Features r 0 tai ' " ONO 4 3y Marsha Larsen B&B is not a drink, and it's not a polite description of what .he Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders have to offer. Rather, it's a new way for Americans with less and less discretionary income to travel, have their bed and eats with it, too. Bed-and-breakfast accomoda tions are springing up all over the country. Even in Manhat- My husband and I decided to try it. We wanted to go to New York, but hotels there had become too expensive. How to combine these two realities became an exercise in creative problem-solving. Could we stay with friends? (Out of the ques tion. We have no friends in New York.) Camp in Central Park? (Probably illega l .) Ride the subway all ni ght ? (Were we kidding?) At last we discovered the B&B alternativelin New York magazine. The bed-and-breakfast refer ral service, The B&B Group, we found in the magazine acted as our broker. Like a stockbroker, these services consider the amount tourists want to spend and help them get the most from their investment. They do this with a brochure listing all their client homes. The listings give a little information about the hosts, the accomodations themselves. and the cost. example: `l-‘ediatrics nurse & computer sales hus band, both ski & white water enthusiasts, offer double bedrm, wipri. bath in •downstairs of their duplex apt. (a converted loft). Apt. has Jacuzzi & upper bedrm., reach ed via captain's ladder as well as conventional stairs. Located in City Hall area (old New York). . .10 min. walk to SOHO & Greenwich Village. $3O/Single $45/Double." Or, for a splurge: "Extraordinary, posh, self contained 2- 1 / 2 rm. suite (kitchen & private bath), Mid dle Eastern decor in 3 story brownstone offered by couple in interior decorating field, who run their own catering service as well. $75/night (W. 40's off Fifth Ave.). They'll fix a candlelight dinner for two or a larger .cocktail party at an ex tra fee." We chose a "duplex con verted loft which doubles as studio and living quarters of costume designer and film war drobe artist . . . . Walk to Greenwich Village, SOHO." The reservation was handled entire ly through The B&B Group by telephone. We mailed them our deposit, then they gave us the details name, address, and telephone number of our host. We arrived by train (another "deal"—buy one full-price Am trak ticket, and the spouse goes half-price) and called our host, Ken, from Penn Central Sta tion. He was expecting us and had arranged to be home early from work that Thursday to greet us. We pulled up in a cab before an old soot-stained mercantile building, and I began to have second thoughts. We entered the building and caught the rickety elevator. At the en trance to the apartment on the dingy fourth floor, I was ready to turn and go find an outrageously expensive hotel room. At least it would be de cent. My husband, ever the op timist, insisted we see the place, so we followed the in struction taped to the metal double doors to "KNOCK LOUDLY." . The sound of our arrival clanged throughout the area, mixing in with the hot salsa music and chatter of Puerto Rican workers in the Lucky Toy Co. down the hall. "We pulled up in a cab before an old soot-stained mercantile building, and I began to have second thoughts." Water trickled from a leaking pipe behind us. When I stepped inside, I felt like Dorothy Gale felt in the Wizard of Oz when she opened the door of her house blown from black-and-white Kansas to the technicolor world of the Munchkins. It was a tastefully decorated, colorful artist's loft, and the host was young and attractive. The place was funky, granted, but that only added to its charm. The fur nishings were an eclectic mix, all circa 1947. The walls displayed interesting soft sculpture art painted in vivid colors. B&B in this instance meant "Bed-and-Budweiser." Ken in vited us to share anything in the fridge. We saw beer inside plus two cans of cat food, a jug of cold water, and a one-lb. can of Cuban coffee. Just as well. We are not breakfast eaters but love a cold brew after a hectic day of New York sightseeing. We found this sort of flexibili ty to be one of the major attrac tions of B&B-ing in New York. Don't eat breakfast? Have a beer instead. Your train doesn't leave until 5:00? Okay, stay here those additional three hours after checkout. Of course, there's meeting nice people, too. Ken was an at tentive, but not intrusive, host. He provided us with a city guidebook and good advice about transportation, budget shopping, and inexpensive restaurants. And with his pre planned weekend activities, he gave us a lot of time to share the spacious loft . B&B lodgings are a bargain. B&B's have been a familiar part of travel for generations of visitors to Europe. But, only in the last seven or eight years has this idea been practiced in the United States. A recent article by Gloria Levitas in The New York Times attributed the mushrooming B&B trend to several factors: the state of the economy, the sterility (and expense) of motels and hotels, and Americans' desire for more human contact in our increas ingly technological, alienated culture. If you like absolutely private lodgings, B&B's will not suit you. But if you like to travel, must travel on a tight budget, enjoy meeting interesting peo ple in their own homes, and don't mind "winging it," then consider this sleep-cheap alter native. When you make your reserva tion, tell the agency as much as possible about yourself. For in stance, do you smoke? Do you have special dietary needs, or require facilities for the han dicapped? Any children or pets in your party? The agencies generally approach these prob lems with a sense of challenge. They want your business, and they and their hosts can be flexible in ways hotels and motel chains can't. Nothing broadens like travel, nor flattens the pocketbook so quickly. B&B's can help. Contact: The B&B Group (New Yorkers at Home), Inc. 301 East 60th Street New York, N. Y. 10022 212/838-7015 House Guests, Cape Cod 85 Hokum Rock Road Dennis, Mass. 02638 (House Guests can also put you in touch with referral agencies that service other parts of the U. S. the West, Southwest, Deep South, New England.) Send for: "Bed and Breakfast Ser vices—United States" $1 and self-addressed stamped envelope to: Sweet Dreams & Toast, Inc. P. 0. Box 4835-0035 Washington, D. C. 20038 "The Bed and Breakfast Direc tory" $3.50 (covers cost & mailing) to: Posey Publications P. 0. Box 2512 Fairfield, Calif. 94533