And Cedric makes 12
Ukraine refugees
So obviously, everybody knows that there is a war going on and there is a lot of refugees looking for shelter. I felt terrible about the whole thing so I decided to act and offer our place to house some of these poor people. When I saw a busload of them, my heart just went out and I couldn't chose so I offered to take them all in, if Janice agreed. Heck, we have a big house so I definitely know I would find a way to make it work. You can see them here and you decide. If this pans out, I may give up on deploying with Team Rubicon and just care for refugees.
Project update
What? Again? Is the nothing to do but work, work, work? What ever happened to being retired? I want a rocking chair! This is all coming to end, believe me. I am seriously missing our past travels to hither and yawn but the decision to buy this place committed us to do what needed to be done plus doing what ever Janice dreamed up in the meantime. This our 5th season here and it has become a wrap in spite of my thinking it could all be done in one or two. HA!
We have a 1600 sf patio (150 sm) that was covered with uneven patio stones that had been improperly laid originally. We decided (we, meaning Janice) that we had to bite the bullet and fix it. So last November, we hired a contractor to pull all the old stuff out and pour a slab so that we could stain it like we did our patio in California.
Life here
is... different
It's to be
expected that living in a foreign country will have its benefits and challenges.
After all, it's why we want the experience. There are things we experience
here that we wish we would replicate at home. Like traffic circles, for
instance. Being unaccustomed to having roundy-round traffic circles at home, they
can seem weird and downright confusing or dangerous. But, once you master
them, you quickly realise how efficient and time saving they are as you rarely
come to a stop at intersections and never have to stand still at a red light. Then again, French bread and salted butter is enough to make us cry. We covet them the 8 months we are away.
Menus at fast food places are unidentifiable. Dominoes pizza has unrecognisable toppings. McDonalds not only serves wine and beer with your burger (that can be on a baguette) but has a desert that is, eh... unique. A hamburger bun stuffed with peanut butter and chocolate M&M's.
On the
other hand, there are other differences here that can be...eh...different. Some
gas stations (not all) do not have credit or debit cards systems at the pump and operate on a
cash basis. Fair enough. They have up to 8 pumps for self serve, where you
pull up behind the current customer at one of the pumps and wait your turn.
When he is done pumping, he pulls out to get in line with all the other
customers who have pumped their fill and are waiting to get up to the kiosk to
pay their bill. There is only 1 kiosk and all must wait in a single line for their turn. Meanwhile, you pull up to the pump as the previous customer has left
but you are unable to pump any fuel as the preceding customer has not reached
the kiosk yet to pay and your pump has not been ‘cleared’. Once the previous
customer at your pump has reached the kiosk and paid, your pump is cleared, you fuel up then YOU get in line to reach the kiosk to pay.
By now, I
am fuming, the smoke is coming out of my ears and since no one has asked me if
I am fond of the system, I remind myself that I am just a tourist with a house.
A similar
system is in use at many building supply houses. There is only one entrance and exit
and the space is only one lane wide. Once you enter you are in line behind all
vehicles, picking up what you need as you are in line to the exit where the attendant at
the exit kiosk will all but search your car to charge you for what you took.
This is a slow, methodical process with all the attendant chit chat while a
line of drivers cool their heels waiting their turn. It can easily take a half
hour or more to purchase as little as a bag of cement (something I have been
known to do).
By now, I
am fuming, the smoke is coming out of my ears and since no one has asked me if
I am fond of the system, I remind myself that I am just a tourist with a house.
We live on
a cul de sac with 10 homes on it. 8 are small Fisherman's cottages (roughly 700
sq ft ea), our nearest neighbour with a real house and our 3000 sq ft villa. As
best we can tell, there are 4 different types of addresses in the area. There
is the street address like you put on your house, there is a civic address
registered somewhere, there is a tax address and some other type of address
that no one I know has been able to explain. My point here is that delivery
trucks, service staff (phone company, power company and others) regularly show
up with addresses that do not correspond to any of the above and are totally flummoxed
as to where they should go. Pity the poor fire department, police or ambulance
drivers. This is a phenomenon we have witnessed all over France.
The entire
society is fanatical about proof of residence. You can hardly do anything
without ‘proof’ of some kind. Flying into the country for a period of time to stay at your
own home? Prove it! (A RECENT utility bill with your name and address) You want
your mail forwarded? Prove you have another home. You want to change your TV
programming? Prove you are a customer of ours!!! You want to take something to
the city dump? Prove you live nearby. (No, I brought my garbage from 6,000 miles away to bring it here (!!!)
By now, I
am fuming, the smoke is coming out of my ears ..... well, you know...