January 2007

 Page 2

The INNside Scoop

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SSD, Inc.
d/b/a
The INNside Scoop©
22 W. Bryan St.
PMB 202
Savannah GA  31401

Publisher/Editor: Maxine Pinson
Associate Editor: Malyssa Pinson
Online Editor: Anna Treece
FAX: 912-232-8550
E-mail: innscoop@cs.com
www.innsidescoop.com
____________________________

   Each issue of The INNside Scoop, a bi-annual newsletter, features five personally visited B&Bs in various parts of the U.S. It also recommends twelve B&Bs recently experienced by the editor. Previous newsletters may be viewed online at www.innsidescoop.com. No inn (or recommended restaurant) pays to be reviewed or recommended by The INNside Scoop.
  
The newsletter, published in January and July, is circulated in hardcopy and via e-mail. Since 1995, The INNside Scoop has been enjoyed by readers and subscribers nationwide and abroad. A complimentary e-mail subscription, offering a full-color edition of the newsletter with links to each inn and restaurant, is available by sending an e-mail request to nlsub@cs.comTo purchase a print subscription see page 8.
   Please note:
Since personal tastes in décor and styles vary, the editor tries to factor this component into her ratings. Therefore, even inns receiving INNside Scoop’s top ratings may include some guest or common rooms which the editor does not personally consider “extraordinaire.”

Scoop From
The Editor

    This edition of The INNside Scoop includes a delightful sampling of B&Bs, as well as historic and country inns, from south Georgia to Toronto, Canada. The  bed and breakfast inns included in this edition reflect the never-ending variety available at B&B-type lodgings.
   The next edition of
The INNside Scoop will be available in mid-July 2007. It will feature/review  outstanding inns located in Arkansas, California, Florida, Missouri, and Oklahoma. In addition, there will be recommended inns, also personally visited by one of the editors, in other states as well (see www.the-innside-scoop.com/forthcoming.htm). Delicious recipes, from inns where we have enjoyed extraordinarily good breakfasts, will be included as well. Don’t miss it!
     After visiting hundreds of B&Bs, in this country and abroad over the span of several decades, I still get excited about each forthcoming visit to a new inn. I enjoy an occasional visit to a ritzy hotel or resort; however, staying at B&Bs is always the highlight of my travels. If you have not yet experienced the bed and breakfast/country inn world, give it a try. Once you do, you will understand why B&Bs have become so popular and why the B&B industry is booming as it is.
    
The INNside Scoop is read by readers throughout the U.S. and abroad. The current newsletter may always be accessed online at www.innsidescoop.com. Produced in full-color, it has links to all inns and sites noted in newsletter. E-mail subscriptions are available at no charge, and print copies of the newsletter are available by paid subscription (see page 8).
    Suggestions for inns to be considered  by
The INNside Scoop are always welcomed. Send suggestions, along with the inn’s Website, to innscoop@cs.com.     

Happy travels!



Baja Room’s private deck

 An aspen-shaded deck, adjoining Hughes Hacienda’s
Baja Room, overlooks magnificent vistas.
(see review on page 1)
 

All 2006 “Sunflower inns”
are recognized and
listed on page 8.

CRITERIA FOR RATINGS

Inns:  hospitality, cleanliness/maintenance of property’s interior and exterior (does not appear worn or neglected), comfort, aesthetic qualities (furnishings, color coordination, décor), amenities, location/setting (surroundings), uniqueness, attention-to-detail, creativity, good lighting (inside and outside), historical significance, breakfast—taste and presentation, complimentary refreshments and/or beverages offered, quotient value of room and services received, accessibility/helpfulness of innkeeper or staff member, respect of guests’ privacy, private baths, special features, congruency with marketing (inn looks as good when visited as it is described and shown to be in brochures and on Web site). Congruency with marketing is considered, by The INNside Scoop, to be obligatory and something the consumer should be able to rely upon confidently. An inn is given a lower rating when this criterion does not apply.

Restaurants Menu selection, food quality, presentation of food, service, location, atmosphere, uniqueness, special features, quotient value for food and service received.

____________________________________

Notes:  The above listings are not, necessarily, listed in order of importance. Whenever there is uncertainty between 2 rating categories, the higher rating is given in order to give the inn/restaurant the benefit of the doubt. No inn receiving a “sunflower” rating is ever  a “borderline” inn; however, it is often one found to be even more delightful that its advertising proclaims.

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