| Moving to France |
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The first one was Gastronomique. I made these wooden wine crates with sliding lids and we packaged them with French wine and food. I built a website and we did OK, but the postage costs were 30% more than we had budgeted for so in the end after about 9 months we knocked that on the head. The other business we started was Go Languedoc. Wehad a vacation rentals website in in the UK, but we sold that before we came out here. We have been working on Go Languedoc for the full 3 years we have been here and it is now starting to earn us some money. We have learnt a lot about web design and search engine optimisation which has been cool. Now I have my own web design business out here in France (www.l34websitedesign) and I can earn a living from building websites for other people.
Living in France - you need more than fresh air!We arrived here with 7 months money - and we blew about 5 months money in the first 6 weeks. We got-by through doing the odd jobs - painting, gardening, cleaning - in fact Jane still gets involved with some cleaning and gite changeover stuff - hence the contacts we have with Maisons Tournesol (www.maisonstournesol.com). Esther is a good friend of ours, and we sometimes help her and Gerard out with the business when they're busy. The reason I am explaining all this about earning money that is because if you are thinking about moving to France, what we have learnt is that you need a good strong plan about how you are going to earn cash whilst you are here. I have learnt so much whilst I have been here. People pitch up in France either having paid a lot of money for a rubbish business (B&B, cafe, restaurant, etc) or they buy a ruin of a house, sink all their cash into restoring it and then do not have a plan B about how they will afford to live in it once it is finished. We always say that there are 2 types of people moving to France - people running away from something or dreamers. I actually like the dreamers and I suppose we fall into this category a bit.
Moving to France - the planI don't know how we really ended up in France. I liked France before I came here, but I probably preferred the Spanish or Italians. I wanted to go to northern Spain, just above Barcelona, but we were warned off by someone we met about all the dodgy ex-Pats. We really liked Cote d'Azur near St Tropez, but it was too expensive. Then some good friends of ours said they would come for a year-out too. Julie had been to a school in the UK that was twinned with a school in Beziers. So Languedoc is half way in between Spain and Cote d'Azur, so we thought it was a good spot. We came out here the October before we moved. We saw 10 houses to rent in a weekend (that was when we realised that there was a gap in the market for advertising long term rental houses). We chose our house in Nezignan l'Eveque because it was close to a school - like 200m instead of 5km over a mountain- and also we really liked the look of the local town, Pezenas. Well we bloody landed on our feet. Nezignan is really friendly and lots going on. Pezenas is absolutely beautiful. We are about 15-20mins to the sea and Montpellier is about 45mins away. Beziers as it turned out is a bit of a dump. Our friends who were going to come ended up in Denver, but we drove Julie into Beziers when she visited us and said "Right, what exactly was it that you liked about Beziers?".
Living in France - speak French!The other thing we noticed about living in France was that even though we had been having French lessons for half a year before we arrived, we had only got up to good holiday French level, which is no where good enough if you are living in France full time. So that is the other thing I would advise anyone. If you planning on moving to France long term, get some basic language skills behind you and then do a 2-3 week immersion language course immediately before you come. It is costly, but the difference it makes is enormous. You get to meet more people, job opportunities, etc.
Moving to France with childrenIf you are moving to France with children, there is not much that you really need to prepare beforehand. Kids are pretty resilient. You may have a difficult first 2 weeks when they are in school, but after that they are fine. We have 3 young boys and they have adapted really well. We speak English at home, but they are fully bi-lingual now. In fact Cameron, our eldest son, speaks with an accent of the South of France (which is a strong accent like Geordie! or someone from Louisiana!). I am pretty sure that we will stay here long term. Jane's French is better than mine and she has a great group of friends. I have got a couple of really close mates here, who thankfully speak better English than my French - so they usually speak to me in English and I speak to them back in French (it is a bit bizarre but it works). Much as I love the UK, there would have to be a really good reason to go back to live there. The biggest difference I have noticed since we have been living in France, is that because we work from home and we are around the kids all the time and the weather is so much better, you just get those days where you feel like you are still on holiday. You also get your bad days, but most of the time we still think to ourselves we can't believe that we are here.
Living in France - the ex-PatsWell, what can I say. Read Peter Mayall's book "A Year in Provence". You will then get a good impression of some of the ex-Pats down here. If you really read his book closely, what you will see is that his best times are spent with the French, not the English, Americans or Canadians. You will get to meet some great wacky people. You will also get to meet some dreadful people. We now have a very clear rule. Q. If we would not have been friends with them in the UK, why are we friends with them here? This seems to work for us, even if people do think that we have gone native!
Moving to France - our adviceSo overall, if you are thinking of moving to France I would say do it, but plan for it at least 1 year ahead. Really research the area as well. A house halfway up a mountain is great for a 2 week holiday, but not so great in the dead of winter (and boy does it get cold down here!) - see our article on Long term rentals for more advice. Also, don't even think of moving to France unless you have intermediate French. We have been lucky with our French, but it still took us a good 12 months to integrate ourselves down here because we could not converse properly. You also need to lose all your shyness and inhibitions. Yes you are going to make a bit of a Tit of yourself sometimes, but keep on trying and put yourself out to meet people. Eventually the effort pays off.
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| Last Updated on Tuesday, 19 May 2009 09:07 |


