Polo and More, Barbados 2014 Issue 9 | Page 107

& More 2015 Hunting wild pearls requires great skill, with the most precious lying in deep and dangerous waters. Yet in Barbados, there is one fascinating pearl that sleeps right on the seashore, a villa named “Footprints”. B ob Monkhouse was a famous comedian who brought chuckles to Brit radio, TV and the big screen for over 40 years. But in his later years he brought his gags and goofs to Barbados with a serio u s inve st ment in a holiday home on the West Coast . The prop erty at t h e time was a Spanish style bui ld ing separate d into a pair of apart ments and was truthfully a sandy grain of the refined jewel it stands as today. Called “Footprints”, it is a 5 bedroom, 5 bathroom installation across four floors, a 12,000 sq ft chunk of only the best beach front property that money can buy. We are talking about the Platinum Coast of the most easterly island in the Antilles, here, you’re so deeply embedded in heaven that a stone’s throw might knock God’s window. “Footprints”, with modern décor and white on white on white, is definitely worth a peep. But if you try to sneak your peep from the outside, you’ll be terribly disappointed. Had we been in 1714, many a groggy buccaneer would float right by without ever catching an inkling of the treasure they’d passed. These days the buccaneers zip by on jet skis, catamarans and glass bottom boats, but from the open horizon they’re equally oblivious to the wild pearl nestled on the white sand beach, its entrance concealed by sea grape shrubs, palm fronds and other indigenous flora. In fact, with dandelion cushions on the sofa, the media and entertainment room is the only place where Kelly allowed a change from the taupe and white code. It ’s refreshing to experience an interior so au naturel, devoid of the tacky eye burning colour of tropical hotels and stripped of any crude landscapes on the walls, but rather enhanced with minimal accessories like organic sea shells on the counter tops, genuine corals asleep in sand from the Crane, and beach pebbles gently manicured into the flooring. Designed by Jeremy Gunn, a Vincentian born, detail oriented architect, you really must crack the shell to see all the good stuff inside. Gunn’s repertoire includes luxury hotels, dining concepts and bars across the Caribbean and Europe. 105