the short distance to Kelmarsh Hall,
which will be opened exclusively for us.
We begin with lunch in the Saloon
before a guided tour of the house, made
famous by Nancy Lancaster. Afterward
there will be time to visit the garden.
Kelmarsh Hall
After leaving Kelmarsh, we’ll head back
home to Mallory Court, where there will
be a generous amount of time to relax
before drinks and dinner at the hotel.
DAY 6
Wednesday,
th
September 11
LINCOLNSHIRE
B, L, T, R, D
This sensational day will be devoted
exclusively to Burghley House, the finest
example of late Elizabethan architecture
in England. We will begin with a
private, before-hours tour of the state
rooms and then enjoy a lecture – Objects
of Vertu – The Countess’s Gems – given by
Burghley’s curator, Jon Culverhouse.
Lunch will follow in the Loggia with
owner Miranda Rock. In the afternoon
we’ll take a garden tour, including the
private South Garden, with head
gardener John Burrows, and a tour of the
private apartments. We end our day with
afternoon tea with Miranda Rock in the
Library.
Kelmarsh Hall is a fine Palladian house completed in 1732
for William Hanbury, a famous antiquarian. The house was
built by Francis Smith of Warwick, working from a design
by James Gibbs. Sir Nikolaus Pevsner described Kelmarsh
as “a perfect, extremely reticent design…done in an
impeccable taste.”
Ronald Tree and his wife, Nancy Lancaster, took a 10-year
repairing lease on Kelmarsh in 1927. Nancy, who became
legendary for her interior designs, subsequently married the
owner of Kelmarsh, Colonel Lancaster, and added the
Chinese Room and redecorated the interiors.
We return to Mallory Court for some
R&R, followed by pre-dinner drinks and
a farewell dinner at the hotel.
The Entrance Hall
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Burghley House
Burghley is one of the supreme examples of power country house architecture of the late 16th century. The
house is modeled on the private lodgings of Richmond Palace and is built around a large courtyard,
combining traditional medieval architecture with classical design elements (the house was built in
formation of the letter “E” in honor of Queen Elizabeth, but, as it is now missing its Northwest Wing, it
can no longer claim to be an Elizabethan “E” house). Burghley was built for Sir William Cecil, later 1st
Baron Burghley, Lord High Treasurer to Queen Elizabeth I, and one of the Queen’s top advisors. The
house has been home to the Cecil family for more than 400 years and is famous today for the Burghley
Horse Trials, a three-day international event held every autumn in the Capability Brown-designed
landscape at Burghley.
Burghley contains one of the finest
private collections of 17th century Italian
paintings in the world. The Staircase
Hall contains carvings by Grinling
Gibbons and wall paintings by Antonio
Verrio; the latter’s work also fills the walls
and ceilings of the Heaven Room and the
Hell Room, among the most amazing
interiors to be found in any British house
and considered one of the greatest
decorated suites in England. The Heaven
Room, completed in 1694, is considered
Verrio’s masterpiece and is the only room
he ever painted from floor to ceiling; it
displays scenes from classical mythology.
The Heaven Room
In 2010 two small enameled white china jars in the collection at Burghley were identified as being possibly
the earliest hard-paste porcelain manufactured in Europe, pre-dating that produced at Meissen by at least
25 years.
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DAY 7
Thursday,
th
September 12
Stowe House
BUCKINGHAMSHIRE
B
In the 18th century the powerful Temple-Grenville family created
an idyllic land of wonderment at Stowe, filling the landscape
with temples, follies, statues, and endless paths. Amidst this
enchanted garden they built the most lavish temple of all, Stowe
House. From its impressive 1770s entrance hall, the Marble
Rotunda, Stowe House boasts spectacular views in four
directions, with the line of the state rooms stretching 500 feet.
Numerous famous architects worked at Stowe, including John
Vanbrugh, William Kent, James Gibbs, Robert Adam, and John
Soane, making Stowe one the most important houses (and
gardens) in Europe.
Our last visit will be to
magnificent Stowe. After
arriving at the new Visitor
Centre, we will begin with a
walking tour of the National
Trust’s famous Stowe Landscape
Garden, which encompass 250
acres of gardens. Following the
Paths of Vice, Virtue, and
Liberty, we will walk the same
paths as 18th century visitors,
dotted with some of the most
famous follies in the world.
Lunch will be on your own at the
Visitor Centre. After lunch we’ll
have a one-hour guided tour of
the state rooms at Stowe House,
now a private school.
After leaving Stowe, our coach
will first drop passengers at
London Heathrow Airport
(estimated arrival: 4:00 PM),
and then continue on to the city
center to drop anyone who is
staying on in London (estimated
arrival of 5:00 PM).
For those flying out of Heathrow,
book flight departures
for 6:00 PM, or later
The Marble Rotunda
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An Explosion of Beauty
September 6 – 12, 2013
Program Prices
Land-Only Tour Cost
$6,500 per person, double occupancy
Single Supplement
$595
Includes: Six nights’ luxury accommodation; English breakfast daily; six lunches; and six dinners including
pre-dinner drinks; wine/beer and coffee at lunches and dinners; transportation by private deluxe coach;
lectures as indicated; donations and entrances to sites indicated; porterage at Mallory Court Hotel; tips and
taxes for included services; Tour Leader to provide commentary; Tour Director to manage logistics; and
gratuities for the coach driver.
Excludes: Round-trip airfare to and from London; airport transfers in London (except for those who are
dropped at London Heathrow on September 12th); meals and beverages not otherwise included; items for
personal use, including phone, fax and email charges, minibar, and laundry services; passport fees, if any.
General Information
This tour is operated by Travel Muse for The DiCamillo Companion, Ltd.
AIR TRAVEL
The tour cost excludes airfare. Travel Muse recommends booking online or through Ann Barrasi at agency
affiliate Vista Travel. Ann can be reached at 617-588-4241, or [email protected]. If you wish to
travel using frequent flyer miles, you may make arrangements directly with the card member’s travel center, or
Ann will assist for a fee of $100 for a mileage-award booking, and $75 for a mileage-award upgrade. Ann will
also assist with any pre- or post-tour arrangements.
AIRPORT TRANSFERS
Airport transfers are at additional cost. Information will be provided about independent and pre-arranged
transfers closer to the tour.
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HOTEL AND SINGLE SUPPLEMENT
Accommodations are reserved in Master Rooms at Mallory Court Hotel. Upgrades to Junior Suites and
Master Suites are subject to availability. Please call for the supplemental cost. All bedrooms have ensuite
facilities. The right is reserved to substitute hotels when necessary. Although Travel Muse will endeavor to
arrange for congenial travel companions, this cannot be guaranteed and a single supplement will be charged
when necessary.
MEALS
Only those meals indicated are included in the cost of the tour:
B = Breakfast; L = Lunch; T = Tea; R = Reception; D = Dinner
ITINERARY
Although Travel Muse and ground operators will make every effort to adhere to the itinerary, on rare
occasions it may be necessary to adjust arrangements due to circumstances beyond our control. Should any
activities not be available, substitution will be made to the best of our ability and no refund will be made.
Any additional costs necessitated by such changes are the responsibility of the tour member. Please note that
there will be significant walking and standing, as well as tight staircases to navigate. The tour is not handicap
accessible. Casual dress is recommended, particularly comfortable shoes. And always be prepared for weather.
TOUR COSTS
Prices are based on a minimum of 12 paying participants and a currency exchange rate of $1.65 to the British
pound. At the time of final payment, Travel Muse reserves the right to add any increased amounts arising
from changes in foreign exchange rates and taxes and from changes instituted by suppliers or caused by
market conditions. All local/government taxes on hotels, meals, and services in the itinerary are included in
addition to normal gratuities to porters, waiters, and local guides. Rates are based on group participation, and
there can be no refund for services or portions of the tour not taken. It is also understood and agreed that all
excursions are optional and refunds cannot be made to tour members who do not participate or complete the
tour, for any reason.
PHONE OR EMAIL
For questions, please call Meg MacDonald at Travel Muse in Boston, MA: 617-469-7370,
or toll-free at 1-877-716-1776. Or send an e-mail to: [email protected].
The Great Hall, Wrest Park
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Terms & Conditions
LIMIT OF LIABILITY
Travel Muse and all its agents act only as agents for the passenger with respect to transportation, hotels, and
other arrangements of this tour, and exercise every care possible. However, we cannot assume liability for
accident, illness or injury, delay, loss, damage or expenses incurred, of or by clients and/or tour members and
their property, alleged to have occurred as a result of strikes, riots, public disturbances, terrorism, war,
quarantine, acts of God, or other causes beyond our control. All such losses or expenses will have to be borne
by the passenger, as tour rates provide for arrangements only for the time stated. Travel Muse disclaims any
and all responsibility for changes in air, coach, boat and other transport services and for any consequences of
such changes. Travel Muse also reserves the right to cancel any tour prior to departure in which event the
entire payment will be refunded with no further obligation or liability on its part, though exceptions may be
made for unforeseen circumstances such as acts of terrorism, in which case refunds will be made based on
monies recovered from suppliers. The right is also reserved to decline to accept or retain any person or group,
without any liability either to such person or group or agent/organizer/client or any other party connected to
this service. The right is reserved to substitute accommodations, carriers or any other qualified leader; or to
alter the itinerary of the program at any time when deemed appropriate or advisable without penalty or
liability. The sole responsibility of any airline used for this tour is limited to that set out in the passenger
contract evidenced by the ticket.
PAYMENTS
Deposits will be accepted on a first-come, first-served basis. An invoice will be sent to you upon receipt for a
partial balance due May 17, 2013, and a final balance due July 12, 2013.
CANCELLATION POLICY
All cancellations must be made in writing to:
Travel Muse, 25 Montclair Avenue, West Roxbury, MA 02132
Cancellation Penalty
• Cancellations received prior to May 17
• Cancellations received from May 17 – July 11
• Cancellations received on or after July 12
and up until the day of departure:
$300 *
$600 *
Total tour cost **
* Cancellation fee covers administrative and operational costs and any penalties assessed by suppliers.
** Travel insurance information will be sent to you upon receipt of your deposit.
This itinerary and its content is © Copyright 2013 by
The DiCamillo Companion, Ltd.
a corporation registered in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts
76 Elm Street, No. 310, Boston, MA 02130-2999 USA
www.DiCamilloCompanion.com
16
An Explosion of Beauty
September 6 – 12, 2013
Reservation Form
Please complete this Reservation Form and send it with your deposit of US$1,000 per person (by check payable to
Travel Muse) to: TRAVEL MUSE, 25 Montclair Avenue, West Roxbury, MA 02132 USA.
Name(s):
(Include preferred titles: Mr., Mrs., Ms., Dr., Lord, Lady)
Address:
City/Town:
State/Province/County:
Zip/Post Code:
Day Telephone: (
Cell/Mobile Phone:
)
Fax: (____)
Evening Telephone: (
)
Email:
ACCOMMODATION
____
We would like to share a room: ______ Twin beds
______ King bed
____
I/we would like to have a ____ Non-smoking room ____ Smoking room
IF SINGLE
____
I would like to have a single Classique Room at the supplemental cost of $595
____
Please assist me in finding a roommate. (If none can be found, I will pay the single supplement.)
DIETARY
Are there any foods you cannot eat?________________________________________________________
WAIVER OF LIABILITY
I (we) have read the details of this brochure, including the Terms and Conditions, and agree to abide by all stipulations
contained therein.
Signature:
Date
Signature:
Date
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