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misplacedperson

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Posts posted by misplacedperson

  1. Fonctionnaire working practices, news in English here: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/france/7866140/French-civil-servant-lifts-lid-on-five-hours-a-week-culture.html

    And the book in French here: http://www.amazon.fr/Absolument-d%C3%A9-bor-d%C3%A9e-comment-mois-Quand-fonctionnaire/dp/2226206027/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1278046975&sr=8-1

  2. I've been intrigued by these reports recently, so I did a cost comparison using my shopping receipt last week. Sainsbury came out slightly more expensive than Casino in the first place and once I'd added the delivery charge (plus VAT) the bill was 50% more than I'd just paid locally.

    All of which leads me to wonder what on earth you're all eating. [8-)]

  3. Apparently, the others are just watching to see what happens before

    acting themselves.

    No doubt. But if what happens is that Times readers desert en masse to the Telegraph, other papers aren't going to go there, are they?

  4. "the quality of most items - food or electrical or furniture - isn't as

    good as in the UK"

    Er, what? You're saying that IKEA and Whirlpool deliberately make sub-standard goods for the French market? You might wish to get some help with that sort of paranoia.[8-)]

  5. With that sort of money you could easily buy a house/apartment rather than a caravan. You will need to work though, both from the financial point of view and because otherwise you'll be extremely isolated and will probably ditch the whole idea as a result. Doesn't have to be full time, especially if you own your house outright and assuming you're not addicted to consumer tat.

    My advice:

    - learn French. Makes me laugh the way people think they can just roll up and get a decent job (or any job) when they don't speak the language and don't appear to intend to either.

    - pick a tourist area. Your English is then in demand and as a result employers are more willing to put up with you speaking French like a vache Espagnole. I even get paid a 50€ bonus just for speaking my own language, bargain.

    - if you go for the tourist thing, get some relevant experience first. Bar work, catering, maintenance, whatever. Look at working a season or two for a UK company before you commit to the move. They pay peanuts, but it's a good way to suss out where you like/what you could do.

  6. You don't 'need' any bedrooms at all - I know people who live in 25 square metre studio apatrments (not that I fancy it, admittedly). How many you want is entirely up to you - if you have multiple visitors and loads of junk, clearly three is the way forward. Or more, even. If, on the other hand, you don't want visitors, you can deter them by having a smaller house into which they do not fit and pay less tax into the bargain.

    I'd say the resale thing is just a red herring, particularly if you're planning to do something as old fashioned as actually live in the place.

  7. If you've never had a phone line you will need to get one installed, for which you need to speak to France Telecom. They have an English-speaking service, I believe, though I have no idea what the number is - presumably it will be on their website. Once the line is installed you can go to anyone you like for internet services. We have an SFR box, costs about 35€ a month for line rental, ADSL and unlimited phone calls. There's also some kind of TV thingy rolled up with it, about which I know nothing at all because I can't stand TV and the service isn't available here anyway.

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