Blog Archives

Author: Carla
• Friday, May 08th, 2009

Now while we cannot claim to be experts, and we’ve only been in France full-time for just over two years, there’s some things we’ve noticed about house hunters here in the Haute Vienne and what they buy.

We think these are basic mistakes. Maybe they aren’t, but give them your consideration. There’s only three of them….

1. Too much
2. Too old
3. Too remote

Let’s take them one at a time, this time…

Too much…
The old farm, with the outbuildings and barn to convert into gites, with lots of land, it’s cheap, seems too good to be true. But, the old farm has been run down over the years before it went on the market. The farmhouse itself needs major renovation work. Do you know how cold those stone houses can be in the winter? Here’s an example – Our neighbour who lives in such a house, gets through more than 30 cubic metres of firewood each winter. Compare this with another neighbour living in a modern house. They burn 6 cubic metres!

A derelict croft with 3 adjoining barns on 0.37 acres (1 500m²) of land. Restoration project Village location. 65,000€” – there’s loads like this!

The outbuildings and barn that could be converted into gites. It’s a reasonable idea, but unless they’re going to be something really special it’s a flawed one. Why? Well, even in the height of the season in August we see really nice gites standing empty. You can take your pick, so you’d pick something pretty special.

Lots of land. It sounds great, but things grow fast here in the Limousin. It’s not really green for no reason. In the growing season grass grows at an alarming rate. I’d swear you can almost see it grow. Certainly people cut their grass once a week. Trying to keep a couple of paddocks, or a large garden in check is a full-time occupation. If you are here all the time you’re in with a chance, but if not, you’ll need to hire someone to do it for you. We’ve seen couples who come out for a fortnight to work on their renovation. They spend most of their time trying to get the garden back to square one, even beat a path to the front door. Problem is, next visit it’ll be just as bad.

Number 2 next time.

Author: Carla
• Monday, March 30th, 2009

loving it at the departmentals 2009Remember when I rode the Departmental VTT Championships last year? Remember how hard it was? How much I didn’t enjoy it? But was actually pleased to take a silver medal? Well, I did it again this year. It was just as hard. I didn’t enjoy it, and I took silver again.

On the bright side, it was a great course on a lovely spring day. Oh, and just like last year we did the double. Steve came second again as well!

Take a look at the picture. See how much I’m loving it? As I write this, I’m absolutely shattered trying to stay awake. I hate Steve, and Theo for making me do it. Still gonna do the Regionals though! ;)

Many, many thanks to all the supporters and spectators on the final hateful climb. You really helped me.

Category: Mountain Biking  | Tags: ,  | 8 Comments
Author: Carla
• Friday, March 27th, 2009

I'd rather be gardening, any day!

It’s the Departmental VTT Championships on Sunday! I’m not really up for it. Not really a racer see. I’ve been far too busy gardening. Now, if it was a race to get the circuit planted, mowed, trimmed or pruned, I’d win easily. I love gardening, and that’s the problem. Give me a choice between riding my bike or working in the garden, I’d choose the garden every time.

Not making excuses here by the way. I’m a reluctant racer. I don’t have that driven desire to win. I’m too nice, I’d let you win if you really wanted to. I don’t have that winning streak. Unlike Steve, who’s been training hard, and has a nasty vicious streak that drives him on. I’ve seen him in action. It’s funny how the fitter he becomes the more agressive he is on his bike.

However, I was out for a final training run yesterday, and I felt just great. Plus, us veteran women got our own category this year, so here’s hoping………….. check back on Monday, I’ll let you know.

Category: Mountain Biking  | Tags: ,  | Leave a Comment
Author: Carla
• Wednesday, March 04th, 2009

We have a couple of huge fir trees in our garden (looks like one tree but is actually two). They block the light, and things growing in their shadow suffer. We’ve been planning on taking them out for some time, but they’re a little bigger than we’re confident of handling. We don’t want them to end up in the pond, break the farmers fence or damage the gorgeous pair of silver birch trees that stand nearby.
Proffeseur de jardinage a travail
Lucien our neighbour, retired carpenter, our ‘professeur de jardinage’, voluntered to fell them for us. So last Thursday at 8am sharp he arrived armed with a deuce of chainsaws, some wedges, and a sledgehammer. Watching him work was a treat. He took complete control and felled both trees inch perfect. He made it look so easy. Once felled, he lopped a few branches, identified the main branches propping the trunk, gave instructions on what was to be done, announced that his work was done, and departed. Over his shoulder he told us that he would be back to make an inspection of the clearing on Saturday.

All day we worked clearing, all day I tell ya, and all the next day, and we still weren’t done. Big stuff kept for seasoning, medium to the déchetterie, and small to to the bonfire pile. By close of business (sunset) on Friday we had cleared one tree. Which meant that as Steve won’t work the weekend ‘cos he’s biking, we still have one tree to clear starting Monday.
Tree clearing
Monday saw us make an early start, we didn’t want to start burning the small stuff because our neighbour over the field had her washing out. By late afternoon I went over to ask here if it would be OK for us to start a fire next day. She must have been on the Pernod, as she smelt strongly of booze. However, she said the washing was nearly dry, and a fire next day would not be a problem. She must have gone back to the Pernod because next morning the same washing was still out hanging like a board in the frost. Luckily the wind had changed direction so we were able to get burning, and with sone urgency too as bad weather is forecast Wednesday.

Wednesday morning now, and as I type this the wind is howling and it’s bucketing down. But we have at least two metres of wood seasoning, an improved vista, and no fir tree blocking the sunlight. :)

Category: Gardening  | Tags:  | Leave a Comment
Author: Carla
• Friday, January 02nd, 2009

En France, le 1er janvier c’est le jour de l’an. Oui mais pas pour tout le monde car le jour de l’An est un jour différent selon les calendriers qui diffèrent selon les pays. Nous, notre calendrier, c’est celui du calendrier grégorien. Le calendrier grégorien est utilisé par la majorité des pays dans le monde. Il se base sur la révolution de la Terre autour du Soleil sur une période de 365,2422 jours. Chaque jour durant 24 heures, 60 minutes et 60 secondes. Le tout groupé en quatre trimestres et divisé en douze mois. Ce qui nous donne un temps de 365,2425 jours exactement. Il y a donc un décalage qui s’opère selon l’année bissextile qui se définit par un mois plus court tous les 4 ans. Le calendrier grégorien se tient sur une période de 400 ans au total. Avec 3 siècles de 24 cycles juliens comportant 3 années de 365 jours et 1 année de 366 jours puis 4 autres années de 365 jours et 1 siècle de 25 cycles juliens.

Chaque calendrier dépend de la renaissance cyclique de l’année en fonction du climat entre l’équinoxe de printemps et le solstice d’hiver. Par exemple, le calendrier égyptien antique avec pour date de nouvel an le 19 juillet. Ce qui correspondait au même moment a la crue du Nil. Il existe donc un lien entre la nature et la date de fin d’année. Le nouvel an chinois aura lieu le 7 février en 2008 alors que les années précédentes la fête du printemps tombait le 18 février pour 2007, le 29 janvier pour 2006 et si on remonte jusqu’en 2004 le 22 janvier ! Imaginez vous fêter le nouvel an français le 14 février cela ferait de l’ombre aux amoureux. En France le nouvel an s’appelle le Réveillon de la Saint-Sylvestre ou réveillon du Jour de l’an. Saint Sylvestre était un pape du nom de Sylvestre 1er qui a permit au christianisme de se développer pendant l’Empire romain. Sylvestre 1er aurait réussi plusieurs miracles comme le domptage d’un dragon. Il fit un martyre de l’époque et sa fête tombe donc le jour du 31 décembre.

Happy new year! :)

Author: Carla
• Monday, November 24th, 2008

I couldn’t wait any longer.  I dug my first parsnip today.  I had been waiting for the first frosts and this is supposed to make them taste much ’sweeter’.

With no sign of frosts on the way, I decided to dig one up to see if there was anything under the mass of leaf growth which had virtually now died back.

In with the fork – twice!  What a shock.  I pulled out the biggest parsnip I’ve ever seen.  Fully intact and smelling as fresh as I imagined it would.  All these weeks and months of waiting, battling with the black fly and continuous watering during the dry summer.

If the first is anything to go by, I’m in for a a few great roast dinners through this winter – can’t wait!

Category: Gardening  | One Comment
Author: Carla
• Friday, October 17th, 2008

Just recently Steve has been helping to improve the performance of a web site. More from the webster himself in a mo’, but first…at first, I thought, “Carp Fishing! – what’s that all about then?! My experience of fishing and fishermen being the ones who fished the canal on my commute route. They’d regularly whip they’re tiddlers out when I cycled past! (snigger). Anyway, Carp Fishing, and Carp Fishing holidays are really big in France. Turns out that some people are as passionate about Carp Fishing as Steve is about cycling – so bordering on an obsession really. ;)

The website that Steve has been helping with is for a fishing lake in the Corrèze department near Coussac-Bonneval. It’s 3 acres of Carp infested fishing heaven (if you’re a Carpist). Groups of fishermen or families hire the whole lake out for a week, or even two, so that they can fish all day and all night. Set in 65acres of forest with walks and mountain bike trials. The owner told us that the forest is home to wild boar, deer, kites, buzzards, owls, and like so much of the Corrèze, once you’re out in the countryside you could be a million miles away.

I thought we’d got some big Carp in our pond, but the Carp in Liam’s lake are ‘really’ big, with the biggest being 50lbs!!!

Now a few words from webster Steve, who”ll eplain what he’s been doing…..

“i’ve been re-sizing and optimising the images for best display at fastest down load, paring down the HTML removing redundant and deprecated tags so that the page jumps onto the screen. I’ve also been working with Liam on new copy for the site focusing on keywords to improve the site performance on search engine results. See, while the site looks pretty good visually I found that some great keywords were actually stored in javascript files and pulled in at each load of the page. Now while this makes for easy site maintenance it does nothing for SEO as search engines don’t index the content of javascript files. We’ve still got a way to go, but by the time we’ve finished we should have something that we can all be proud of.”

Very interesting Steve….zzzzzzzzzzz ;)

Category: Nearby  | Tags: ,  | 2 Comments
Author: Carla
• Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Phil the diggerman

Our little village now has an ‘assainissement collective’ (village drains system), and it’s up to us to get connected to it within a two year timescale. This is good news, as our ageing fosse septique has been suffering from indigestion of late.

After much measuring, planning, and investigation we sussed that a 25 metre trench was needed that would skirt the old fosse with a couple of gentle bends before making a beeline for our connection point in the road outside. Can you believe I dug the first 5 metres by hand? Steve would have helped, but he has bad shoulders, no really, he does! Anyway, the first bit was easy as the ground around the old fosse has been out before. However, when it came to the stretch onwards toward the road, no chance, the ground was like rock. A digger was needed.

We called Phil Bentley, and the following week Phil came along with one of his mini-diggers, and in the space of half a day the trench was dug. We could have hired a digger from Phil to drive ourselves, but for the extra euros it costs to have Phil drive we reckoned it would be quicker and safer. Not only that, but Phil comes armed with years of experience of groundwork, and an array of ancillary tools to make the job easier and more accurate.

By the end of the day we were connected, and looking forward to a first flush, and a free flowing shower. If you’d like more info’ on Phil’s services contact me. I’d be happy to put you in touch.

Author: Carla
• Saturday, August 02nd, 2008

The weather has been scorchio since about the middle of June. All the vegetables are planted and ticking along nicely, the grass has gone brown and growing much slower. This means more time to enjoy the garden and over the last week or so, we have been sitting watching all the comings and goings in the garden.

We’ve had the pleasure of seeing a couple of Golden Oriels land in the tree and the kingfisher has also returned to fishing in the pond. The water is good foot or so lower than it was back in June but it’s still a valuable source of food and water for a lot of wildlife.

A baby hedgehog appeared in the garden one day and I was able to get close enough to take a picture of it.

Baby Hedgehog

Whilst doing some routine weeding in the veggie patch, I spotted a fantastic lizard in amongst the cucumber plants. It was almost flourescent green and I was lucky enough to have the camera with me at the time. I’ve seen it on a number of occasions but never seen it displaying such vivid colour before. Quite extraordinary.

Green Lizard

The hot weather triggers huge swarms of flying ants to appear from underground. The lizards take advantage of this and there is an afternoon feeding frenzy with a plentiful supply of their favourite food. I spent an hour trying to photograph one catching their prey but they are just so quick, it was all over by the time I pressed the button. I did manage to get a good picture of one of these comic creatures though ….

Brown Lizard

In the last week, there has been a noticable influx of fledglings in the garden. Green Finches, Sparrows, Blackbirds, Wagtails and Redstarts are to name just a few. The award for the most spectacular display goes to the Martins. The fledglings landed on a branch that Steve put in place in the Willow tree after we cut it back last year. It was meant for the Kingfisher and it hangs out right over the pond. While they waited patiently, the parents, in flocks of about 10 or so, swoop down and catch various insects off the surface of the water. Every now and then, they give their prize to a fledgling who excitedly starts flapping it’s wings and twittering at the site of a parent bird coming towards them. It has been difficult to get a picture with no telephoto lense, but Steve managed to get a shot taken through the binoculars …..

Baby Martins

Category: Wildlife  | Leave a Comment
Author: Carla
• Saturday, July 26th, 2008

Since Steve’s random dismount at the Mandragore, I’ve had to take over doing all the jobs he would normally do. This includes, doing the oil change on the van. It was long overdue and with Steve strapped up and unable to do anything, I had to take up the spanners and get dirty.

The oil filter on the van is right at the back of the engine and the only way to get at it is from underneath. There isn’t enough room to get underneath so we borrowed some ramps from our good friend George.

Me doing the Oil Change

Steve moved the van into place and then proceded to talk me through the procedure. First removal of the belly pan underneath the engine. A bit of a fiddle and some comedy moments but I finally manage to drop the cover off – onto me at first as I was lying right underneath it!

Next challenge was to see if I could find the oil filter. I can see it, but blimey how the hell do I undo it? Steve hands me a strap specially for the job. I’ve got about an inch of space to play with and after about 20 minutes of fiddling and swearing I managed to losen it.

Next, can I undo the sump plug? OK where’s the sump plug? “It’s under that big metal thing called the engine block” Steve said helpfully! OK, sump plug identified. Steve hands me a variety of different size spanners to try. Got the right size, now get my weight behind it and … Well I’m obviously not heavy enough …. OK, foot on the inside of the wheel for leverage and get my weight behind it – voila, it gives.

OK, so I know I can get the filter off and the oil out. Steve runs the engine to get the oil nice and warm. A big plastic bowl and here we go.

First empty the oil. I manage to complete this without covering myself and everything else in hot oil. Second that filter. “Keep it as upright as you can, it will be full of oil”. Easier said than done, whilst lying on your back with the filter at full reach but who am I to argue? Here it comes, oil spilling everywhere – lucky I put thost marigolds on. Operation complete so on with the new filter – hand tight as instructed and sump plug back in.

Now for the easy bit. Tip 5 litres of oil down into the engine and take a reading from the stick. Looks about right, now to start the engine and see if I’ve put that filter and oil plug in tight enough. A few nervous moments later, it looks like everything is “oil tight”.

Feeling rather pleased with myself, I forgot just one last thing – I’ve got to get that cover plate back on. Lying on my back with front end balanced on my knees, I wrest the hinges into place first and manage to get a nut on. A quick scew to my left and re-screw the side bolts one by one and then tighten them.

That’s it, my first oil change. It wasn’t that difficult really, well specially with an expert on hand ;-)

Category: everyday stuff  | 3 Comments