Some "off the wall" musings from the charente valley, one of the prettiest parts of France.
Friday, July 26, 2013
Life in the Charente - it's payback time
Some of you may know that I have an annual golf outing with three friends and we have been playing together since we were 17 years old.
Now, without wishing to appear boastful, it's relevant to this little tale that I'm better than any of them.
Far better.
I was a single figure golfer as a kid and if you go to the Drift Golf Club in Surrey you'll see the Downie name scattered around quite liberally in the trophy room.
My three chums were all cricketers and over the years have suffered from various ailments including hooking, slicing, topping and shanking.
We.ve played some fab courses together though - from Druids Glen to Paris National I've boomed one down the first only to try and pretend I'm not with them as they amuse the gathered audience with a collection of airshots, slices into the next county and even (I swear this is true) a shot that ended up thirty yards behind the tee. How much did I enjoy saying "It's still you Steve"?
Better still we always play a few rounds of Greensomes which is where you take alternate shots. Usually my partner gets to play from 300 yards down the middle but woe betide if I hit a duff drive and have to take my partners tee shot. I've played from the ladies tee on many an occasion as well as out of bushes, bunkers, ditches and adjacent fairways....all the time with people passing by and smirking, thinking what a duffer I must be.
I've suffered in silence because that's what you do for friends.
Well, it's payback time. Golf is my past but cycling is my future....more accurately cycling with my father-in-law is my future.
You see we've entered a 20km, two man, time trial in October - the "Duo Jarnacaise".
You might see where this is going. Pa-in-law is not just a good cyclist, he's a very good cyclist indeed. He's been cycling all his life and has conquered the Ventoux, the Tourmalet and any other European mountain worthy of the name.
He has legs of oak, lungs that could power a steam train and a competitive spirit that makes Sir Alex Ferguson look like a politically correct junior school coach.
We cycled out to look at the circuit today and had a trial ride round.
It didn't go well.
Pa-in-law had this crackpot idea that we'd be taking it in turns to shield the other from the wind and that this was some sort of team event. Not so - we'll go fastest if he drags me around behind him but we'll still be way slower than if he was doing it by himself.
At the end of our practice I was wheezing, panting, dead on my saddle but generally pretty pleased with myself.
Now, I get on like a house on fire with "beau pere" - he's more than family and is one of my best friends on the planet. So I could tell he wasn't happy.
Our ride home started with some chuntering. Words like "humiliation" and "disgrace"started being bandied about and soon developed into "knew you were a wrong 'un" and "I'd be better off doing it with your mother-in-law".
Haha....I've been waiting 35 years for this....you just have to take it on the chin Dave. I know what it feels like to be dragged down but as Mahatma Gandhi said "The law of sacrifice is uniform throughout the world".
If anyone wants to come and cheer us on, the Duo Jarnacais team time trial takes place on Sunday 6th October.
I'll be the one sheltering behind the chap with a look of anguish on his face and his cap pulled down low :-)
www.cognacproperty.com
Cycling in the Charente
OK, I know that we don't have the dramatic scenery to match the Alps & Pyrenees. Come to the Charente and you won't be faced with the horrors & challenges of Alpe d'Huez, Mont Ventoux or the Col du Tourmalet.
However, I genuinely think that cyclists of all standards will be thrilled if they bring their bikes & obligatory lycra to the sunny Charente.
For once I remembered to take my camera out with me yesterday in the early evening and took a couple of snaps to show what I mean.
This first one is of the bridge at Juac. It is one of many that criss-cross the river between Jarnac and Chateauneuf. Although we went "off piste" yesterday, our regular lunchtime route is a 30km circuit that starts in St Meme and goes through Saintonge, Graves, Vibrac, St Simon, Juac, Bassac, Jarnac, Gondeville and back home.
My second pic was taken when we deviated from this route and climbed the short hill to Moulidars.
This small lane actually runs in front of a house that I bought for a client a few years ago, it's an idyllic spot. There's an equally nice view the other side of the hill that yesterday was looking down over dazzling sunflowers & the ubiquitous vines.
The juxtaposition of the two with the greens & yellows sparkling in the evening sun was truly spectacular but sadly I was hurtling downhill at the time and didn't have the legs to cycle back up to capture the moment.
You'll just have to take my word for it!
www.cognacproperty.com
However, I genuinely think that cyclists of all standards will be thrilled if they bring their bikes & obligatory lycra to the sunny Charente.
For once I remembered to take my camera out with me yesterday in the early evening and took a couple of snaps to show what I mean.
This first one is of the bridge at Juac. It is one of many that criss-cross the river between Jarnac and Chateauneuf. Although we went "off piste" yesterday, our regular lunchtime route is a 30km circuit that starts in St Meme and goes through Saintonge, Graves, Vibrac, St Simon, Juac, Bassac, Jarnac, Gondeville and back home.
My second pic was taken when we deviated from this route and climbed the short hill to Moulidars.
This small lane actually runs in front of a house that I bought for a client a few years ago, it's an idyllic spot. There's an equally nice view the other side of the hill that yesterday was looking down over dazzling sunflowers & the ubiquitous vines.
The juxtaposition of the two with the greens & yellows sparkling in the evening sun was truly spectacular but sadly I was hurtling downhill at the time and didn't have the legs to cycle back up to capture the moment.
You'll just have to take my word for it!
www.cognacproperty.com
Thursday, July 25, 2013
The Poitou Charentes playlist
Was out working this morning - driving through the vines, in the Charentaise sunshine, with the windows down and the music turned up maybe a notch too loud.
It made me grateful to be alive and so, so glad that we took that leap of faith ten years ago and made the move to France.
The two albums I was listening to are en vogue in our household as it's two artists we have seen perform live recently.
The first - Passenger - we saw in Paris at Le Trianon and he was superb. Here's a little taster of my favourite song taken from a time before he hit the charts.
The second album was that of a busker we saw in Covent garden recently called Sammy Jay. She hasn't quite hit the big time yet but perhaps one day she will (don't forget that my youngest spotted Ed Sheeran way before he became famous and has a knack for these things). Here she is singing Price Tag.
Perhaps you won't like these young artists as much as me or maybe they're like the local "vin de pays" which needs to be drunk on a summers evening on the vineyard where the grapes were grown....but then again perhaps you will - and you'll understand why I was driving along with a huge smile on my face this morning :-)
www.cognacproperty.com
It made me grateful to be alive and so, so glad that we took that leap of faith ten years ago and made the move to France.
The two albums I was listening to are en vogue in our household as it's two artists we have seen perform live recently.
The first - Passenger - we saw in Paris at Le Trianon and he was superb. Here's a little taster of my favourite song taken from a time before he hit the charts.
The second album was that of a busker we saw in Covent garden recently called Sammy Jay. She hasn't quite hit the big time yet but perhaps one day she will (don't forget that my youngest spotted Ed Sheeran way before he became famous and has a knack for these things). Here she is singing Price Tag.
Perhaps you won't like these young artists as much as me or maybe they're like the local "vin de pays" which needs to be drunk on a summers evening on the vineyard where the grapes were grown....but then again perhaps you will - and you'll understand why I was driving along with a huge smile on my face this morning :-)
www.cognacproperty.com
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Poitou Charentes - flavour of the month with international buyers
More on the 5th annual "Investing & Living Abroad" survey by BNP Paribas International Buyers.
It was interesting (but not all surprising) to see that every single region in France saw the number of international property buyers decrease in 2012.
Except one.
Poitou Charentes.
Yup, sleepy old Poitou Charentes, with it's low property prices, glorious beaches, rolling hills covered in sunclad vineyards and friendly, old fashioned, locals.
Here in paradise we actually saw a 4% increase in the number of sales to international buyers who spent an average of €145,000.
78% of these buyers were from the UK, 13% from Belgium, 5% from Holland and 4% from Germany.
Who knows what the reason is? Perhaps it's the micro climate that makes it the second sunniest area of France (well not all of the region but certainly the arc between La Rochelle and Angouleme), or maybe it's the attraction of Cognac itself which has seen sales of the amber nectar boom over the last few years.
Whatever - they say that in troubled times it's the prime areas that fare best and I'd say that this is certainly true in this case. All those smart buyers are probably sat by the pool in their old, Charentaise, stone houses, with views over the vineyards, as I write this.
If they used me to help them buy it then they'll probably also be feeling quite smug about the price they paid :-)
www.cognacproperty.com
Thursday, July 18, 2013
French property sales to international buyers becalmed
The 5th annual "Investing & Living Abroad" survey by BNP Paribas International Buyers came out earlier this month.
For those of us who earn a living working with international buyers they make pretty gloomy reading but there are one or two silver linings if you look hard enough.
The headline figure is that house sales in France to "non resident" purchasers dropped by 29% to 10,663 (from 15,073). There is no getting away from the fact that it's a tough market and until consumer confidence returns many people will keep their hands in their pockets rather than splash out on a home in France.
However, there are a couple of points worth highlighting.
Firstly, those canny buyers taking advantage of the lower prices are spending more - on average €384,000 which is a €64,000 leap over the figure two years previously.
Secondly, these tend to be astute cash buyers, with only 20% of them requiring a mortgage.
Finally, we were shown the figures (which I have forgotten sadly) of UK expats who have sold but moved within France (ie moved to the next village along). I remember thinking that this figure was pretty high - not far short of the number of buyers from the UK. This flies in the face of all the headlines of "Brits fleeing France back to the UK".
Anecdotally, I know far more expats who have sold and moved within France than expats who have returned "home". These figures never get reported and I'm glad that BNP Paribas included it in their research.
I do firmly believe that there is a pent up demand and that once confidence returns we will see a big influx of international buyers again. Time will tell.
www.cognacproperty.com
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