3 JANUARY 2004, Page 55

Q. Last year my husband and! bought a house on

Exmoor which came with two cottages superfluous to our needs. We have been renting these out as holiday lets. Out of six recent lettings three of the punters, all of whom appeared happy while they were in situ, complained retrospectively and asked for money back and/or free weeks in the future. One complained of having been kept awake by an owl, another complained that she had been disappointed by the cottage because of the amount of Ikea furniture. We are sure that punters are just 'trying it on'. How can we outwit future chancers?

Name and address withheld A. Landlords should try to ftanish their holidaylet properties from country auctions rather than from Ikea, as the McDonald's-style ubiquity of

Ikea fianiture in such cottages is understandably depressing and rather defeats the point of hiring a country 'retreat'*. Even so, this is not a case where compensation would be appropriate. One way for a landlord to outwit bogus compensation-seekers is to supply the rustic properly with a visitors' book. Visitors generally adore leaving reams of descriptive prose about the area and how much they, have enjoyed their stay, often embellishing these with illustrations, and so on.They then forget about these eulogies. Later, when they have returned home and decide to go for compensation, the landlord can simply take a copy of their entry in the visitors' book and send it to them with a simple note to the effect of some mistake here, surely: This usually nips compensation-seeking in the bucL *Remember that upholstered furniture must comply with fire-prevention regulations.