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We live in a village by the sea.
Clearly not all the houses can see the sea.
But I admire "[b]sea glimpse[/b]" for their conviction that they can...
DrP
A serious minded colleague of mine lives in house he inherited from his parents, called "Nine Trees". It's number 27.
Didyabringyagrogalong in Australia.
I used to know a consultant in Leeds, whose house was called "Bedside Manor" - used to make me laugh!
Far Corfe
Luther Blissett used to live there.
me: Binsteamin.
There's a farm in Cumbria called Wide Open Dykes.
We had our eye on a little fixer-upper up the road from here called 'Little Black Dykes'. Someone else bought it and demolished it though. Shame as we thought it ticked all the boxes in terms of size and location, it also seemed to tick most of the boxes on an equal opportunities monitoring form.
There's a house on California called "Outside of the Asylum "According to Douglas Adams.
Lottery winner here in Armadale built a new house and called it 'Whit A Vue'. New owner has since removed the name plate.
Out for a walk on the Northumberland coast with my wife we passed a house with the name plaque " Shavenhaven ".
My parents used to live in a house they bought new nearly 40 years ago, they moved in soon after the builders left and it was a right mess. they called it "Dusty Hole"
Not best, or especially funny but in the same vein, I stayed in a cottage in High Bents above Gunnerside with my wife a few years ago. It had been a couple of old lead miners cottages, empty for years, and the owners had called it "The Stone Tent" when they first bought it because there wasn't much more to it than that.
Helping a family friend to build his house in Oxfordshire in the 70s, we were sitting drinking tea and watching the rain pouring down and discussing names for the house. Suddenly the friend burst into hysterical laughter: "Sea View!"
My best school buddy lived in a house called "Wet Paint". His Dad had painted the gate and thought it was a funny idea to leave the sign.
Call me old fashioned, but houses really shouldn't have names.
That's a bit daft. What happens if your house is old? My inlaws live in a house with a name (fairly boring one) but its half a mile from the nearest neighbour, so there are no house numbers there. And its 650 years old.
My house has a name too as it and the immediate neighbours predate the rest of the houses around by quite a bit, so descriptive names make sense.
This farm's name always amuses me, hopefully not a triumph of hope over reality:
http://binged.it/1IGy1Io