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23
Dec 2002.
My
brief spell of introspection did me good. I have a good idea of my
plans for the next few weeks and my perspective has been restored.
A
snag has arisen which is beginning to worry me. The sale of the
house back in UK has not advanced any further. We are in the too
frequent position of so many others. The 'chain'.
We have two 'very interested' potential buyers, each held up
by the buyers of their house, or by difficulty in getting the
mortgage money.
I
know it is quite common, and although I have funds for the bar
purchase, I may not have enough for the improvements which will be
required very soon after taking it over. I thus need the funds from
the house sale as soon as possible.
The
son of the bar owner is due to meet us tomorrow, Xmas eve, and get
things moving again. We don't foresee any particular problems as the
price is agreed, and he is using the Notaire who arranged the sale
of my house in 1999. She is very easy to do business with, and
provides an English translation of the contract.
I
cannot recommend too strongly how necessary this is to the English
property buyer. Legal stuff is pretty well unintelligible to most
people in their own language, let alone in archaic French, so
everything should be done to ensure you know what you are buying.
In
my case with the bar, I shall be letting my accountant/notaire look
over the compris, to ensure that everything is set up for maximum
tax benefits, and to ensure inheritance plans are not obstructed. I
have yet to be instructed in the tax and social security position
except in general terms, but know enough to get the advice of a
trusted Professional.
Once
I have the bar, I have a few things to do to it. It has no kitchen,
no bathroom, and the toilets are the municipal ones across the road
behind our tiny Marie. These have been adequate in the past, no one
ever complained, and our local councillor makes it clear that they
want the bar open and will not 'look too closely' at these minor
omissions.
This
is reassuring only up to a point. The 'fonctionnaire' in France is
formidable indeed. Dossiers have to be completed and I am always
wary of E.U. regulations attracting enthusiastic officials. I remain
fairly optimistic, however, and it is not something I can influence
anyway. Our enthusiasm and the goodwill of the villagers will see us
through.
Whilst
we make the addition to the bar of 3 bathrooms, toilets etc, all to
be connected to the 'fosse' (not even a fosse-septique) we will have
to complete our own dossiers. We will have no problems with the
cartes de sejour or with obtaining the licence and becoming members
of the chambre de commerce, but we have to do a 2-day course so that
we can sell tobacco products. There is also a rumour that other
courses will have to be attended, but again we will wait and see.
I
still haven't tiled my bathroom. The suppliers managed to deliver to
our local Point P seven square 'russo' tiles instead of 7 square
metres of tiles. They couldn't be the beige tiles to be used at high
level, which would have allowed me to do the lower half, so I have
had the time to set out the next phase of work, and plan the
plumbing runs.
I
have also used the opportunity to take advantage of a couple of
'promos'. All the brico stores (DIY stores, sometimes of vast size
and scope) have a 'promo'. The
trick is to find a promo which is on something you actually want!
I got my oak stairs on an offer which saved about 750 E. and
tools are frequent purchases.
Last
week I saved about 500 E on my shower cabin and another 200 on the
sink unit and taps, so I haven't been too upset about Point P and
the tiles. It all fell into place really, and reinforced my resolve
to slow down a bit.
On
the festive front, the village has had a huge success with the Xmas
lights. It has become
an occasion for a committee to be formed! Once this happens there is
no limit to the enthusiasm and grand planning.
There
was a villagers-only walk (about 3 kilometres) last week to test the
arrangements. It finished in the former school that is now the
village hall. A steel-framed, plastic tarpaulin tent was erected
along the open sided, lean-to building which once was probably the
bike shed.
There
is the usual dirt floor of course, with trestle tables and benches
for the feast of crepes and hot wine. Chris was roped in to assist
with the kitchen, and acquitted herself well as a plongeuse (a
washer-up, not a diving belle - this is one of the times when you
notice the effect of French having fewer words than English). I
missed this preliminary dry run as I was on puppy watch, but there
was no way I would have missed last night.
Ours
is a tiny village. The main street is no more than 300 metres long.
The route of the walk takes in a D-shape course from one end of the
village to the other via half a dozen farms and as many houses
around the curved part of the D. The start times were 18.30 and
20.30, as two sittings were thought necessary to cope with the
expected hordes.
In
fact this was a stroke of genius by the committee, because at 6.30
rural Brittany had its first ever gridlock! About 200 cars were
estimated to be looking for places to park, or to drive those
unwilling to walk the course. Wonderful, good-natured chaos. Just up
my street (quite literally). I had a whale of a time, as did
everyone else.
Most
visitors to France probably don't get to functions like this, and it
is hard to describe the sheer simple pleasure of the whole village
welcoming friends and strangers to their little Xmas party. To be
sitting in a crowded, steaming ex-schoolroom and the tented area,
with excited kids, dogs, young and old alike, in what most English
people would think was quite unacceptable conditions, was truly
marvellous. It is a shame, in many ways, that our family, and
another friend and his family were the only English to attend.
We
couldn't have been made more welcome, and so many new (and some
established) friendships were cemented. We know at least half a
dozen other English families are living in the village, and were
sorry none made the effort to support the fête. Maybe we can help
change that over the next year, as it is bound to be a topic of
conversation in the bar.
One
of our friends here had an excuse not to come. He was lighting a
bonfire adjacent to his barn and decided that a pint or so of petrol
may help! The inevitable happened. He was engulfed in a flash of
flame, singing his (well receded) hair, eyebrows and lashes, and he
avoided serious injury only by rolling in the wet and quite long
grass.
He
spent the night in two hospitals before returning home looking like
the invisible man for the next couple of days. It's a strange way to
avoid one of the years' best piss-ups though.
* * *
If you want to congratulate or encourage him (or sympathise
with Chris and Lucy) e-mail me with
your thoughts or advice, or better still, write to the Notice
Board.
Have fun.
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