Saturday 31 December 2011

"France 2012 Calendar" Calendars by graceloves | RedBubble

"France 2012 Calendar" Calendars by graceloves | RedBubble:

Move to France: Happy New Year

Move to France: Happy New Year: Its a miserable day 31 December but we are looking forward to tonight when we are going to a restaurant to celebrate New Years Eve and Meg's...

Happy New Year

Its a miserable day 31 December but we are looking forward to tonight when we are going to a restaurant to celebrate New Years Eve and Meg's birthday. La Vielle Fromagerie in Brux is an English run restaurant with gites. It is very popular with the Brits out here especially for Sunday lunch because they do an excellent roast dinner with all the veggies and trimmings plus starter, cheese, pudding and wine for 18 euros in the winter. So tonight should be good if not a riot! New Year's Eve in France is typically very quiet and the towns tend to be deserted so its up to you what you make of it. Some of our friends are having parties, others will just let it slip by unnoticed.

Wednesday 28 December 2011

Life in Charente 16

We are very relaxed now after spending our second Christmas in the Charente, south west France. Its Boxing Day and the shops are shut and there are no signs of the sales. The sun is shining and the water of the Charente river is flowing strongly after the recent heavy rains. So what is living in France like? Chilled I would say. Its not at all hectic. Even in the run up to Christmas, the shops were cool, calm and collected with no sign of the manic-panic buying that characterises so many UK supermarkets.

Before Christmas we went to the Christmas market in Bordeaux which was magical, 150 little wooden chalets with twinkling lights selling mulled wine, hot chocolate, biscuits and treats from Alsace, teddies, trinkets and everything imaginable. Bordeaux was wonderful, as beautiful, if not more beautiful than Paris with its vast squares, sand-coloured eighteen-century buildings and magnificent fountains. We found a street of the most fabulous restaurants with every food imaginable from French to Chinese, Japanese noodles to fondue.





Back in the Charente now and not much stirs in the winter. The elderly people in our tiny village stay very much indoors but we occasionally get to chat to them when we are out walking the dogs. The village has three Christmas lights up, its rather sweet. The only noisy creatures are the donkeys which call to each other across the village, even in the middle of the night.