Wednesday, May 30

Promising young artist's work in Chateau Lalinde



I am so excited! A young friend of mine, Sophie Kee, who shows tremendous promise as an artist, has agreed to hang one of her "Doors" series in Chateau Lalinde. Visitors to Chateau Lalinde will remember a few of Sophie's smaller pieces -- which always attract much interest and admiration.

As boxes > rooms > doors have always played a huge role as metaphors in my life, I am thrilled to take possession of what is probably one of Sophie's masterpieces to date. An explanation of the intention of the artist will follow later -- watch this space!

(Now, to get the work from the UK to France............)



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    Et si on allait a Bordeaux la semaine prochaine?
    What do you say we go to Bordeaux next week? How about we go to Bordeaux next week?







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  • Tuesday, May 29

    Another blogging bit

    When I look at the number of times I write about blogging and bloggers, even I am surprised -- but the subject does fascinate me and when one keeps a weblog, you stumble upon other blogs all the time -- either whilst looking for information or when Google alerts pop up. It is a voyage of discovery -- all those millions of blogs out there! And the occasional blog in another language that links up with mine poses a real challenge - to respond with the help of dictionaries can be much fun! But the interesting thing is of course what brought them to my blog in the first place?
    My tracking system tells me where my readers live, what their referring URL was that brought them to my blog, what they looked at and how long they stayed. What the tracking system does not tell you is whether they liked what they saw -- unless they leave a comment or send me an email. Fortunately this does happen quite frequently --
    I do not get many comments, but I do receive many emails -- and I love that, because it generates lively discussions, I learn so much about other people and other places, I share passions and interest with others who have the same--- and I make new friends!


    Here are just a few blogs that I have discovered in recent times:

    The Coffee House The Spectator newspaper's blog. Good commentary on what is happening in particular on the British political scene and a great way to stay current.


    Taxi Stories . Bob ---
    • Gender: Male
    • Industry: Transportation
    • Occupation: Taxi Driver
    • Location: Barrow in Furness : Cumbria : United Kingdom
    -- says : "I've been round the block a few times now, but still as sharp as mustard. A keen observer of the human condition I see what others often overlook."
    This is a delightful and insightful blog, very well written - and yes, he is correct in saying he often sees what others overlook. I wanted to say that 'very original', but Bob is linked up to a whole range of taxi driver blogs, which is not really surprising -- how often have you yourself said -- "Ah! What they must see and hear! Taxi drivers should write books!" Well, here it is -- Bob is doing it. Do go have a look.
    And while you are there, also click on his second blog, , a photographic versionof taking a look at what others often miss --- here he takes two steps back and looks at things from a different angle. He is not only a good writer, but an excellent photographer.


    Blogflux's Top blogs - always of interest to see what is out there and what is rated as 'top' blogs. I am still not able to figure out what makes these blogs the 'top' blog -- whether it is by readership numbers or by any other criteria. -- Perhaps someone can tell me?


    Boer in Ballingskap is a blog by a fellow South African who lives and works in Korea. As it is written in Afrikaans, it may not be understandable to all of you, and more is the pity. He writes well and has an easy style -- and more importantly, he is interesting, informative and -- unique! -- as he must be the only Afrikaans blogger in the ancient town of Gyeongju, 4 hours to the south of Seoul! He makes me smile and he makes me think and he makes me remember.... I like that.




    Then there is one blog that I was wondering whether to mention, or not. Post Secrets is a blog where "You are invited to anonymously contribute your secrets to PostSecret. Each secret can be a hope, regret, funny experience, unseen kindness, fantasy, belief, fear, betrayal, erotic desire, confession, or childhood humiliation. Reveal anything - as long as it is true and you have never shared it with anyone before.". I hesitated as this is one of those places that can delight on one day and cause great discomfort the next. Whatever it does to you on the given day that you have a look at this blog (as the postcards change regularly and vary from one extreme to another), it will make you stop for a few moments...


    And then -- the loveliest discovery of a long time! It was a little like digging a hole in the rich garden soil to plant a new rose bush, and suddenly finding something glinting in the sun. And when you retrieve it from the soil, you find it is a precious little something from your past that you had lost many years before.

    Musings of a textile itinerant is a blog written by a woman who lives in Gellibrand, Victoria, Australia, Dijanne Cevaal. What caught my eye was a Google alert on "Dordogne" and her mentioning that she is considering coming to live here for a while. I then found her blog and this piece of fabric that she had dyed (is there some batik used as well?)and called "Summer Forest" and I just fell in love! This is so exactly like the forest I walk through almost every morning that I was sure Dijanne must have been there with me!
    I am definitely hoping that someone here has a place for Dijanne to rent, because I would love nothing more than welcoming this gifted artist into our community -- and even having her present textile making classes here at Chateau Lalinde! I shall most certainly start working on making that happen!
    And in the mean time, I shall continue to enjoy her beautiful blog!




    Relevant Links on this blog:

    The Power of Blogging
    The Unedited voice of the people
    The Blooker prize for Blogs
    Chateau Lalinde Blog
    About blogs
    Blogging in France
    10 Coolest blogs
    Still blogging
    Google's Zeitgeist and blogging

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  • Monday, May 28

    60th Cannes Film Festival : It's a wrap!

    Despite Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie and George Clooney being the biggest draw cards at the 60th Cannes Film Festival this past week, (they were there to promote their film on the death of Daniel Perlman as well as "Oceans Thirteen", but they also raised a massive almost €10 000 000 for Darfur!), it was a small Romanian film that was crowned with the Golden Palm this year.
    "Il semble enfin qu'on n'ait plus besoin de gros budgets et de grandes stars pour faire une histoire que tout le monde écoutera", exclaimed Romanian director, Cristian Mungiu, winner of the Golden Palm at the Cannes Film Festival last night. (It seems that finally we do not need big budgets and big stars to tell a story that the world will listen to). He continued to express his wish that this win for his very 'small' but powerful little film, "4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days", which follows the harrowing journey of two women as they seek an illegal abortion in Communist Romania, will augur good things for the small film makers from small countries.

    US film-makers Joel and Ethan Coen had been among those tipped to take home the Palme d'Or, but left with empty-handed. The American director Julian Schnabel won the best director prize for his adaptation of the best-selling French book, "Le scaphandre et le papillon", -- "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly", the autobiography - and the most amazing feat of courage and perseverance of Jean-Dominique Bauby, while Japan's The Mourning Forest claimed the Grand Prix.

    The important Jury Prize was shared between Mexico's Silent Light, by Carlos Reygadas, and animated Iranian film Persepolis, from Marjane Satrapi and France's Vincent Paronnaud.

    Another US director Gus Van Sant, and Cannes favourite, won a special prize - created to celebrate the festival's 60th year- for his film Paranoid Park, about a teenage skateboarder's dark secret.

    Actress Jane Fonda was handed a surprise lifetime achievement award by festival chief Gilles Jacob. "You are a woman who fights and wins," he told the 69-year-old Hollywood star - who stole the show on the red carpet last night with her radiance and elegance.

    The international jury, led by British director Stephen Frears, selected the winners from a shortlist of 22 films, which included Quentin Tarantino's Death Proof, David Fincher's Zodiac and Wong Kar Wai's My Blueberry Nights with Jude Law and Norah Jones.
    The team of the winning film on the red carpet at the closing ceremnoy of the 60th Cannes Film Festival


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  • Saturday, May 26

    25 May : Missing Children Day



    It is an upside world we live in.


    Yesterday thousands of balloons, each containing the picture and name of a missing child in France, were released next to the Eiffel Tower in Paris. This is something that happened all over the world on the 25th of May -- and I can only hope that there was more interest generated and more attention given to this very important and very sad issue of our times. From the little coverage that I saw on the event in Paris, it seemed to me that the world is too busy, too rushed, too flustered, too overwhelmed already with wrongs and worries and woes to pay much attention to the hundreds of thousands of children that go missing every year.

    25 May was proclaimed International Missing Children’s Day by the General Secretariat of the European Federation for Missing and Sexually Exploited Children, and is to be a day dedicated internationally to bring the attention to the children that go missing around us.

    Origin of the day May 25
    On May 25, 1979, six years old Etan Patz was abducted in New York. He was never seen again. Over the following years, different organizations began to highlight this date, but it was not until 1983 that the President of the United States declared May 25 "Missing Children's Day". This day has also been commemorated in Canada since 1986 and has had since then, an international dimension.

    Purpose of the day May 25
    The main purpose of the International Missing Children’s Day is to encourage the population to think about all the children who have been reported missing in Europe and around the world and to spread a message of hope and solidarity on an international scale to parents without any news of their children and who do not know where their child is or what has become of him/her. The purpose is also a reflection about prevention strategies to promote at the European institutions and to implement in close collaboration with the authorities in charge of education and social policy, justice and police. The ultimate objective for this day is to be commemorated every year in all the countries members of the European Federation for Missing and Sexually
    Exploited Children and, as far as possible, in many other countries of the world.

    Symbol of the day
    The forget-me-not was the original symbol for the day, but this year it was decided to release hundreds of thousands of balloons, each containing the photograph and details of a missing child.

    The horror of this growing phenomenon of our times is that it is believed that the vast majority of missing children now are taken by paedophile rings and sex slave syndicates. Ironically this is something that had been going on a large scale in Africa and in Asian countries for many decades, and although there were concerned people who tried to get action on behalf of these children, nothing much was ever achieved. Then, in 1983, when a child in New York went missing and the parents refused to give up their fight, it was President Reagan who proclaimed the day a special day dedicated to missing children.

    This year, in particular here in Europe, after the disappearance of little Madeleine 22 days ago in Portugal, one would have expected a record number of people to turn up. But -- once again, this is a case of 'what does not affect me, has no effect on me'. Looking at the relatively poor turnout at the Paris event, one can only hope that everyone who could have been there and was not, will never ever have to go through the indescribable anguish of having a child go missing............


    Missing Children Statistics

    “…In the USA a child goes missing every 40 seconds, over 2,100 per day

    In excess of 800,000 children are reported missing each year

    Another 500,000 go missing without ever being reported…”

    ---The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC)




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  • Thunderstorms continue over the Southwest of France

    Thank you to all the readers who have written, and even called to commiserate on the floods -- and for all the offers of help to mop up and clean up after the floods during the night! With friends like you, the firemen can continue to be on standby for those who have had it far worse than Chateau Lalinde. One can only hope that the rain will abate a little now for all the people on mid-term holiday in France - and especially for all my guests who are renting the chateau this week.

    The violent storms caused much damage throughout the Southwest and in particular in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques and in Ariège There has been only one casualty as a result - an aged woman who was found drowned in her kitchen.

    South of Pau about 500 people have had to be evacuated from their homes and more than 100 firemen in that area have been working tirelessly answering calls for help. But it is in the Midi-Pyrénées where the storm was at its most violent this morning at 01h00 and where an extra 50 firemen from neighbouring départements came to assist the 100+ already in that area. Helicopters were also called in to help in extreme cases. Several roads in the Aquitaine are closed, and pre-school centres in more than 12 communes were closed today.


    In other areas of France the storms are also continuing,

    and here in Lalinde, it continues to rain --- outside --- and inside the chateau! Now, why did I not think to call a handsome pompier for help?......



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  • Friday, May 25

    Storms over the Dordogne : and in Chateau Lalinde!

    Just as Chateau Lalinde is standing all 'dressed up' for this week's visitors, rooms ready, towels fluffed, fresh flowers everywhere -- big drama! In the middle of the night a storm broke over the Dordogne with thunder and lighting -- and very heavy rain. A deluge! I got up out of bed to come downstairs to check that the pool was not overflowing, only to find a waterfall cascading down the marble staircase! There must be a blocked gutter up on the roof, for the water was simply streaming through the ceiling over the double volume staircase, running down the stairs, down the walls, flooding the floor in the entrance hall. soaking carpets and drenching the furniture.

    La Bella di Firenze put her arms over her head and exclaimed "Un inondazione del Noah!", and Cromwell the pig just sat there, dazed, wet and miserable.

    So -- back to work to get everything dry and cleaned up again -- before the guests arrive!


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    Quelle mouche t'a piqué ?
    What's eating you?
    (What fly has stung/bitten you?)








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  • Thursday, May 24

    Comments on Sarkozy's choice of government - The Women, the Socialists -- and Rachida Dati

    France, and the new president Sarkozy in particular, have joined a small group of countries that have chosen to recognise the important role women can play in a country's politics. Other countries to have done this -- with great success -- are, for instance, Sweden, Finland, Chile and Spain.

    In Sarkozy's government of fifteen ministers, seven ministers are women.

    Here are thumbnail portraits of the seven women (as published by AFP):

    The Minister of the Interior: Michele Alliot-Marie

    This 60-year-old is known familiarly in France as "MAM", a loyal follower of former president Jacques Chirac and a lawyer by training. The first woman to chair Chirac's right-wing RPR party, the ancestor of the ruling UMP, she was also the first woman to be named defence minister, a post she has held since 2002.
    Long seen as a potential rival for the presidential nomination, Alliot-Marie swung in behind Sarkozy's campaign at the last moment after winning guarantees that he would open up his government to moderate right-wingers.

    The Minister for Justice: Rachida Dati
    Dati, 41, became a national figure as Sarkozy's official spokeswoman during the election campaign. One of 12 children of north African immigrants, she qualified as a magistrate and worked as an accountant before becoming Sarkozy's advisor on delinquency in 2002.
    Dati, who has strongly supported Sarkozy's ideas on affirmative action to help minorities, would be the first politician of North African origin to hold a senior French government post.

    Minister for Agriculture: Christine Lagarde
    Once listed as one of the world's most powerful women by Forbes magazine, the 51-year-old Lagarde is a high-flying corporate lawyer who was the first woman to head the executive committee of the major US law firm Baker and McKenzie.
    She joined the outgoing French government in 2005, serving as international trade minister. An employment and antitrust specialist, Lagarde is also a former competition-level synchronized swimmer.

    Minister for Higher Education: Valerie Pecresse

    A spokeswoman for Sarkozy's UMP party, the 39-year-old entered politics in 1998 as an advisor to Chirac. She was France's youngest Member of Parliament when first elected in 2002, and has since divided her attention between thorny issues such as bioethics, and work on the family and the rights of juvenile offenders.


    Minister for Culture: Christine Albanel

    Currently director of the chateau of Versailles, the 51-year-old Albanel was for many years a close advisor and speech-writer for Jacques Chirac. She is a former senior member of the foundation for the memory of the Holocaust, and is a published playwright.

    Minister for Health, Youth and Sport: Roselyne Bachelot
    A staunch feminist, Bachelot, 60, is a former environment minister and was Chirac's spokeswoman in the 2002 presidential campaign. Known for her outspoken views, Bachelot was the only right-wing deputy in the French parliament to back a 1999 law introducing same-sex unions.

    Minister for Social Cohesion: Christine Boutin
    Boutin, 63, is a Member of Parliament best known for her opposition to same-sex unions. A fervent Catholic, she chairs a French pro-life group and is an active anti-poverty campaigner. She ran for the presidency in 2002, winning just over one percent of the vote, before rallying Chirac's UMP party.

    Sarkozy has chosen well, it seems. On the night of the results of the elections, I mentioned to a friend that if Sarkozy were clever, he would take the best of the opposition and offer them top jobs. A statesman and good leader selects on merit -- the best person for every portfolio, no matter their political leanings, and Sarkozy has done exactly that. He has most certainly irked his opponents and surprised supporters by courting leftwing politicians for top positions in his Cabinet. He has carefully selected the fifteen ministers in whose hands the vital change and strategising for the future of a more dynamic, more pro-active and above all, more progressive France will be entrusted. The seven women who will form part of his cabinet are all very highly competent women who have proved their ability, their versatility and their enthusiasm to bring about change in France. Amongst the men are senior politicians from the opposition, the Socialist party. One of them is the Socialist human rights campaigner, Bernard Kouchner, a former doctor who founded the relief agency Medecins Sans Frontieres, whom Sarkozy has appointed as his foreign minister.
    The Socialist Party immediately moved to distance itself from Mr Kouchner, saying he was no longer a member -- just once again showing their pettiness and lack of substance. Rather than take the view that one of their 'own' was considered the right person for this most important job and being proud of his achievement, they choose to disown him. I am willing to bet if François Hollande, leader of the Socialists and partner of Segolene Royal had been approached to take on an important portfolio, he would have jumped at the opportunity, but ala! poor M. Hollande was not asked.... tsk.. tsk....

    "President Sarkozy's "government of all the talents" include, in the key cabinet posts :

    Prime Minister: Francois Fillon
    Environment, Sustainable Development and Energy Minister: Alain Juppe
    Foreign Minister: Bernard Kouchner
    Economy, Finance and Employment Minister: Jean-Louis Borloo
    Interior Minister: Michele Alliot-Marie
    Justice Minister: Rachida Dati
    Defence Minister: Herve Morin


    I was excited about the new French president's choice of cabinet -- they look good, their qualifications read well, they all have experience in different fields and have been handpicked for the jobs awaiting them : all a good formula that bodes well for the future.

    But then you get the critics who sit on the sidelines -- like a bunch of cackling ole biddies, clicking away with their knitting needles -- and with their sharp tongues, looking for any possible point to criticise, malign and dissect. The kind of people who feel they have to add something to the debate, and rather something negative, for that is more likely to make the news.
    I appreciate commentary when it is constructive criticism -- but when it is based on pure conjecture or hearsay or assumptions, the result is often patronising and demeaning - and ugly.


    Such was, I believe, the commentary in a Moroccan blog on the appointment of Rachida Dati as the Minister of Justice in the new French cabinet. I wondered whether the author of this blog, a young American woman who lives in Morocco, realised that her patronising comments were derogatory to the point of being racist and bigoted?

    She calls Rachida Dati, the first person of an ethnic minority to hold a senior position in the French government, a French Orio, which is, she explains, "North African on the outside, bigoted Caucasian on the inside".

    Ms Dati, one of twelve children of an Algerian mother and Moroccan father, has risen in the ranks like a shooting star. Since early childhood she has stood out for her intelligence and hard work -- She credits her mother for her persistent drive and determination to better not only herself but also the lot of those around her. Thanks to her hardworking parents - who wished for their children the opportunities they had not had, she went to university where she excelled in her studies - first in law and then in accounting. She worked for the oil giant, Elf and from 1997 to 1999 she continued her studies - this time to become magistrate. In 2002 she joined Mr Sarkozy's interior ministry, and immediately started playing a key role in improving relations with immigrant communities in the suburbs. Ms Dati acted as Mr Sarkozy's spokeswoman during his presidential campaign. Even Sarkozy's opponents could find no wrong with Ms Dati --- she has, in every position she has held and in everything she has done, excelled in her excellence and her commitment to the job at hand, and was, in every respect always the choice of merit.

    When one reads Ms Liosliath's comments and name-calling, one can only cringe. Where she could have redeemed herself somewhat for her lack of research when a Mahgrebian responds to her rant in defence of Ms Dati having achieved such success due to hard work and commitment, and asks "Why can't an immigrant child share the same views as Sarkozy? (or any other rightist politician for that matter)
    Is the "right" always wrong on immigration issues and the "left" always right? Why can't a Moroccan share the same views as Sarkozy, based on her own evaluation and experience? Why does that make her an "Oreo"/ Uncle Tom? Isn't that also discrimination and bigotry? Well, yeah it is.
    ", she instead makes the inane and unfounded comment "Actually, no, it's not. Ms. Dati's parents wouldn't even have been allowed to enter France under Sarkozy's proposed immigration policies, and that's just one of the reasons I find her so hypocritical. She's pursued Sarkozy for years, begging to be part of his team - obviously morals are trumped by career ambition in her case". -- and one feels like saying --- You poor misdirected person. Don't you know that when you are in a hole, you should stop digging?

    In a major publication this week, the doyenne of women in politics in France, la grande dame, Simone Veil, (survivor of Auchwitz, President of European Parliament, Minister in French government, author of La Loi Veil -- legalising abortion in France, et al) underlines the exceptional character, personal value and work ethic of Rachida Dati. She met Dati back in 1992 when she was instrumental in bridging the gap in the debate that was raging at the time over whether muslim girls should be allowed to wear their scarves to school. So impressed was Simone Veil with this young woman at the time, that they have become close friends with a great mutial respect for each other ever since.

    It is altogether a very interesting phenomenon, the reaction to these French elections! Looking at the reaction from where I am sitting, I am fascinated with the vehemence in which people are reacting to Nicolas Sarkozy's election as the new President of France. What interests me so much is that the most reaction comes from those who did not vote.

    In France itself there has been commentary from the losers, the Socialists, yes -- but at the end of the day, they know that it was a completely free and fair election in a democratic process and that the man with the most votes won. Instead of continuing to find fault with everything that Sarkozy is and stands for and instead of denigrating his appointed government members, they very quickly turned back into themselves and started analysing the reasons for once again losing the presidential election. They immediately started looking at their lack of convincing policy -- in fact, lack of any policy. They immediately acknowledged that they had placed too much hope on the 'romance' of an attractive well-spoken woman winning over the hearts of the French nation, rather than forming an agenda and a plan for the future that would persuade the nation to vote for a socialist government.

    However, the worst critics react as if Sarkozy had bulldozed his way into the presidency. They totally ignore the fact that there was a perfectly legal election that put him in office. They build up the losers as having been duped, tricked out of their rightful position, robbed of a socialist president.

    There was a lovely article in one of the British newspapers a couple of weeks ago where the reporter talks about the worst critics of the government are the people who write letters to the paper's Editor, from addresses in the Dordogne or the Algarve.
    I can remember years ago in South Africa, pre- the 1995 elections, it used to be the same thing -- the worst critics of South Africa were expats safely ensconced in their new abodes in Sydney or Perth or Montreal or San Diego or Ealing from where they had every source of every wrong and every solution to every outrage. And those of us who had stayed behind to help build the new nation wanted to say to them -- "If you feel so strongly about what is happening in this country, why are you not here to help with the work?"

    But this instance is almost worse than even that! "THE BRITISH REVOLT AGAINST NEW FRANCE" read the headlines in the Daily Express of Saturday 19 May. Peter Allen, in Paris wrote: With its easy pace of life, affordable houses and beautiful countryside, France has always been a mecca for Britons seeking a better life abroad.
    But those analysing last week's election of Right-wing President Nicolas Sarkozy, who replaces Jacques Chirac after 12 years in power, have hinted the glorious "Vie Française" may be about to change for ever. The 52-year-old conservative sees himself as a Margaret Thatcher figure, ready to revolutionise his country in the same way she did with Britain in the Eighties. This means battles with the trade unions, tax cuts to encourage small businesses and the replacing of strict job protection and bureaucracy with an entrepreneurial, can-do attitude in almost every aspect of working life."

    He then goes on to clarify what it is that threatens the expats living the easy life the most: "Mr Sarkozy has already pledged a "rupture" with the comfortable welfare state and called the country's 35-hour working week "absurd".
    Most of all he wants to stimulate growth in the economy, with people being encouraged to look for a quick profit in every aspect of life.


    Horror! Stimulate growth in the economy??? Heaven forbid!

    "Businessman Tom Lodge, 51, who lives with his family near Toulouse, in the south-west, said: "Those of us who remember the profound social changes which happened in Britain under Thatcher can't help believing that exactly the same thing is going to happen to France under Sarkozy."

    And the crux of the fear?
    "Although people made a lot of money under Thatcher, there's no doubt that the atmosphere and pace of life changed for the worst in many parts of the country."

    The article continues in this vein, quoting a large number of Brits that live mainly in the Eymet area -- a beautiful spot here in the Dordogne. And one can only wonder at the short-sightedness and selfishness of people who are here for the good life, and would rather the country around them stagnates, deteriorates and eventually crumble -- as long as it is not in their lifetime -- than change for the better of the entire French nation.

    It would be a good thing if all French expats were obliged to vote -- and if all expats from other countries who live in France, were obliged to vote as well --- but only after they had been given some kind of information update and exposure to the election campaigns of all parties beforehand -- to ensure that they were well informed and could thus make an informed decision as to which party they wish to vote for.




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  • Wednesday, May 23

    Canadians build a new resort in the Dordogne

    St. Emilion


    If you've always dreamed of owning a traditional property in rural France, but don't want to be isolated or get involved in renovation work, a new development in the Bordeaux region may be just the ticket.

    According to an article by Laura Latham in The Independent two days ago, you will now be able to invest in some stylish mock architecture in France. Close to the beautiful St Emilion, there is a pocket of rural charm -- a ruined 19thC manor house with its outbuilding, surrounded by farm land and vineyards, called the Domaine Haut-Gardegan. This will form the backdrop to a new village, which, though being built from scratch, is designed to look as though it has always been there.

    As well as a mix of flats and detached houses, the 12-acre estate will have cobbled streets, a village square with restaurant and bar, and shops run by independent local retailers. And the old stable block is being regenerated into a market place where you will be able to buy fresh produce, just as you would in any farmers' market.

    Will it be a Disney-esque attempt to capture the magic of Bordeaux?, asks Ms Latham. Well, it makes a refreshing change from the faceless new-builds in more developed locations – but it may come as little surprise that there is transatlantic involvement: the Canadian developer bought the site after the original owner failed in his attempt to turn it into a golf course, and though there will still be an 18-hole course, designed by the champion Tom Lehman, the main focus of the project is the village.
    "It will be built in the traditional mellow stone of the area, and according to strict planning laws. The original manor house at the centre of the development dates back to 1890, but burnt down in the 1950s and is now a shell. Nevertheless, the company decided to keep it as a focal point, and the structure help to preserve a sense of the history and character of the original estate. " The chateau will have some renovation, but it will be left as a ruin. Along with the open market and exhibition space, it will be the soul of the site".

    Not everything at Haut-Gardegan is as you would find in your average village, though. In addition to the golf course (which will be open to the public) there will be a spa, swimming pools, acres of formal gardens, a conference centre and a cookery school, all aimed at drawing visitors throughout the year. The company hopes to attract a top chef for the school, where residents and visitors can do classes.

    Property is priced from £205,000, which gives you a 42sq m, one-bedroom apartment with terrace and views over the countryside or golf course. At the upper end, a 98sq m three-bedroom penthouse apartment, with Jacuzzi on the terrace, starting at about €300,000, and when the villas are released, they'll be more expensive still. So, it's not cheap, but the proximity of sought-after St Emilion raises prices. Plus, residents will have access to on-site facilities, including concierge services.

    You may find that you're there more than you think – part of the beauty of owning in this area is that you can hop over with ease. It'sa 90-minute flight from the UK to Bordeaux; three hours from Paris via TGV."




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  • Unethical to eat chocolates!


    Thank goodness for the beautiful flower markets in the Dordogne! One of the joys of living in France and in the Dordogne in particular, is that here every flower is grown with love in the land which we love, picked with love and enjoyed by all! On a Saturday morning I can walk across the village square to the Lalinde fresh produce market-- to the corner under the 'halles' where a lovely local woman brings the pickings of her garden from that morning. Bunches of something of everything. For next to nothing I can buy bunches and bunches of flowers of every colour, every perfume and fill the chateau with fresh flowers for the week!

    But then I read a blog entry by James Forsyth on Coffeehouse -- and I can but shake my head in wonder!!

    Hollywood, friend of cheap dates everywhere


    Leonardo di-Caprio and Blood Diamond gave men an excuse not to buy their wives and girlfriends diamonds on the grounds that they were ethically tainted. Now Julia Roberts is going to star in a movie that will do the same for flowers, reports New York Magazine.

    The film, based on the Vanity Fair essay ‘A Flowering Evil’, will tell the tale of the conservationist Joan Root who struggled to save Lake Naivasha in Kenya from the flower farm industry before being murdered earlier this year.

    All Hollywood needs to do now is to make a good thriller about the evils of the chocolate industry and tight-wads the world over will be able to say, "I'm not cheap, I'm ethical."


    Hear! Hear!


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  • The power of blogging and the pleasures of googling

    One of my favourite pastimes is googling. I love it! I love typing in a keyword and getting 7,943 of a possible 29,467 entries on the internet that will give me information about that subject!

    There are other search engines, but googling remains my favourite -- perhaps because I have just about mastered the art of, more often than not finding the right keywords for the specific subject I am looking for. Perhaps because I can "google" -- legitimately 'google' (a word now in the Oxford dictionary as a noun) -- and until such time as I can 'orange' or 'jeeves' or 'blackdog', 'hotbot', lycos', 'webwombat', 'qango'............. no! none of them slip off the tongue and flow 'from the finger tips quite as smoothly as 'googling' does......


    On the Spectator's blog, Coffeehouse Matthew d'Ancona writes about his "audience with the King of Google", Eric Schmidt.
    "Just back from Google Zeitgeist Europe 2007 in Hertfordshire, as dazzling an assembly of those shaping the destiny of the web as you could hope to behold. The cast list reads like a who’s who of the media-political class: Sir Martin Sorrell, James Murdoch, David Miliband, Mark Thompson, Peter Bazalgette, Chad Hurley, Sanjiv Ahuja, Matthias Döpfner and many others. The ripple of power and cerebration outclassed any party political conference I have attended.

    At the centre of it all, the quiet presence of Eric Schmidt, chairman of Google’s executive committee and CEO: some people don’t need to show off, and Schmidt is one of them. Why bother when you’re at the helm of a search engine company, capitalized at $149billion, and so culturally powerful that its brand-name has already entered the Oxford English Dictionary as a verb?

    Schmidt says that the next question Google users will be asking is: “What should I do tomorrow?” And to that future question some of the answers could already be generated: “What should you read? We are going to do a pretty good job on that…We could give you a reading list on the hour.”

    Politely, he prefers to refer to newspapers and magazines as “traditional media” than as “old media”. He resists the hyperbole of less Olympian webheads. That said, the world he describes is inescapably one of fundamental change: a world of social networking and zero deference, in which the authority of a relatively small number of information providers has been replaced by a much noisier marketplace and the permanent testing of reliability: “Everyone has a camera-phone, everyone is a blogger, everyone is a reporter.” The challenge for established media organisations, he says, will be to identify the stars: “One hundred million bloggers, and there are a couple of people you should have hired. And you screwed up when you didn’t!”

    There is, Schmidt concedes, a risk of cultural balkanisation, in which online tribes communicate only with their fellows. But the likelier outcome is a blossoming of “self-mobilising” initiatives in which online communities form, seize the initiative and act together. Born in 1955, he watches with amazement as the young colonise the web and turn it to their own creative and entrepreneurial ends.

    Schmidt carefully insists that the established structures of political life will not be overturned by the onslaught of Web 2.0: one senses that he does not want his awesomely powerful company to seem too powerful. Yet – by his own admission - the unprecedented level of e-scrutiny and the permanence of all digital records is “going to drive politicians crazy.” One only has to imagine what life will be like for the David Camerons of the future, their every youthful indiscretion caught on mobile phones and posted on Facebook: how will they mark out a boundary between their early private lives and their subsequent political careers when all the facts of their past are a click of the mouse away?

    Schmidt’s suggestion is that – to take the US context – every single person running for the presidency should, two years before entering the race, interview every single person from their past and disclose every conceivable embarrassment, past and present, in one spectacular clearing of the closet. This, he says, will make news and buy time: “The cleverer politicians will understand they should ‘self-out’ or ‘self-describe’.” But woe betide those who miss anything out. What Schmidt calls “the standard for self-disclosure” will be unprecedentedly high.

    Anyone who has followed Barack Obama’s campaign cannot fail to be impressed by the role the web has played in creating and sustaining its momentum (www.BarackObama.com, and many other unofficial sites). What Howard Dean began online in 2004, Obama has continued with much more sophistication – more, for instance, than Hillary Clinton. Schmidt will not be drawn on personalities, but speaks of a “new generation” of politicians who understand what is at stake – including, one assumes, Mr Miliband, who gave the keynote address at this year’s event, Mr Cameron, who has put the web at the very heart of his campaign strategy, and Nicolas Sarkozy, who held a weekly conference with 200 key bloggers."

    Heady stuff! Interesting ideas.......... Google could be spearheading something that could change the political world? mmmmm Worth some thinking about.....

    So what will we all be doing tomorrow? One leaves Eric Schmidt’s presence with a hunch that he has a clearer idea than most of us, says d'Ancona. I can believe that!


    Previous Related Articles on Blogging

    Power of Blogging
    Blogs: The unedited voice of the people
    Blooker Prize: Literary prizes for blogs
    Chateau Lalinde Blog
    Blogs for Expats in France
    Tourism in France
    All-time favourite: The Ten Coolest Blogs 2007
    Blogging - still, again and toujours!
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  • Tuesday, May 22

    Learning French: One phrase a day




    depuis des lustres* (depuis très longtemps) : in a very long time, not for ages, not since King Tut!
    *un lustre : chandelier
    Je ne l'ai pas vu depuis des lustres : I have not seen him in ages




    And a very big THANK YOU! to PYL, a reader who wrote in to say:

    Dear Red Shoes,

    it is somewhat funny to illustrate (if I may say so...) the depuis des lustres French expression with a candelabrum (lustre) because these terms a actually completely unrelated.

    In the former acceptance, a lustre is a period of time of five years. It comes from the Latin word lustrum that describes an expiatory sacrifice that was happening every five years during roman antiquity.

    In the latter, lustre as a lighting device comes from an italian word lustro meaning "glory or fame" and by extension "bringing light".

    Aside from this minor inaccuracy, keep up the otherwise good job of promoting French language which is so rare these days.

    Hoping having enlightened you somehow, ;-)

    Best regards.

    PYL

    Interesting! The wonderful thing about learning any language - even one's own - is also learning the origin of words and expressions. Knowing the origin of this 'lustres' in fact will make it much easier to remember the expression --- and I shall go straight back to the French person who told me about the chandeliers! -RS






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  • Friday, May 18

    Baby Boom for France- But more babies needed in the Dordogne!



    According to a recent press report, France produced 830,000 new babies last year but this is considered to be not enough. Despite this being the highest annual total since 1981 and the fertility rate in France having increased to an average of two children per woman -- a high average by any standards, this growth apparently needs to get to 2.1 in order to be sufficient to replace the population. According to the state statistics agency INSEE this is the figure necessary to sustain the population in a developed country and though the rate has been climbing since 1996, it seems there is more to do! INSEE are quoted as saying, "The deciding factor comes from the fact that it is easier to reconcile professional activity and a family life in France than it is in most other European countries". The total population of France now stands at 63.4 million and it is one of the few countries where most of the population growth comes from births and not immigration.

    Among the pro-family measures, the French government offers €748 a month to parents who take one year's unpaid leave from work after the birth of a third child plus discounts on shopping and public transport fares. In Australia this financial incentive to couples for having more children has resulted in the coining of a popular saying -- and one often hears of "plasma babies" -- couples who have another baby in order to buy a big plasma television screen with the government subsidy. With the average age in the Dordogne region falling as more and more younger people arrive to settle down to a new way of life, we might find quite a few plasma babies in the Dordogne as well, if the government incentive is effective.

    With the summer heat arriving -- and another heat wave, worse than the canicule of 2003 predicted for this year, we might have to wait for a baby boom though!





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  • Expat from Wales French Prime Minister's wife

    Pénélope Kathryn Fillon,(née Clarke) wife of the newly appointed Prime Minister of France, François Fillon, is only the second ever foreign-born to move into the Palais Matignon, the French equivalent of 10 Downing Street. The first was Eva Barre, the wife of Raymond Barre, who was Prime Minister from 1976 to 1981. She was Hungarian born.


    Penelope, or Penny, as she is known, was born 51 years ago in Llanover, close to Abergavenny in Wales. --- One has to wonder what it sounds like when the French try to pronounce these Welsh names!

    She married François Fillon in 1980, and together they have had five children, Marie, Charles, Antoine, Edouard et Arnaud - the latter having been born in 2001. Obviously a good match, as one of François Fillon's brothers, Pierre, later married Penny's sister, Jane!

    The French are quick to point out what an excellent French student Penelope was at school -- and "out of the ordinary student" they say, and whose French is excellent -- "although with a Welsh accent". That must sound quite lovely -- a gentle musical tilt to her perfect French from the green valleys of Wales.......

    The couple live in the Château de Beaucé, a sprawling 12th century manor house at Sablé sur Sarthe, near Le Mans, in western France.

    A local journalist, Florence Loyez, said: "Mme Fillon is a very natural and unpretentious woman. She's also very clever. I think she definitely has the intelligence and discretion to be a good 'second lady' of France. She'll advise her husband well."

    M. Fillon, 53, is a close associate of M. Sarkozy. He is a handsome, eloquent man, regarded as more consensual and somewhat less abrasive than Sarkozy. As minister for social affairs in the government of Jean-Pierre Raffarin from 2002-05, M. Fillon is credited with steering a significant and overdue reform of the French pensions system through parliament. After he was fired from the government (following the rejection of the EU constitution by the French people), M. Fillon said that his reform was the "only memorable achievement" of M. Raffarin's term of office. As M. Sarkozy's prime minister, he will run the day to day government of France and will be expected to guide a large package of economic and social reforms through parliament within 100 days.

    French prime ministers live and work at the Palais Matignon in Paris's seventh arrondissement, a once-aristocratic dwelling, larger than No 10 but much smaller than the President's Elysée Palace. The prime minister's wife and family do not always move into the Matignon but she is expected to be present for formal receptions.



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  • Monday, May 14

    Josephine Baker : Still in the News



    I have mentioned Josephine Baker on several occasions in the Chatea Lalinde blog -- as have others, such as Suzanna Clarke, Arts Editor of the Courier Mail, Australian, in her article about the Dordogne and Chateau Lalinde.

    How can one NOT mention this remarkable woman when you talk about the Dordogne Valley and its heritage! Josephine Baker left such deep footprints in the banks of the Dordogne River, with her beautiful home, Les Milandes, her exceptional contribution to the Resistance during WWII, her family of 'Rainbow children' - adopted from many different regions and backgrounds, and her outstanding success as an artist, adored by the French nation.

    But the latest reason for Josephine Baker to be back in the news, has nothing to do with any of these things. The reson she is back in the news - yet again! - is because of the now very famous skirt of bananas that she wore - or, that was ALL she wore, and so outraged and/or delighted Paris back in the Twenties!

    Agence France Presse reports in New York that the American postal services had difficulty in accepting postcards depicting Josephine Baker in her banana skirt, feathers and bare breasts for mailing!

    Apparently Jean-Claude Baker, the thirteenth adopted child in the Rainbow of Josephine's family, owns a restaurant in New York, "Chez Joséphine", and had decided to use the picture of his mother a la banana skirt, feathers and bare breasts, for his publicity mailing. However, when he arrived at the post office to mail the 15 000 postcards, the Post Office worker was mortified. "That will not do at all, sir! I cannot accept these card for mailing. It is explicit pornographic material!", exclaimed the worker.


    Jean-Claude took his 15 000 cards to the printer and asked that he covers the offending breast by 'painting' in a scarf. But once again, the cards were refused. The Post Office worker managed to see -- it is not reported whether this was with or without a magnifying glass -- the tip of one breast peeping through the scarf.
    The scarf was enlarged, and Josephine managed to slip into the post box.
    This time an advocate for civil liberty at the NYCLU got wind of the incident and stepped in. "It was a misunderstanding!" protested the spokeman for the USA Postal Services, Pat McGovern. "The postal workers have no right to make a decision like that!"

    So, six months later, Jean-Claude Baker, son of Josephine Baker, gets his sweet revenge. Last Tuesday he sent off another batch of postcards of his mother - uncensured in her banana skirt, feathers -- and bare breasts -- and this time he held a massive press meeting in front of the post office before mailing his postcards.
    "It is a small tear in the river of liberty........And it is all done in the spirit of Joséphine, my darling mama. She was a fighter and she loved freedom!" proclaimed Jean-Claude in true Bakerish style!

    Jean-Claude Baker is the 13th of Joséphine's twelve adopted children --- as a young adolescent, he was porter in a hotel where Joséphine stayed in Paris, until she took him under her wing.






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  • Sunday, May 13

    Americans in France

    In my recent article for the Expatica.com website, I made a few observations about why Americans go to Paris and the British come to the Dordogne. This article caused quite a storm in the big tea cup of the cyber world, and in that stormy process, I discovered a number of blogs and sites where similar issues are addressed.

    One such blog,
    Americans in France
    , writes in particular about the Americans in France. Although his statistics seem a little suspect -- they are vastly different from the official current numbers of 700 000 Brits and 165 000 Americans in France - of which 50 000 in Paris, and this always makes then wonder about the rest of the article, I did find it an interesting read. This is what he has to say:

    "Although your first thought might be that Americans in France would end up, for the most part, in the same areas of France as the Brits, this isn’t actually the case so funnily enough there is very little interaction between the two communities.

    Generally speaking, the Brits end up in Brittany/Normandy, Dordogne/Loire, and Provence with the Americans largely confined to Paris, though obviously there are a lot of exceptions to this.

    One of the more complete sites is Americans in France which seems to be a fairly complete reference guide for Americans aiming to move over here. Interestingly for me is that they still need to declare their income to the US tax authorities.

    Of interest to the parents amongst us is the list of bilingual schools. You might think that the list on the site “must” be too short. There are bound to be more bilingual schools in France, aren’t there? Well, there might be a few more but there aren’t an awful lot more which is something you may want to factor in when you’re considering where in France you might want to settle. If you don’t arrange bilingual teaching for your children from about age 11-18, they will not be fluent English speakers and that will set them at a major disadvantage in their future life.

    Not listed on the site are the international schools though there aren’t many of these either and bilingual is the way to go. International schools don’t raise children to fluency in both languages as you might expect.

    Anyway, lots to see on the site."


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  • Saturday, May 12

    Robert Thompson and Alan Haigh : two very special people


    Some years ago I 'discovered' one of those things that is utterly delightful and that you feel would have been poorer for not knowing about it.
    I walked into the beautiful home of Kevin and Theresa Leeper in Knaphill, Surrey, and saw, for the first time, a little mouse carved on the side of a table leg. It was a Robert Thompson mouse -- and it was beautiful!

    Robert 'Mousey' Thompson (1876 - 1955) was a British furniture maker who worked in Kilburn, North Yorkshire, manufacturing oak furniture. The origin of the mouse is said to have happened accidentally. Robert Thompson and another craftsman were carving a huge cornice for a screen and the other craftsman happened to say something about being as poor as a church mouse. Robert Thompson carved a mouse there and then and it struck him as a lovely trade mark. This was in 1919 and the mouse quickly became his trademark and it is this now world famous `logo' that makes the furniture, whether it be a church pulpit, a fireplace or a dining table, instantly recognisable as the work of the Mouseman of Kilburn.the mouse has stayed until the present day. His company still exists and is now known as "Robert Thompson's Craftsmen Ltd - The Mouseman of Kilburn"





    Recently, years after the discovery of my first Thompson mouse, I friend of mine showed me two beautiful writing boxes that her father had lovingly and expertly restored to their original perfect state. The craftsmanship was exquisite, and as the daughter of a man who restored antique furniture with the skill and authenticity of a master craftsman, I recognised the excellence of this man's work. So it was with joy and pleasure that I got to meet this man - Alan Haigh, a retired maths and science teacher and then headmaster, breaks all the rules of left brain/right brain-, art vs science-, logic vs dreamer theories. His 'official' field is mathematics and science, but his interests cover every spectrum imaginable --- from Motown and progressive music (who knows another 80+ year old who could DJ a hip disco tonight with just the music he has on his Apple Mac at home alone??) to meticulously restoring falling-apart bits of furniture -- and, because he too loves Thompson's carved mice, but because 'he is slow --- because he CAN be'!, Alan has started carving little snails on his work!

    Just as years ago I 'discovered' the Thompson carved mice on furniture --- that I would have been poorer for not knowing about, just so, in meeting Alan Haigh, I feel again as if I had 'discovered' someone quite special and unique-- a true Renaissance man -- and who also carves little snails ..........and my life would have been poorer without the encounter.




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  • Friday, May 11

    Market Day in Lalinde and Cheese cakes from the Poitou Charente



    Every so often, one discovers something new.

    And the most likely place to make new discoveries is when one travels. Being a tourist in France must be one of the most exciting experiences -- there are just so many things in this country that are unique and special and delightful!

    One of the many great pleasures of living here in the Dordogne, is the availability of fresh organically grown produce that one can obtain at any of the country markets in many of the towns and villages in the area.
    Not only can one buy the most delicious fresh fruit and vegetables, seafood straight out of the sea at Arcachon, locally home made cheeses of every kind, flowers picked from a garden, deliciously aromatic home cured hams and sausages, second hand books, candles, donkey milk soaps and toiletries, exotic silk skirts and sun bleached cotton shirts, but one can listen to an actor reciting poetry or to a group of talented youngsters making the most beautiful music.





    And then -- you discover yet another speciality from the region --- such as these light-as-air fairy cakes made with goat's cheese. Originally from the Poitou Charente, the same area as the first would-be woman president of France hails from, the tourteau fromagé not only look splendid, neatly stacked in perfect little rows, looking like a class photograph of little school boys in their black caps, but taste heavenly!




    One needs a special mould for these cakes, but should you not have one, choose an oven proof dish which is preferably narrower at the base than at the outer rim, about 8 inches in diameter and about 2 inches high.

    The black caps were probably originally an accident, but that is what gives these cakes their individual and special appearance!



    Recipe for tourteau fromagé or cheese cake

    Ingredients

    260 gr flour
    120 gr butter
    250 gr fresh goat's cheese
    175 gr sugar
    6 eggs
    5 cl milk
    a pinch of salt
    1 coffee spoon vanilla essence

    Method

    With the butter, 200 grams of the flour, salt and a little bit of water, make a pastry, cover it and let it stand in the bowl for a couple of hours -- preferably in the fridge.
    In a bowl, mix the cheese with 125 grams of the sugar and the milk
    As soon as the sugar, cheese and milk mixture is well beaten, mix in the egg yolks one at a time, 60 grams of the flour and the vanilla essence
    Beat the egg whites with the rest of the sugar until stiff and fold into the mixture.
    Press the pastry into the well greased mould. Pour the cheese mixture on top.
    Bake in an oven at about 180'C for 45 minutes.
    When baked, either under a very hot grill or with a blow torch, very quickly and evenly blacken the top.



    Try it at breakfast, with your apéritif, with a glass of Haut Poitou white wine, or as a dessert, covered with fruit purée or ice cream. -- or like we did, with a cup of coffee at a little bistro on the Lalinde market square!

    As with all great traditions, there is a special Brotherhood of the Tourteau Fromagé, founded in 1974 in Lezay! Their address is:

    9 avenue Général Faucher
    79400 Saint Maixent



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