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Noisette

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Posts posted by Noisette

  1. Yes, Norman, when you look at the météos for these holiday destinations, they're not all they're cracked up to be. La Réunion is the same, if not worse.  Cyclones, hurricanes, wet seasons etc etc.  None of them can hold a candle to Goa or Kerala in January.  I hope your restaurateurs manage a better holiday next year!  Funds permitting, I'm off back to Goa. Apparently it's been rather overrun by young Russians and Israelis, which won't have done much for the ambiance, but at least the good weather's 99% guaranteed 🙂 It's a shame it's anglophone but nowhere's perfect...

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  2. It's not that special, TBH.  It rained for 11 days out of 14 (just warm showers, mind) and the western coast of Basse Terre is very windy. Fine if you like being sandblasted 😆. The food is.... erm..... repetitive.  Parking is horrendous and there's only one main road to get around the island.  The plusses are that it's Francophone, everything is very French (obviously), beautiful scenery and vegetation, cheap rum and lovely people.  Oh and going on a plane again after too many years without being airborne  🤩

  3. 3 hours ago, menthe said:

    I am often surprised by how much my French friends and neighbours seem to be happy to spend on food.  Even those of modest means will splash out on oysters and foie gras on high days and holidays.

    I have noticed high value items in supermarket baskets and trolleys the contents of which differ substantially from oveladen trolleys in the area of South Wales where I lived.

    When I go on my walking breaks with French friends, they would spend huge amounts on cheeses, meats, pastries (whatever the local specialities of the region) to take home to family, neighbours and friends.  I mean large amounts by my standards....lol!  Perhaps over 150€ on a jambon sec or 50€ on a couple of tartes de mytilles.

    I'd splash out if I was entertaining but, just for us, I'd nearly always find an alternative if something was over-priced by my reckoning.

     

    Quite agree, Menthe.  We're living on one UK State pension and even when three of us were living on 2 pensions, I never felt 'flush' enough to spend €25 on an apple tart from a patisserie that I could produce myself for €5. In fact, I'm not a very good française at all, as the aim when moving here was to be as self-sufficient as possible. Not from meanness but just the pleasure of having land and being able to produce our own food.   The raising, conserving, growing etc. goes down much better with 'my' French farming family than it appears to do with the townie and Parisien friends but then  they can't even begin to imagine living on what we do 😁

  4. 9 hours ago, alittlebitfrench said:

    Apologies…..google correct had a bit of a turn.

    This is being discussed on many Brit forums and it seems that mostly don’t like the actions of the French farmers. But then again before Brexit many Brits used to buy their food from the UK and have it delivered to France. So they have no idea of the country they live in. More concerned about their swimming pool.
     

    I was pleasantly surprised by how many do support the farmers! There are the inevitable selfish whingers, of course, but on the whole the Brit community are much better informed and positive than I would have expected.  Perhaps we're all agreed that it's time to call halt on the greed of the big supermarkets?

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  5. 8 hours ago, alittlebitfrench said:

    It was a play on words. Nosette is from the ‘Lots’. read it again. 😀

    Anyway yeah, looking for change. We were looking at Voiron. Which is a nice little town between Grenoble and Lyon.

     

    Noisette is from Lot et Garonne. It's not the same as the Lot 😛   I know Voiron! We stopped off there many years ago on our way down to the south coast. Lovely little town..... In fact, we always planned to live somewhere over to the east, anywhere between Dijon and Gap, but hey ho...best laid plans and all that 😁

    As for not getting around France much, I've just got back from Guadeloupe so nana na na na heehee

    ETA:  The glacier is still there in Chamonix, but it's shrinking fast.

  6. With regards to desirable properties, certainly just over the border in Périgord pourpre, there seems to be a healthy market for châteaux amongst Brit buyers.  Something to do with UK TV, perhaps 😁  Another factor in buying big, old properties is the never-ending idea that you can earn a living (or at least supplement your income)  by running gîtes. 

    Hasn't ALBF gone quiet? 🤣

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  7. I don't doubt for a minute that you're content (I'm glad you are)....the incoming Brit figures speak for themselves.

    I don't ramble but I do drive a lot, anything up to 200kms a day in all directions, on minor roads, to visit friends. Apart from the vineyards, my overall impression remains that there are vast areas of untamed forest and friche in Dordogne. But that's most likely because Lot et Garonne is tiny in comparison and most of it is cultivated, whether arable, sylviculture, orchards or vines 🙂

    Do you happen to know anything about the veracity or otherwise of the stories concerning the role played by the Dordogne Resistance (or maybe the opposite, and it's collaborative activities) and it's subsequent impact on the département in post-war years?  We were told that the Dordogne was a severely impoverished département as a result of being 'punished' for those activities, and that it's only relatively recently that it's managed to shake off that legacy. I've no idea how true that is.....Ashamed to say that I won't be digging into archives to find out, either. I prefer to leave the past behind. But I do wonder if that might be a reason for a difference in property prices.

    Of course, it could just be something simple like slight differences in climate. Hence the steeper prices the further south you go. The Gers might be considered 'rude' but it's certainly not cheap 😂

    Whatever the reasons, France is so beautiful and diverse that there's something for everyone, even ALBF 😉

     

  8. I’ll try to be tactful....just a few differences that have struck me since living in neighbouring Lot et Garonne. Firstly, the roads. It’s so noticeable that the roads are maintained to a higher standard in surrounding départements. Probably something to do with Dordogne being a huge dept?  Then general scenery. Most of it is quite a ’natural/sauvage’ landscape compared to the neat cultivation of vines or arable crops elsewhere.  Lots of wild forest.  That’s not a criticism...each to their own 🙂  Maybe the fact that the tourist season is short, so many attractions and activities are crammed into two months in summer?  Not a problem if you live in a big, culturally active place like Perigueux or even Bergerac.

  9. Spot on about the pretentiousness, ALBF. Living where I do, there’s no escaping exposure to Brits and their current preoccupations. Soooo judgemental and so much more prone than the French to insisting that everyone should conform to their views (voir fads) on diet, ecology, allergies, you name it 😁  Even that is to a certain extent subject to a town/countryside divide. Given that there’s not a huge amount of countryside left in England ( note England, not UK) perhaps that explains it?  Things are following the same course here, though, gradually. The littering, the media dependency, the crazy municipal/political decisions....all the joys of 21st century civilisation, quoi? 😉

  10. I’ve seen 3 rebouteurs over the course of the last 16 years. The first was the most spectacular success. He sorted, in the space of 5 minutes, a very nasty twisted thigh muscle problem for which the MT had only offered prescriptions for painkillers and which was getting worse by the week.   A genuine healer, ’thanks’ were entirely voluntary and discretionary. The experience certainly converted me.  Equally, friends and OH have seen more ’structured’ i.e. moneymaking versions without noticeable success. The only way to find a genuine one is by word of mouth and the art seems to be on the decline which is a dreadful shame.

  11. We toured France quite a few times in the early 80s and were bowled over by the sheer number and quality of restos just about anywhere in France. Back then, they opened in the evening and at the same price!  Then, when we moved here, I was ’adopted’ by a French family (agriculteurs) and got to experience everyday country cooking and conserving. Georgette taught me a lot. Much home-produced pork and fowl, veggies either in the form of the ubiquitous soup or sterilised, bottled and re-hashed but rarely fresh and lightly cooked 🙂 The family didn’ t eat out much because by then, restos were too often expensive with far less tasty, well-cooked food than they got at home.

    We found some excellent restos here back in 2007 but they’ve since closed or been replaced by over-priced, pretentious tourist traps looking for a Michelin star. Thing is, young working  French are pretty much like young, working Brits....not many are interested in spending hours in the kitchen producing traditional meals. So if the demand is there for ready meals and fast food, the supply will be forthcoming, and how!  Pizza is my bête noire. Not even French and every time one of the few little, genuine, remaining restos folds,  it reopens as a Pizza joint a few weeks later  😞 Best not to get into the discussion of French beef again lol.

  12. Our local Intermarché introduced a 'maturation cabinet' for côtes de boeuf, some time ago. 20, 30 or 40 days au choix. I didn't even look at the price, just asked for a modest 2-rib piece. Got to the tills and it came in at €85, which at the time was only slightly less than our meat budget for the month 🤣  It was very good but why should the French have to pay such an exorbitant price for something that's been available in the UK since forever?  Sadly, the answer is that the country 'with the finest food in the world' isn't.  It's all down to profit, protectionism and self-publicity.

  13. 5 hours ago, alittlebitfrench said:

    Please don’t eat ducks.

    Ducks are such lovely birds and don’t deserve that abuse.

    Hein?  If the beef here was properly matured and edible when cooked, we'd probably eat less duck, but it isn't so we do. Have you ever visited a proper, small,  French elevage, ALBF?  The birds are not abused.  Chickens are more cute and much more fun than ducks, though. 

  14. That is a truly perspicacious and accurate post 😁 Well done!  Perhaps we're both in mourning for France as we knew it. You can't stop 'progress', though.

    I used to buy whole ducks from the farm and do confit, dry magrets, make terrine de foie gras, rillettes etc.  This will be the first year that we'll be doing without foie gras for the fêtes.  €96 / kg???? They're out of their minds!  Which is a shame, 'cos I've got about 40 jars of home-made confit d'oignon and confit de figue stashed away 🤣

    Bon dimanche  x

  15. 7 hours ago, alittlebitfrench said:

    Now nuts…in your recent posts you are basically saying you don’t like French humour and don’t like French music.

    You are perfectly integrated 😃

    What I think is funny is that Brits who move France pretend they like this stuff. Forcing themselves to listen and like Patrick Bruel…whereas they would probably prefer to listen to Oasis or Blur. 

    No I'm not! I'm basically and very diplomatically saying that I prefer English humour and English and American (oh the shame..) music 😁  Although, since I've been listening to a Russian radio station I have discovered some very good German and Swiss groups.  Listen to yourself making these sweeping generalisations! 😁  Some Brits do genuinely like chanson française. Good for them!  I think Dave Lister has hit the nail on the head.....I'm completely out-of-date with current stuff of any nationality. That's what comes of not reproducing 😉

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  16. Well what a coincidence! I was only pondering this question yesterday 😁   Apart from the obvious appalling customer service, which doesn't seem to have changed much over the years, I can't and never will appreciate French humour (tel quel) or music.  There are a few exceptions, but on the whole, French comedians and writers can't hold a candle to the humour that I grew up with.  I've been asking various French friends and acquaintances since 2002 for recommendations but they all go very quiet after suggesting Coluche, Desproges or Raymond Devos 😐  It's not so much disliking as just not appreciating,  and thanking Heaven that there's some saving  grace to having been born English.

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  17. On 07/12/2023 at 10:01, alittlebitfrench said:

    Why not the UK ? There is nothing wrong with the UK ? It is a fantastic country.

    Why do peeps who have moved to France don’t want to live in the UK ? Or spend their time on forums (not you or anyone else on this forum btw) criticizing the UK.

    I am betting most would choose to live in the UK rather than most places in France. Why is that me wonders ? These people live in France but never ventured out of their rural village. That is NOT reality France. They know nothing about France but for them France is better than the UK. What they are saying is their bubble in France is better than would they could achieve in the UK. It is nothing to with France as a country. But that bubble won’t last forever.
     

    I can live anywhere in France. Rural, suburban, estate, city and have done. It does not bother me. These muppets couldn’t.

    That is my rant over for the day…lol.

    I'm glad you excluded me from the whingers 😉.  Um, isn't it obvious why, if you've taken the plunge and left UK, then unless you're hijacked by the pull of family or the need for comfort-zone health care in old age, you wouldn't want to go back? This is just my personal opinion, obviously, but it's a complete ****hole with an even bigger bunch of crooks running it than France has. Life here, again in my opinion (which can never be the same as yours because our situations are so different), is better than it would be there. I feel at home here. Sorry, but that can happen.

    As for forums, the best laugh I've had today is reading someone's claim that France is a Socialist country . She lives here..........Still chuckling over that one......

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