Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Holiday. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Holiday. Afficher tous les articles

samedi 14 décembre 2013

jakey 001  Jake when he was about 10.
The children were growing up.  The elder two caused that usual adolescant mixture of joy and fury, temper and sulks, utter and complete selfishness and sudden and unexpected spurts of kindness and cooperation.  And more.  Much more.  I won't say those years were "normal" because they weren't, and some of the events took me years to recover from - in fact, were the greatest tests of my life - but I have written a whole book about it and I won't go in to it here.
I continued with my rounds of the banks. Phoned to see if they had got an answer for me, phoned the next one, then the next.  I saw a financier in La Rochelle who put far more energy in to trying to (unsuccesfully!) get me in to bed with him than dealing with my dossier, and another on the island here who told me that no bank anywhere in the world was ever going to loan anybody such a massive sum.
"It's not a massive sum!" I wailed, "it is the price of a very ordinary house in England!"
"But this is France," he replied with a logic that was infuriating.

Money laundering

My father put up some money so that we could continue with the work.   It was now March.  The first signs of spring were arriving and, if we didn't start to advertise the cottage holiday lets very soon, we would miss the season altogether.  And then another year would go by.  I was beside myself.  We owed so much money to the men, to my father, to the suppliers, and to our very selves.  We had to get this loan one way or another and we even travelled to Paris to see a north African gentleman who, we discovered, wanted to launder his money through us.
" Typical!" I spat. "At last we find somebody willing to put up the money - and he has to be a b....y criminal!"
My mother, bless her, trying to encourage me, said:
"Don't worry about your looks, my dear, they will come back once you can relax again."
Oh, thanks mummy!  I had no idea my looks had "gone" !
renov 3 001  The stone walls.  Each and every stone had to be picked around the joints so that it could be re-pointed, and then cleaned off.  This picture shows about two thirds of the extent of the walls - it was a labour-intensive job.  And just clearing away all the junk ! - there were mountains of it.
And it was that same week that at last we got the loan.  Of all the big nationwide banks I had applied to, and all the local banks, it was a small unheard-of bank in Rochefort.
We have never moved so fast.  We placed advertisements in the UK and very rapidly had bookings for all the cottages for the summer.  Internet was in its infancy and ads went in to glossy magazines.  The phone rang constantly.  We even rigged up a loudspeaker outside for the phone so that we could hear it ring and rush to deal with an enquiry.  We worked day and night, seven days a week, for three months.  And in those three months we created six cottages - floors, ceilings, roof, plumbing, wiring ... all of it, to include raising the roof in two places.

Major building work

There were two really very major works.  One was with the drainage because the land is solid rock.  I spent time phoning round to find the appropriate builder - they call that sort of work terrassement in France - you need to know this kind of stuff because you can waste hours and hours phoning the wrong people.  Initially a man said he would do it with a mini-digger.  He came round to look at the site, but Bruce told him he wouldn't be able to do it, the ground was far too hard. And sure enough the man couldn't and made only a five-minute attempt.   More time wasted. So Bruce hired a big compressor and two road drills - more phone calls, more trips in to town, more time - and it took 4 men 4 days to dig the trenches through solid rock.  We were amazingly lucky that there was mains drainage to connect to in the road that ran past.
renov 4 001
 The pool on the cottage side, and also the one on the chateau side, are situated in the only two places in the entire property where there is no rock. When the first lot of guests arrived the pool wasn't quite ready.  Mercifully they all had that good old British stiff upper lip, and they just bore with us till, on the third day of their stay, we were able to fill the thing up with water.  It took an entire day and night to fill.  The "hill" the far side of the pool is, of course, simply the earth that was dug out.  It now has a children's fort on the top of it, built by regular holiday-makers.  Loads of things like the derlict shed behind and the broken wall to one side had to be left for several years till we could afford it.
The second major item was the pointing and rendering of the exterior walls - and some of the interior ones too.   It was a massive job and big old Michel had already started hacking out the old, blackened render.  We had thought we would do this ourselves but mercifully one of our labourers had a brother who had all the specialist equipment precisely for that.  It cost a huge amount and made a serious dent in our budget, but it was well worth it for it saved many weeks in time, plus a great deal of energy and hassle.   Actually, they were a really good team - from Saintes I seem to remember - who turned up promptly every morning and worked hard and fast till the job was done.
All roofs had to come off, already broken or otherwise,  to be insulated and then laid with  flexible waterproof material before putting the old Roman tiles ontop.
Inside partition walls that we built had a  timber frame, then laid with insualtion & plasterboard, incorporating wiring and  plumbing as we went.   I loathe glass fibre - it gets everywhere - in to your clothes and eyes, and it feels itchy and uncomfortable and the only solution is not only a shower but a complete change of clothes too.   The French call it "laine de verre", meaning glass wool.
Some weeks we had up to fifteen extra people on the site, to include Michel's daughter who came to help me make curtains, and Corinne, the gipsy I mentioned earlier with her little girls.  The little girls ran around the site playing in the debris.  I bought a second-hand buggy for the baby and carted her back and forth with me when Corinne couldn't.  We put table and chairs in what is now cottage 2, a fridge and an old cooker, so that the men could make coffee and eat as they wished.  While the weather remained cold they lit a fire on the floor, there in the middle of the derelict room.
These were good, fruitful, positive days.
ouitside of our barn 001  The corner barn with a huge hole in the roof became our home for several years till we were able to convert it.  We sort-of camped in there from April-ish to mid-September or so, when the Chateau became available again.  The Chateau lettings went very well, despite several initial mistakes, and it was almost always full.  

All around was beaten earth and that summer was extremely hot.  Jake and I flung grass seed down in all the little front gardens - too late realizing that one packet was wheat !! - and it is surprising how much of it took - both the grass and the wheat!  Grass is good stuff.  It grows in all sorts of places, hot or cold,  and survives all sorts of abuse.  I like grass.
Jake and I were also in charge of buying the wherewithall to furnish the cottages, and we dashed about after I had picked him up from school, frantically ordering beds and mattresses (you couldn't do things on line), dozens of cups and plates and pillows.  We had a Chrysler Grand Voyager at that time and we were able to pile a great deal in, Jake frequently balancing buckets and plants and curtain rails on his lap.  We would unload it in to one of the cottages, where it always got in the way of the workers, and dash back to the shop for the next load.  Back and forth, half an hour in each direction.  Sometimes things were delivered, but usually delivery was too expensive or - more importantly - too slow.
Jake was great company, a smiley, happy little guy who joined in all this activity with as much energy as I did.
Everything had to be inexpensive and serviceable; it also had to be easily replaced.  A year later a really good shop opened in a neighbouring village, where you can buy almost anything and everything needed for a holiday cottages - from teaspoons to floor tiles and more.  But at that time I had to drive to Royan or Saintes and make my way to the relatively few suitable stores there were.
wm on sofa 001

Thundery-looking day that spring. A large part of the roof re-done and the exterior stonework cleaned up. I see there is a new door-frame in place (cottage 5), though none of the windows are in.  Mud and/or dirt everywhere.  When Jake and I were finally able to clear up the grounds, the cigarette ends alone filled a bucket or two despite my constantly asking the men to dispose of their butts properly.  
gites B 001  Ready for occupation. We made a mistake with that fencing, and once guest said it looked like pig-pens!!!  We cut them down to a better height the following year.  No grass - just scrub really.  It is interesting to look at this picture now when the trees we planted along the fencing have all grown up and the hollyhocks provide splashes of colour all summer long.  It was so bare then.
I opted for either yellow, orange or green everywhere downstairs and blue in the bedrooms.  All crockery had to be easily replaced, bearing breakages in mind, and for the same reason had to be cheap.  The cuttlery suffered from Yuri Gellar syndrome but - despite its flexible abilities - it is still going strong to this day.  Saucepans and bowls, bottle openers and kitchen implements, bins and doormats ... it is amazing how much we had to buy.
The furniture was inexpensive flat-pack pine - much to the fury of the men when they realized it all needed to be assembled.  Amid a hearty mix of grumbles and laughter, they cracked on with it.  William did a lot of it himself ... he'd have been 16 I think.  He was a brilliant help.  Sun loungers, garden furniture, parasols.  Pots of geraniums, curtains, tea towels. Bedding!  That first year - in fact for the first three years I seem to recall - the sheets, towels and pillow cases were all bought in charity shops when we were in the UK, and were an extraordinary mixture of colours and patterns.  It was all we could afford.  When guests arrived they were somewhat taken aback, but very few minded.
francoise 001  The first few years were incredibly hard work. With little money to spare I did all the cleaning of the cottages and Francoise (here, in red) did the Chateau.  Gosh, she was a tough little thing, tough as nails, hard working and strong even though she was small.  We went hell-bent-for-leather on changeover days.  During the week all the bedding had to be washed and ironed, regardless of the weather.  Nowadays I have an entire batallion of cleaning and outdoor staff and I farm-out the laundry.  But those first few years it was extraordinarily hard work.  But fun.  Lucrative fun.
The last cottage was ready just half an hour or so before the guests arrived.  The previous night we had worked till very late, painting walls, assembling furniture, putting curtains and pictures up.  We decided the simplest thing was to sleep in there and I stained and varnished the staircase as I worked my way backwards upstairs.  In the morning they were still sticky and I used a hair dryer to dry them off!
People could see we were working very hard.  The weather was great and the beach not far, so most guests were satisfied.  That first year there was just one woman who complained - I hadn't thought of coat hangers and she made a major issue out of it.   It is a pity when people make an issue over something small for it sort-of devalues any other issues that may crop up.  Oddly enough it is always the same type of person too.
At the end of that first week we stood in the darkening grounds one evening and looked at the lights in the pool and the barbeques sizzling in the little individual gardens, and listened to the low drone of voices of people as they cooked their meals and talked about their day ... and we felt proud.  Very proud indeed.

Part 21 to follow
 Catherine Broughton is a novelist. Her books are available on Amazon/Kindle or can be ordered from most stores & libraries.

mercredi 22 mai 2013

In the Souk-Morocco


This amazing old crone (there is no other way to say it) had a stall at the edge of the souk, opposite where we sat down for a coffee.  It was impossible to judge how old she was, quite possibly not very old at all, for these people often live very tough lives and age quickly.  We had been over to her stall to look at her wares, which appeared to be bits of dead I-dread-to-think.  Certainly the smell drove us away promptly.  The woman herself was extremely loud, despite the pensive look in this quick sketch.  Yes, her hands were big like that – huge hands that had done a great deal of hard work.  They were more like a man’s hands and, indeed, her general features were, and for a mad moment I wondered if it really was a man … and perhaps it was.  She did a great deal of shouting, angry shouting, at an older man nearby.  He in turn just went back and forth, back and forth, between an old timber cart drawn by a moped and the back of a small shoe repair shop.  He ignored her completely.
We watched for a while, drank our coffee (though I think mine was mint tea) and then set off around the souk, avoiding the old crone, and mesmerized by the brilliance of the colours, the cacaphony of sound and the exotic mixture of scents and smells.  All around Arab boys gathered, all trying to persuade us that we needed them as a guide.  We had taken one of these boys on, years earlier, in Tangiers.  His name, he told us, was Mustafa Coca-cola.  I sometimes remember him and wonder where he is now – no doubt running around with tourists in a souk just like this one.
Catherine Broughton is a novelist, a poet and an artist. Her books are on Amazon and Kindle, or can be ordered from most leading book stores and libraries.  Catherine Broughton has travelled widely and her book “Travels with a Biro” is due out soon.  More about Catherine Broughton on http://www.turquoisemoon.co.uk



vendredi 3 mai 2013

Spain


We crossed the border near St Jean de Luz.  The caravan ran along behind us, as good as gold.
Our trusty Nissan Patrol dealt with the hills, as indeed it should, like a dream and made us remember our poor Chrysler Grand Voyager, who faithfully towed our 1.5 tons caravan all over southern Europe for five months.  This caravan is lighter and the car heavier.  That old Chrysler would weep if he knew.

For this blog in full and more please see http://www.turquoisemoon.co.uk/blog/spain-2/


lundi 22 avril 2013

Trip reports, hotel and book reviews and so on...from the point of view of the client


The aim behind reviews is somewhat forgotten in the modern frenzy for putting things on the internet.  We now have a voice that can carry all over the world, and there is a good side to this, and a bad.
The aim, when all this started, was so that we could warn people if we had a genuinely dreadful experience.  That is how it began, starting with cheap hotels in Spain and people who came home, having paid for a holiday, disappointed and angry because the hotel was only half-built, or there was no running water or the WC was three floors down and so on.  Some of these early experiences were truly horrid, and as a direct result of it the reviewing system was born.
Owners of hotels especially had, and still have, a responsibility to provide what they say they will provide.  If it says there will be a TV in the room, then there must be a TV.  Likewise owners of restaurants, villas or whatever.  The system has spread to books, cars, washing machines … and so on.  And has, in many ways, got out of hand.
People will now post any kind of nasty thing on the internet, just because they can.  Many tradesmen have become the victims of unnecessary and unfair criticism that could ruin their business.  Writing a bad review can do real damage to a small business. And that is not fair.  And no, you do not have that right.
The tables are turning, mercifully, and tradesmen can now reply to most – if not all – reviews.  When you give the name of the business, if it is a small business, you are in effect giving the name of the owner, so you can now expect the owner to reply using your name.
Something that a lot of people say is “but I have every right to say what I think!!”
No, not always.
You should always try to write a good review if you really liked the hotel/book/villa/restaurant.  Trade makes the world go round. It creates employment, and encouraging trade can only be a good thing – for theentire world.
If you didn’t like the hotel/book/villa/restaurant it is unkind and unfair to say so on the internet just for the hell of it.  By all means do so if you genuinely feel that the public at large should be warned about this book/hotel or whatever … there was hard porn everywhere when it said it was suitable for kiddies, for example.  Or there were rats running under the dining tables.
But if it was a something personal to you that you didn’t like, e.g your napkin looked a bit grubby, the bed had not been properly made, the book was boring – no, you should not put that on the internet.  What would be your aim ?  By doing so you are saying to people “do not buy this book” or “do not eat in this place” … which is ruining trade (yes, it seriously can) and why would you want to do that?
If your napkin was grubby and you feel this is something that should be pointed out to the owner, write him a private letter.  He will probably be glad of it and rectify the matter immediately.
To post a bad review on the internet when you know the owner did everything he could to rectify whatever had gone wrong is really unforgiveable.  I quite often see that.  If you badly want the internet public to know about your personal experience and what went wrong, do not name the hotel (or whatever it was).
Last but not least, remember that trade now has a voice too.  I know a man with a small hotel in Cyprus.  In reception he has a big notice which says: IF YOU WRITE A BAD REVIEW ABOUT ME, BE SURE I WILL WRITE A BAD REVIEW ABOUT YOU!  Not very professional, and arguably childish …. but I can see where he is coming from!
Catherine Broughton is a novelist, a poet and an artist.  Her books are on Amazon and Kindle, or can be ordered from most leading book stores and libraries.  More about Catherine Broughton, to include her entertaining blogs and sketches from around the world, on http://www.turquoisemoon.co.uk




Trip of a Lifetime by Maurice Chapman



Here is an amusing little tale from a friend, an example of the good old British spirit!

Concord to New York, 2 nights in the infamous Waldorf Astoria and sailing back to Southampton on the QE2!  What could possibly go wrong?
We left Bristol and drove up the M4 to Heathrow and managed to park up with plenty of time on our hands…our dream holiday had begun!  When the gates opened we were first in the queue with our best friends who were travelling with us.
“Four non-smoking in a row, if possible.” I asked
“Oh, deary deary me Sir.  We are unable to seat any of you together as regular Concord travelers have priority.”
This was a bit of a shock, but it didn’t really matter, we were only going to be on the plane for a short amount of time, after all it was a Concord!
In the Concord lounge everything was free, even the telephones and you could even make international calls.  Carol, my wife, just had to make a quick call to her mother, but unfortunately she was out of course.
We settled down and ordered ourselves a bottle of Champagne and some cucumber sandwiches…as you do!
Once on the plane I sat down next to a very nice gentleman who asked, “Do you travel on Concord often?”
“No,” I declared, “this is my wedding anniversary and I can’t even sit next to my wife!”
The old gentleman was very sympathetic and offered to change seats with my wife after lunch.  We had a fantastic silver service lunch, but before we could change seats, the pilot came onto the tannoy and told us there was a problem with one of the engines and that we would be returning to Heathrow.
Back in the lounge, we had more Champagne and we were given £250 each for the inconvenience.
One hour later we were on another Concord, less the businessmen that had missed their meetings, so we had plenty of room to sit together.  We received all the Concord goodies a second time and off we went to New York at Mach 1.
The Waldorf Astoria…what a hotel!  We were in heaven, until the early hours of the morning, when Carol went to the bathroom.  The door would not open.  Someone in the room above had left the water running and the ceiling of our bathroom had caved in!  Not exactly what you would expect from a 5 star hotel.  Apart from lack of sleep it was not a serious problem, it just meant that we had an early start to discover New York.  When we returned, the receptionist gave us a key to another room, and all our belongings were moved for us.
They say things come in three’s…we left the hotel and we were chauffeured to the port where we boarded the QE2.  There was a band playing and ribbons decorated the ship.  We felt like royalty!  But, sadly, not for long.  Mid ocean the ship entered a hurricane.  Most entertainment was cancelled, no-one was permitted on deck, the use of the lifts was forbidden, and most passengers were sea-sick!
Other than that, everything was fine…we arrived back in Britain 1 day late and very weary.  Yes it was the trip of a lifetime, and if I am honest, I loved every minute of it!
With the compliments of Maurice and Carol Chapman, La Tremblade.
Catherine Broughton is a novelist, a poet and an artist.  He books are on Amazon and Kinlde, or can be ordered from most leading book stores and libraries.  More about Catherine Broughton on http://www.turquoisemoon.co.uk

lundi 8 avril 2013

Myths and Legends in this part of France


Once upon a time four handsome, strapping young lads were teasing a young girl.  She was small for her age and not very strong, and as she and the four boys made their way through their daily chores with the fishing nets, the girl stopped to rest frequently.  The boys found it funny, flexed their muscles, and teased incessantly.
However, the girl was really a fairy.  She had disguised herself as a human girl in order to see what it was like.  And she had soon seen it all – nothing but mockery and teasing – because she was so small and frail, underdevelopped and white.
One day, getting fed up with her experiment, the girl decided to become a fairy once more and she cast a spell over the four horrid boys.  She said to them “you see, being muscular and handsome is not always an advantage!”
“You are very vain,” she continued, “and instead of helping me with my chores and showing some kindness to a person in need, all you have done is make fun of me, often cruel fun, and you are nasty boys.  And as you seem to think that being so big and strong is a huge advantage, I condemn you now to be so big that nobody anywhere will ever be able to take you in!”
And in a second the four boys were transformed in to giant shells.
The four beaches at St Palais now known as “les conches” (the shells) are all that is left of the boys.
Catherine Broughton is a writer and an artist.  Her books (good reads for women) are available from Amazon or on Kindle, or can be ordered from most big book stores and libraries.  More about Catherine Broughton, to include her sketches and amusing anecdotes from all over the world, on http://www.turquoisemoon.co.uk


mercredi 20 mars 2013

Holiday Rentals - The Chateau and Cottages of Rochebonne




www.holidaychateaufrance.com 
Situated near La Rochelle, magnificent beaches, ideal for families.
Places still available for this summer!!

mardi 12 mars 2013

Tonnay Boutonne-historical places in this part of France


We used to live just outside Tonnay Boutonne, so I know it well.  It is (with the best will in the world) just a stoney French village with a main road blasting through the middle of it.  I haven’t been for several years now and I have heard that it has been spruced-up and modernized, which is great.  Some of these villages have had by-passes built, which makes the place quieter but takes all the trade away.  Tonnay Boutonne boasts a pretty river, the Boutonne, an interesting old church and some pretty surrounding countryside.
Tonnay Boutonne’s main claim to fame (if it can be called fame) is that one Ganes de Ganelon ( 8th Century) was once Lord of it.  Never heard of him of course.  He was the chap who betrayed Roland, as in Roland and Charlemagne.  He was married to Isabelle de Taillefer, widow of the King Jean-sans-Terre, and her ghost is said to haunt the one remaining tower in the centre of the village.  She in turn was Countess of Taillebourg, another local village.
Tonnay Boutonne has two stories as to the origin of its name.  The first is that the ancient Celtic word for tower was tom, and the ancient Celtic word for river was bou.  The second story dates to the days of Eleanor of Aquitaine (12th Century), when there was a large population of English in the area and they referred to the town as the town on the Boutonne, which over the years became Tonnay Boutonne.  The truth is undoubtedly a mixture of the two.
There are the remains of a chateau, mostly within the grounds of a private house.  It seems there were three towers with drawbridges and a moat, and that the place was more of a fortification than a village.  The remains of the Chateau have been dated to the 8th Century, but the one remaining tower, in perfect order, seems to be several hundred years later.  Perhaps it was re-built.
Now, Roland is a vastly more interesting subject, even though he never went (as far as I know) to Tonnay Boutonne.   During medeival years there was a great culture for highly romanticized and embellished “true stories”, and La Chanson de Roland appears in a 12th Century Oxford manuscript, telling the story of Roland, nephew of Charlemagne and Defender of the Frontiers.  He and his army were betrayed by Ganelon in Iberia at the battle of Roncevaux, where they were ambushed and every last man slaughtered.  According to the legend, Roland had a horn ( called an olifant, which was a special message-horn) to blow if he needed back-up, which, with his dying breath he managed to blow, and Charlemagne and army came dashing to the rescue, arriving too late.
Roland also had a horse by the name of Veillantif and a sword that no other man could weild, by the name of Durandel.  These stories, and various versions of them, appear in medeival writings in Norway, Italy and Spain, as well as in England and France.  However, the one and only historic and accurate mention of Roland is in Charlemagne’s 8th Century “biography” (Einhart), where it is stated that Roland, nephew to the kind and prefect of all frontiers, was killed at Roncevaux in the year 778 AD.
What happened to Ganelon ?  Oh, I think Charlemagne killed him, which is why his wife’s ghost forever haunts the tower ….
Catherine Broughton is a novelist.  Her books are available on Amazon and Kindle, or can be ordered from most leading book stores and libraries.  Catherine Broughton is also a publsihed poet and an artist.  Her web site, for her entertaining stories and blogs from all over the world, is http://www.turquoisemoon.co.uk




lundi 11 mars 2013

Holiday Rentals: The Chateau and Cottages of Rochebonne




The Chateau  is available for short breaks (as well as weekly breaks) of 4 nights from early October through to the end of March.  Full central heating and two open fireplaces, all inclusive £700 for up to 8 people.  Another 4 people can be accomodated @ £40 each for the 4 nights.
Situated half way down the west coast of France, this lovely property offers the perfect getaway.  Comprising a small Chateau and six cottages (totally separate, so the Chateau is not over looked), and huge grounds barely 4kms from the beach, this is a delightful and unique place for a short break or your main holiday.
Closest airport: La Rochelle
Closest port: St Malo
Closest big towns: La Rochelle, Royan, Saintes
web site:  http://www.holidaychateaufrance.com
Contact: hit the contact button on this site or on the above site
AVAILABILITY:-
Availability in the Chateau and in the cottages below.
The Chateau is also available for weekly stays:-
8 June – 13 July @ £2430 pw  SPECIAL OFFER £1999 pw
31 Aug – 7 Sept @ £2430 pw    SPECIAL OFFER £1999 pw
21-28 Sept @ £1885 pw             SPECIAL OFFER £1500 pw
“8 Sept through to the end of March @ £1885 pw  SPECIAL OFFER £1110 pw
Prices do not include travel.
Prices include all bedding but not towels – which can be hired – please ask.
Wifi available @ £20 for the duration of your stay
Cook available – please enquire.  Also English-speaking baby-sitter.

Cottage availability:-
The cottages are closed from mid-September to the end of April.
La Charrue, 4 bedrooms, available 1-22 June @ £785 pw  SPECIAL OFFER £685 pw
13-20 July @ £905 pw  SPECIAL OFFER £850 pw  
31 Aug – 7 Sept @ £750 pw SPECIAL OFFER £600 pw 
Le Chai, 2 bedrooms, available 1-15 June @ £455 pw  SPECIAL OFFER £400 pw
13-27 July @ £665 pw  SPECIAL OFFER £590 pw 
31 Aug – 14 Sept @ £650 pw  SPECIAL OFFER £500 pw 
Please note that there are three 2-bedroom cottages and that availability for the others differs slightly, so it is worth your while enquiring.
Le Pressoir, 3 bedrooms, available 1-22 June @ £495 pw   SPECIAL OFFER £425 pw
20-27 July @ £955 pw (sorry no specials)
31 Aug – 14 Sept @ £700 pw  SPECIAL OFFER £550 pw
Please note that there are two 3-bedroom cottages and that availability varies slightly, so it is worth your asking.
Big shared pool, private parking, games room, individual gardens with BBQ andf big shared grounds.
Prices do not include travel, utilities of bed linen & towels.  Wifi, cot, high chair available.
Full details are on http:// www.holidaychateaufrance.com or click the contact button on this site


www.turquoisemoon.co.uk

lundi 25 février 2013

Belize Part 8

For full blog and more please see www.turquoisemoon.co.uk

Belize Part 7- St Ignacio and the Spanish Lookout.


 The first time we visited St Ignacio, three years ago, it was much like many of the little towns dotted all over this part of the Americas, ie a small, slightly tatty Hispanic town.  The only place for the likes of us to stay was in the Royal Casino Hotel (with price tag to match), and it was really the only place to eat too.  Recently, however, the town has been spruced-up and there is even a pedestrianized area where one can sit out to eat or drink of an evening – a must in any warm climate.

For full blog and more please see www.turquoisemoon.co.uk

Belize Part 6- A small yellow flower

I sketched this little flower when I was out on one of the cayes just the other day.  When I had finished I asked a man sitting on his upturned boat what the flower was called.

For full blog and others on Belize please see www;turquoisemoon.co.uk

lundi 18 février 2013

Belize Part 3



We have just returned from three nights on Tobacco Caye.
The cayes (pronounced keys) off the coast of Belize are small islands situated either on the reef or between the reef and the mainland. It is most certainly well worth visiting a few, but (for me at any rate) they are not necessarily the best of what Belize has to offer.  I say that because so many tourists flock to the cayes, yet Belize is so very much more than that.
There are hundreds of cayes, all basking in the Caribbean sun, but many are uninhabitable.  They offer, on the other hand, good habitat for many bird species, and a great deal of marine life originates in the shelter of the mangroves that dot most of the islands.  The barrier reef runs alongside many of them, 185 miles long, and rich in sea life.
The largest of the cayes is Ambergris, accessed by water bus from Belize City.  We stayed there some three years ago and loved the selection of restaurants and shops … not that there is a lot, but there is more than on any of the other cayes.  The sandy beaches are clean and the accomodation good.  We took a boat trip from there out to a reserve where we went snorkelling in with nursing sharks, extraordinary fish, turtles and rays.  It was amazing.   So far Ambergris has managed to maintain its original feel despite the tourism, but it is now just a question of time.


Tobacco Caye is more easily accessible via Dangriga.  You just go along to the Riverside Cafe and ask for somebody to take you out.  There is usually somebody, certainly in the mornings.   A 30-minute ride brings you to the little island – perhaps half a mile at its widest point and boasting some fifteen or so beach cabanas, in varying standards, where you can stay.  I won’t mention the name of the place where we stayed because I couldn’t recommend it*, but suffice to say it was very very basic, backpacker standard apart from the private WC and (cold) shower.  Not that we minded.  It was only for three nights after all.  But it really was very basic.
The other cabanas or guests houses are only marginally better, though really very quaint, and just the thing if you enjoy snorkelling and simply lying in the sun.  Snorkelling from Tobacco Caye is probably the best option in that you can wade in directly from the beach, or off a jetty, whereas for the other you really need a boat to take you out.
One tip I’ll give you is to take your own food.  Many of these places offer three meals a day included in the price, but the food was also very basic and not in large quantities.  We both felt hungry almost all the time.  As it was only for three nights it didn’t matter, and I quite enjoy eating “local” stuff, but I was well aware that I’d be sick to the back teeth with it if we were staying longer.  There is just one tiny shop which sells almost nothing, and a bar which sells beer, coke, rum and a variety of spirits.  It is an ideal place if you enjoy just lying about, reading, doing nothing.
The people, some of whom live there all year round, are lovely.  So friendly and pleasant and smiley.  Well, Belizeans are.
* I am against giving bad reviews on Trip Advisor and the like. I feel that is very unfair and extremely rude. So if there is nothing nice to say, say nothing – at least on internet!

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