10th Feb 2013 2:41pm | By Daisy Carrington
Deciding where to live in London can make or break your experience of the city.
Weighing up rents, transport links, and the speed with which you need to make the decision can produce mixed results – some of you may get lucky and end up in your perfect ‘hood; others will languish on the outskirts of London and never really know its heart. The solution?
Why not try house-sitting, which lets you get to know an area without signing on a dotted line first.
Tom Hill and his partner Linda have been professional house-sitters for a decade, and have ‘lived’ all over the UK and abroad. They’ve recently founded handy website housem8.com to help similar-minded folks.
“We’ve had some incredibly romantic stays,” says Hill, who along with Linda has looked after more than 80 homes. He says this has afforded them some amazing adventures.
“One of the best times we had was when we got snowed into a complex in the Pyrenees for three months,” he remembers.
“It was a bit like The Shining, except I didn’t spend the day writing ‘All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.’ Really, though, it was quite romantic.”
Hill and his partner have also looked after a winery in Bergerac, a Spanish villa that doubled as a deer sanctuary and several celebrity homes (nondisclosure agreements means he can’t tell us which ones).

While house-sitting can allow you to get to know an area before settling on it and even see the world, it’s not without its drawbacks.
“Make no mistake, house-sitting is a lot of responsibility,” Hill warns, “but the good definitely outweighs the bad.”It’s especially enjoyable for animal lovers, as 80 per cent of homes come with at least one pet.
“It can be a lot of hard work, especially if the pets involved are problematic, and most often they are,” he says.
“Think of it this way: most owners will put their dogs in a kennel when they leave town. It’s the troublesome dogs that don’t get put in kennels.”
Hill notes that the properties involved are also often demanding, and if anything goes wrong – say a tree falls or the electricity stops working – it’s your responsibility as the house sitter to sort it out.
“Some people think it’s desperately romantic but, in truth, you’re not doing nothing all day,” Hill explains.
“You can’t just leave the place unattended for a night.”
Picture the scene: you’ve just taken a tour round one of the most ornate royal homes in the...
Toast the summer with London’s top cocktails or a bargain beer: where to find cheap deals every...
When George Fredenham, one half of wild food outfit The Foragers, picks a flower and hands it to me,...
Vegetarians are in vogue thanks to the horse meat scandal. Here's TNT's guide to London's best...
In the Eighties there were 2200 independent record stores in the UK. By 2009 this number had fallen...
Thrust your index and pinky fingers skyward in celebration of a year with stacks of gigs you can’t...
Afternoon Tea is an English institution, one that any visitor to London should endeavour to enjoy....
Talkback