Wimbledon 2011

The biggest event in the tennis calendar, The Wimbledon Championships, gets under way on 20th June 2011. Tennis fanatics the world over will descend upon Wimbledon in record numbers for their chance to experience the greatest tennis tournament on the planet.


Wimbledon is one of those sporting events that just has to be experienced at least once in life. Where else can you watch the best tennis players in the world battle it out with a glass of Pimms in one hand and a palette of strawberries and cream in the other? So if you’re looking for somewhere different to take someone special, Bowes-Lyon Partnership most definitely recommends Wimbledon!

Check out the Bowes-Lyon top tips for your day of spectacular tennis:

1) WHEN TO GO - The best time to go to the Championships is the first week as this is when the most matches are on and presents your best opportunity to catch one of the seeds in action. The only day to avoid is the middle Sunday of the tournament (26 June) as this is a rest day for all of the players and there is no tennis! The final Sunday is another to be avoided as there’s very little tennis being played beyond the finals on Centre Court.
However, saying that, at £5 it’s worth considering as a venue to watch the Men’s Final as thousands will congregate on Henman Hill to watch it on the big screen.

2) WHAT TO TAKE - The key thing to remember is to pack a mac! English summers are notorious for being damp squibs and more often than not and it rains at some point during the course of the Championships. Remember, picnic hampers and cool boxes are not permitted inside the ground.

3) HOW TO GET THERE - Southfields is considerably closer and is actually a couple of stops before Wimbledon on the District Line. From the station it’s an easy 15 minute walk up the hill to get to the ground. The route is well sign posted though the chances are you won’t need them- just follow the crowds!

4) HOW TO BEAT THE QUEUES - Sadly the days where you could wonder in off the street and catch a bit of the action are long gone. Queuing up for entry is now a Wimbledon right of passage and is inescapable in most cases you have to be prepared to queue for anything up to three hours or more – especially in the first week. Unless you’re prepared to camp in the field overnight that is…!?

5) WHICH TICKETS TO GET - You’re unlikely to be able to purchase a ticket for Centre Court, Court Number One, Court Number Two at this stage, but the Standard Ground Ticket still promises a fabulous day out as this gets you access to all the outside courts and in many respects is better – you won’t get the opportunity to see the likes of Federer or Nadal in action but you will still see some quality tennis at much closer quarters. During the early rounds, in particular, you’ll also see many of the seeded players slogging it out against some of the so called lesser players with a point to prove. Many of the better games in the first week are on the outside courts. But if you’re really, really desperate for a show court ticket, head to the resale ticket office next to Broadcasting Centre in the corner of the complex to see if you can pick up any returned tickets. For a full list of ticket prices check out the official Wimbledon website.

6) WHERE TO WATCH THE ACTION - Check the order of play the night before and head for the court where you think the best matches are on as soon as you’re let in the ground as there’s no allocated seating and all available vantage points fill up fast!

7) WHAT IF RAIN STOPS PLAY? If it’s looking like a wash out or you’ve had enough of the tennis there’s plenty to do in and around the surrounding area. If you make the short walk up the hill and into Wimbledon Village you’ll find a number of bars and pubs for you to grab a drink, many of which will be showing the World Cup.

8) AFTER THE TENNIS - The only place to go afterwards is Wimbledon Village. This is where everyone goes at the end of play including the players themselves once they’ve been knocked out of the tournament. There are many pubs and bars to choose from but here are our top three: Dog & Fox, Rose & Crown or the Hand in Hand.

Enjoy!

Hayley & Natalie

Thanks to http://blog.hostelbookers.com/travel/guide-wimbledon/ for their advice

Posted in Articles, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Bowes-Lyon Ladies’ Top 3 Qualities in a Gentleman…

So we shared with you the top 3 criteria the male members at Bowes-Lyon Partnership are looking for in a partner, now we’re going to share with you the ladies top 3 criteria…

1) Someone youthful and spontaneous
2) Someone intellectually stimulating and articulate
3) Someone honest

Interestingly, for our ladies, looks come a little further down the list than with the gentlemen! But what we frequently find is that members often revisit their criteria after a couple of introductions. For the gentlemen, in particular, we often find that the ‘looks’ criteria gradually slips down the list as they realise there are so many more important factors when finding their ideal match!

Youthfulness and spontaneity are key for most of our ladies, they are independent, positive, fun and youthful individuals themselves so are looking for a gentleman who can keep up with them! Our members are often well educated individuals who have or have had successful careers so it’s no surprise ‘someone intellectually stimulating and articulate’ appears in the top 3 for our ladies. And finally someone honest, many of our members have had previous relationships or marriages and so they know the value and importance of honesty in a successful partnership.

Hayley & Natalie

Posted in Dating | Leave a comment

Dear Caron…

Dear Caron

I am recently single and have not dated for many years. I am finding that dating is not what I remembered it to be and I often go home feeling disappointed. Is there something wrong with me that I am not excited by dating?

Beginning dating is often the most difficult time. The struggle is usually expectations. Going back into the dating world is filled with hopes and wants that often can never be met on a first dates. Most people dive into dating expecting it to solve all the issues that they worry about, such as height, weight, income, anger to name a few.

Take the quiz below to see if your expectations are on track:

1. I want to meet someone as soon as possible Y/N
2. The person I date this time has to meet my needs Y/N
3. I should be excited every time I am on a date Y/N
4. My date should understand how I feel about dating Y/N

If you answered more than one yes , you are expecting too much from your date. Dating is to explore and discover the type of person that you want to be in a relationship with. That often means that the beginning is difficult and not as exciting as you would want it to be.

It may be helpful to think about why you are dating and what you hope to get out of your early dates. The less you expect from the date, the more fun you will usually have. Sounds strange, but it works. Dating is a chance to meet new people and get to know yourself .

So, take a chance! Go out dating and have fun, because that’s what makes it all worthwhile.

Caron

As a practical, interactive, solution-focused therapist, Caron’s treatment approach is to provide support and practical feedback to help individuals resolve current problems and long-standing patterns.

Blending conventional and alternative approaches, Caron draws on a variety of styles and techniques to incorporate what will be most helpful for each individual. She works with each client to help them build on their strengths to identify and achieve life goals.
Visit: www.caronbarruw.co.uk

Posted in Ask Caron | Leave a comment

Bowes-Lyon Partnership’s advice on getting a relationship off to a great start…

Finding a potential partner isn’t without its challenges, so once you have found someone who you have a mutual fondness for, it’s really important to get a relationship off to a strong start and keep the momentum going. It can often be the case that when a couple get together, they have spent significant time without a partner so it’s easy to see how challenges could arise from individuals being a little ‘stuck in their ways’. Bowes-Lyon Partnership believes there are a few key points to keep in mind when embarking on a new relationship that should help to get things off to a great start.

1. Be open-minded to new hobbies/pastimes
If your new partner shares different interests to you, see this as a bonus, rather than a clash. A relationship should be about getting to know someone, having fun and experiencing new things. If your partner shares some different interests to you, embrace this and get involved. You could even find a new hobby for yourself, but failing that, it’s always appreciated if someone takes an interest in your interests so be open minded to getting involved in your partner’s hobbies and pastimes.

2. Keep your independence
The independence you had when you met your new partner would have been part and parcel of what attracted them to you in the first place. Try not to slip into the trap of losing your independence when embarking on a new relationship. You will want to spend time getting to know each other, but ensure this doesn’t take over your life and mean you begin to miss out on your usual lunch with friends or playing tennis each week with your neighbour. Losing your independence could easily mean the beginning of the end of a new relationship as it will put unnecessary pressure on both parties. So make time in your life for your new relationship but try not to replace what was important to you before you met.

3. Communicate, but don’t over-communicate
A really important element of any relationship is communicating your needs and desires. If you’re in a new relationship, your partner probably won’t know you particularly well or certainly in the capacity as a partner rather than a friend. So how are they going to know unless you tell them? Be comfortable speaking about your needs and desires, your hopes and fears. But remember, everything in moderation. Its key not to avoid communicating with your new partner for fear of scaring them off, but equally, remember not to over-communicate, let it happen naturally and you won’t go far wrong.

4. Have realistic expectations
Remember you’re in a new relationship so it’s important to take things at a steady pace, after all you are still getting to know each other. Give each other space and time to get used to the new relationship and try not to pitch your expectations too high too soon. Your relationship will evolve over time, a process that will be far more natural if allowed to develop at its own pace rather than rushing in to anything too soon. Leave moving in together until you are both completely comfortable, try not to rush through the exciting early days and rush into settling in to a routine. A new relationship should be fun and relaxed, there’s plenty of time for to take it to the next level.

Posted in Articles | Leave a comment

They married their first love. Now, divorced and lonely, they’re the new generation of women who don’t know how to date…

The dating game can be a tricky and unfamiliar business, which is why we make it our business at Bowes-Lyon Partnership to do the leg work for our members, making the experience as it should be…one of enjoyment and fun! This article by The Dail Mail’s Marianne Power explains the situation that many women across the country find themselves in. If you can relate to this, rest assured, you’re not alone!

Jennifer Lee was understandably excited when she bumped into an old school crush at a party. Newly single, after ending an 11-year relationship, she jumped at the chance of a bit of romance and was encouraged when he seemed to reciprocate.

For the rest of the night they flirted, until her old flame leaned in to kiss her.

The next week, Jennifer showered her new love interest with calls and texts. Then she arranged to visit him for the weekend and started to make plans for what they could do.

Another world: Women who find themselves single again after years in a relationship are unfamiliar with dating etiquette

‘That’s when he went cold,’ says the 28-year-old advertising executive from Stockport. ‘I started to get short replies to texts and he didn’t seem keen to chat on the phone. I didn’t pick up the signals — as far as I could see, it was going well. But then he dumped me. I was stunned.’

Jennifer made a classic dating error — she’d come on too strong, too quickly. She’d slipped into the kind of intimacy she’d shared with her former boyfriend.

‘When you get into the routine of texting and calling someone every day, you fall back into it,’ says Jennifer. ‘I even made jokes about moving in together. I cringe when I think about it, but I had no idea how to behave — I’d never been on a date in my life.’

Jennifer is one of a growing number of women who don’t know how to date. Many have spent their formative years in a long-term relationship, moving in with their boyfriends in their 20s and suddenly find themselves single for the first time in their 30s.

Others emerge, shell-shocked, from long marriages, having only ever ‘dated’ their husbands.

And it’s very different out there. Internet dating, speed dating, blind dating, playing hard to get and following the rules — it’s all a far cry from falling in love with your school sweetheart.


For Joanne Cox, 43, whose 23-year marriage ended two years ago, it’s overwhelming.

She said: ‘I met my husband when we were 16 and we got married at 18. I thought I’d found love for the rest of my life until he decided to end it. Now, I’m middle-aged and single, something I could never have predicted. It’s horrible.

‘It’s like being back at square one, but it’s worse because all my friends are married with families, so they don’t want to go out.

‘But even if they did, it seems people don’t meet like that any more. I never dated when I was a teenager, so how on earth am I supposed to do it now?’

Dating expert and behavioural psychologist Jo Hemmings agrees it can be bewildering. ‘You have to think of new ways to build up confidence and get out there — and online dating is a great way to do that. Just take it slowly.’

However, for women like Joanne, posting your most personal details online for thousands of strangers to see is an alien concept.

‘When my 16-year-old daughter told me I had to sign up to websites because that’s how everyone meets people, my first reaction was, “No way,”’ she says.

‘I thought I was too old for all that. And then there was part of me that thought: “I’m better than this.” But the alternative is being alone for the rest of my life, and no one wants that.

‘So I signed up to Match.com and a transatlantic dating site called iloveyouraccent.com because I’d always enjoyed travelling to the U.S.

‘Filling out the forms was hard. When your confidence is at rock bottom after a relationship ends, the last thing you want to do is be honest about yourself.’

Don’t give up: As the saying goes, you have to kiss a lot of frogs to find a prince.

Indeed, filling out an online profile is such an art that there are companies which will write your profile for you and take professional pictures. People take online dating as seriously as a job application — a smudgy snap won’t cut it.

‘The first photo wasn’t good enough,’ says Joanne. ‘So, I got advice about how to style my hair and what make-up to wear. It made a huge difference and I started to get a lot more responses. Having people say you look lovely in your photo is a real confidence boost.’

But putting up your profile is only the beginning — you’ve also got to go on a date, finding the courage to meet a stranger after years of being with someone you know intimately.

Charlie Hughes, 34, an air hostess from Oxford, started online dating after a second long-term relationship ended.

‘I bottled my first three dates,’ she says. ‘I got ready, sat on the bed and just thought: “I can’t do this.”

‘I worried that he wouldn’t show up or he’d be awful. I even worried about people looking at us and knowing we were on a first date. I’d met my two previous partners through friends, so this was my first time on the dating scene. I didn’t know what to do or how to behave.

‘It’s not so much talking to strangers that I find hard — I do that all the time in my job — it’s getting used to the fact it’s all a bit of a game and people aren’t who they say they are. And then how do you say you’re not interested without hurting people’s feelings?

‘A few month ago, I met a man online who said he was 30, but he turned out to be 24. He was sweet, but much too young, and I didn’t know how to tell him.

Internet dating: It may seem like a minefield but consider it as like shopping, sometimes you come away happy and other times empty-handed.

‘Then last week I went out with a guy, but didn’t feel there was anything there. He went in for a kiss, but I jumped in my car and drove away. I didn’t know what to do.

‘Now I’m texting three men. It doesn’t seem right, but I’m told this is what everyone does. And I’m aware that this is what the guys are doing, too, playing a numbers game, so it’s hard to have faith in what they say.’

But the message from dating experts is that even when it seems difficult, you’ve got to keep going.

‘Dating is a skill and the more you do it, the better you get,’ says Paula Hall from online dating site Parship.com.

‘You’ve just got to get out there and don’t give up. That annoying cliche your mother told you about kissing lots of frogs is true — you’re never going to hit the jackpot straight away.’

Jo Hemmings has this advice for new daters. ‘When you’re arranging to meet someone for the first time, make sure it has a definite end. Say you have to meet a friend at 8.30pm so you can stay just an hour. This might take the fear away — anyone can get through an hour.

‘And don’t be afraid to email someone the next day to say you had a lovely time, but that you didn’t think there was a spark. I’ve met too many people who carry on seeing someone because they don’t want to be cruel, but that’s not fair to either of you.

‘On the other hand, don’t be too quick to dismiss someone. If in doubt, give them a second date.’
Until you find someone, it’s important to enjoy the process, says Paula.

‘It’s a lot like shopping. Sometimes you’ll find something fantastic; other times you’ll come home empty-handed. But either way, you can have fun looking. Above all, keep a sense of humour.’

After a few months of online dating, Jennifer Lee agrees. She’s had a few fun evenings and is feeling less anxious about her situation.

‘I’ve just started dating a guy who I met online and it’s going well. Who knows what will happen, but I’m enjoying myself,’ she says.

‘When you’re in a long-term relationship, you think that all the good guys have been snapped up, but they certainly haven’t. You’ve just got to put yourself out there.’

Joanne Cox agrees. After six dates and lots of emailing with potential matches, her confidence is growing.

‘It’s nice just chatting to someone online about your day. I have to remind myself I’ve just come out of a 23-year marriage, so the last thing I need to do is go straight into another long-term thing. I’m learning to enjoy it all, even if it sometimes seems a bit ridiculous.’

HOW TO FIND LOVE AGAIN
Get out there: It might be terrifying, but you need to broaden your social horizons. Go online, join a sports club or go to a speed-dating night. You won’t find love in your living room.
Revamp your image: Ask a good friend to appraise your style. Do you need to get a new haircut or trendy clothes? If you are going online, ask a friend to help you pick your best photos (and write your profile).
Learn to flirt: Years in a relationship mean you’ve stopped, so practise, practise, practise, even if it’s with the man in your local newsagent. Ask questions, look interested and compliment people.
Every opportunity is a dating opportunity: Whether it’s in the office, on the train or at a friend’s birthday, learn to open your eyes. There are potential partners all around us — it might even be someone you have known for years, but have never considered until now.
Don’t be too picky: While it’s good to have three non-negotiable must-haves in a potential partner (perhaps intelligence, sense of humour and a shared interest), no one is perfect, including you. If in doubt, go on a second or third date, but don’t keep seeing someone just because you don’t want to hurt their feelings.

Posted in Articles | Leave a comment

Bowes-Lyon Gentlemen’s Top 3 Qualities in a Lady

At Bowes-Lyon Partnership we meet for an informal chat with each and every member, which is great as not only so we see what our members really look like face to face but we are also able to get a really good feel for the type of person they are. We pay particular attention to what our members are looking for in a partner, which means our success rate is naturally very high – we work with the ethos of quality over quantity!

Our gentlemen members are of course all individuals in their own right and are looking for specific qualities in a partner, but there are 3 qualities that crop up the most:

1) Someone confident but easy going – definitely no prime donne!
2) Someone youthful and spontaneous
3) Someone attractive – tricky as beauty is of course in the eye of the beholder, but having met with each and every member, we have a pretty good steer for who would find who attractive!

Posted in Dating | Leave a comment

Royal Wedding Fever Reaches the Bowes-Lyon Partnership Office!

The country has reached fever pitch about the Royal Wedding of Prince William to Catherine Middleton. At Bowes-Lyon Partnership we have been busier than ever as the wish to find the perfect partner has spread like wild fire in the wake of the Royal Wedding furore! In the last week we have taken a few Royal Wedding inspired photos in London in between meeting lots of fabulous new Bowes-Lyon Partnership members and we thought we’d share them on our blog….


Must dash, we’ve got a wedding to attend!

Enjoy the day,

Hayley, Natalie & the team here at Bowes-Lyon

Posted in News, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Marriage Second Time Round & Your Finances

At Bowes-Lyon Partnership, one of London’s leading introduction companies, we find partners for many individuals who have been divorced, so we were keen to provide some valuable advice on marriage second time round and your finances. We looked to Sarah Pennells, the founder of SavvyWoman.co.uk to provide the insights…

It may be a second marriage for one or both of you, but it’s still the start of a new life together. This time round you’re a little older and a lot wiser; you know yourself better and understand where you’re prepared to compromise and where you won’t. You’re also likely to be wealthier in your own right and that means you have to think about how getting married may affect your finances.

Sorting Out Your Will If You Remarry
Many people put off sorting out a will but it’s vital that you draw up a new one if you remarry. Many people – wrongly – believe that divorce invalidates a will. It doesn’t, but getting married does.

If you already have a will: if your will was drawn up before you remarried it will be invalid unless you knew you were going to get married at the time and it contains a clause stating that it should be valid after your marriage (this doesn’t apply in Scotland, where getting married doesn’t invalidate a will ).

If you don’t have a will: if you don’t have a will your estate – the money, property and possessions you leave behind – will be distributed according to the rules of intestacy. In England and Wales, your husband or civil partner would receive up to £450,000 if you don’t have a will and there are no children – or up to £250,000 if you have children – but the rest is distributed to other family members. In Scotland, your husband or civil partner would receive the first £300,000, plus some money and furniture.

Sorting Out Life Insurance When You Marry For The Second Time
If you’re getting married for the second time you may already have some life insurance. Joint policies aren’t generally the best idea because they can’t be divided if you split up and they only pay out on the first death, which leaves the surviving partner with no life insurance.

Maintenance Payments When You Remarry
If you were receiving maintenance payments from your ex husband, they will stop when you remarry, but that’s not the case with child support says David Allison, chairman of the family lawyers group Resolution. “Child support is unaffected by remarriage but maintenance payments will cease. It can happen when couples live together as well, but it’s definitely not as cut and dried.”

Should Prenuptial Agreements Be Considered?
Sorting out an agreement that will spell out who gets what if you split up probably isn’t your priority when you’re about to remarry. But, according to David Allison, an increasing number of couples who aren’t particularly wealthy consider pre-nups when they are on their second marriage.
Pre-nups aren’t binding in England and Wales, however, courts do take account of them and in Scotland they are seen as legally binding.

Pensions And How They Are Affected By Remarriage
If you’re a member of a company pension scheme – or your husband to be is – make sure you change the ‘nominated beneficiary’. This is the person who receives any death benefits if the member of the pension scheme dies.
By law you’re allowed to use your husband or ex-husband’s national insurance record for your state pension if you’d end up with a higher pension as a result.

However, you lose that right if you remarry before you reach state retirement age. Get a forecast of the state pension you’d receive based on your own NI contributions.

Buying Property Together
Many couples who remarry already own their own property. It might make financial sense to sell up and to pool your money, but think about how you will finance your new home. If one of you puts in a much larger amount than the other, it may be worth reflecting that in the way the property is owned. If you own your home as tenants in common (rather than the traditional way, which is as joint tenants), you can draw up a written document – called a deed of trust – that spells out the share in the property each of you owns.

Sarah Pennells is the founder of SavvyWoman.co.uk, a website aimed at smart women aged 30+ who want to get more from their money. Sarah is a personal finance journalist and author who has written three books; about money and relationships, divorce and finance and green and ethical money. Sarah regularly appears on BBC1′s Breakfast programme as a finance expert and reported on consumer and finance issues on the programme for several years. She also writes for a number of women’s magazines.

Posted in Articles, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Lucky In Life? Get Lucky In Love…

High flying, successful types sometimes need a helping hand fitting a love life into their packed schedules.  That’s where specialist elite dating agency the Bowes-Lyon Partnership comes in.  Kate White, editor of Belgravia magazine reports.

A girl falls over in the road and almost gets hit by a taxi.  The man in the back, who just happens to be a dashingly handsome Daniel Craig lookalike, jumps out and asks if he can help.  Gazing into his eyes, the girl just instantly knows: he’s the one.

This is a familiar plot in slushy movies.  But for those who want a more realistic way of meeting a partner, joining a dating agency is the way to go, say Hayley and Natalie Bystram.  The sisters founded their Belgravia-based agency, the Bowes-Lyon Partnership 18 months ago and specialise in finding partners for the elite and successful.

Typical clients are hardworking professionals who have focused on a successful career in the City, hit their mid-thirties and haven’t had time for marriage and children.  Others are 50-somethimd divorcees who simply want a companion to go on holiday with.  They join Bowes-Lyon Partnership because they don’t know where to look. 

“It’s difficult to meet a partner,” explains Hayley.  “As you get older, your social circle becomes smaller, and if you’re divorced you tend to lose half of it.  Once you’ve exhausted friends of friends who are single, where do you go?

“It’s to do with time as well.  It’s the nature of the world at the moment that people want everything done quickly, and our service ups the chance of success and makes the process faster.  Maybe you will get hit by a car, and the person that hits you will end up marrying you.  But when’s that going to happen?  Do you wait for fate, or do you be proactive?”

About 75 per cent of Bowes-Lyon clients find a relationship of six months or longer from the database of nearly 500 clients, which consists of 60 per cent men and 40 per cent women – a deliberate ration that goes against the industry’s otherwise notorious lack of men.  In comparison, internet dating has a meagre 10 per cent success rate.

The sisters put this down to their personal touch.  They meet every potential client for a coffee to discuss what they want from a relationship and to find out about their background, lifestyle, education, career, hobbies and where they go on holiday.  The more the girls get to know a client, the better they can pair them up with the best possible matches.

“Unlike internet dating, we’ve met every single member already for you,” says Natalie.  “The internet is a very easy cover to hide behind and when you fill out a profile you only say the best bits.  Some people are incredibly honest on there, but the majority aren’t.

“Also, we really strive to have a personal relationship and know all our clients.  We don’t ask people to fill in forms and do psychological tests.  We match people with people rather than profiles with profiles.”

Joining a dating agency means you are making sure the pool of people you could potentially meet have a lot in common with you.  But eventually it comes down to chemistry.  “You can’t bottle that,” says Hayley.  “We’ve often found that clients end up in long-term relationships with the most unlikely person, somebody they probably would have eliminated at the initial interview stage.”

Many clients feel daunted when they find themselves unexpectedly single, and the agency offers a free with a confidence coach or an image consultant to new members.  “Self esteem can often be the biggest obstacle in dating,” says Natalie.  “If you have someone that has been married for 20 years and sudenly finds themselves single, you can understand why they’d be a bit daunted.”

Hayley adds: “I’ve had ladies calling me up saying, ‘I’m meeting him in a hour and standing in front of my wardrobe.  What should I wear?’  Everyone enters it with a certain amount of trepidation.  We’ve got chief executives of international companies who will gladly stand up and chat to 500 people at a conference, but send them out on a date and they’re a bit of a wreck.”

Meeting someone through an agency or online is no longer taboo, says Natalie.  “These days it’s more taboo not to have tried online dating or joined an agency.  We looked to America quite a bit, because whatever they do, ten years later our service industries follow.  In America about 93 per cent of people use a third party source to find a partner.

“You can see how people who are accomplished, professional and attractive find it very hard to find a partner.  And that’s why the stigma around dating agencies is starting to fall away, because it’s so normal to struggle to find someone these days.  We’re more connected than ever but it’s harder than ever to meet people.  It’s a strange paradox.”

So have there been any wedding bells yet?  “We’ve only been going 18 months,” says Hayley.  “But we do have a couple who have been together for a year and have now moved in together.  I’ve definitely got a feeling we’ll be getting our hats out next year.”

Posted in Articles, Dating | Leave a comment

Get Valentines Day off to a great start with Bowes-Lyon’s Valentines Discount!

 To celebrate Valentines Day, Bowes-Lyon Partnership is offering a 10% discount* on their annual memberships for the month of February!

 Why not join us for an informal chat over coffee to find out more about our service and to tell us about yourself and who you are looking for in a partner?  To book your free, no obligation consultation, just click here.

 *The Valentines discount is available to new members who purchase a full annual membership in February 2011.  The discount ends on 28th February 2011 and is subject to availablility.  Cannot be used in conjunction with any other offer.
 
 
Posted in Dating, News | Leave a comment