Now that British Prime Minister David Cameron and his family have returned
home, it can be revealed without the risk of fuelling further sartorial
excitement that they chose to spend
their summer holiday in the delightfully named and idyllically located Cabana
dos Rouxinois (House of the Nightingales), between Monchique and the Algarve
highest point, Foia.
They stayed with the
English owners and another couple of friends with young children at a place described
as “the ultimate family holiday retreat with all modern facilities” and
featured in Tatler’s ‘Top 50 villas to rent’.
Sleeping eight in the main house and four children and a nanny in a cottage, this “English country house set
amidst three hectares of beautiful
garden” normally rents for £3,000 per week in July and August, plus £500 for
the cottage.
A special feature of the property is the immaculately maintained
garden, originally designed and planted 30 years ago by Mr and Mrs Michael
Hornby, creators of the famous Pusey Garden of Oxfordshire.
The Camerons’ holiday was six months in the planning, with a local
agency, Turifoia, also arranging accommodation in a nearby villa and hotels for members of the prime minister’s personal staff and security personnel.
David Cameron, his wife Samantha and their three
children clearly enjoyed their stay and in some respects were able to behave just like any other
holidaying family. They bought their groceries at local supermarkets and ate at
modest restaurants without causing too much of a stir.
The ruse of holding an initial photo opportunity in
the public market in Aljezur, way over towards the west coast, failed to deflect
the media from the Camerons’ real holiday whereabouts, but the family were
able to fully relax thanks to CCTV cameras and a largish contingent of
Portuguese police.
How different it might all have been had the prime minister decided to
holiday on the Costa del Sol . No sooner was he
back in No.10 than he was confronted by escalating tensions with Spain over Gibraltar .
The prime minister's concerns arose after Madrid
said it was preparing to impose a €50 fee on the border crossing with the
British territory and threatened to close airspace to planes using the Gibraltar airport.
That would certainly mess up a few holidays.