Monday, March 31

Calling all Expats worldwide: Make your voice heard!



On the Expatica website, HSBC is conducting a an ambitious project to conduct the largest ever survey of expats.

The project aims to give more than 2000 expats across four continents the opportunity to have their say on what life is really like for people living and working away from home. The survey will look at opportunities that come with starting a new life in a foreign country away from home, and the challenges and difficulties that they may face at home and at work.

The survey will also reveal how new technology helps expats start their new lives and manage their professional and social affairs. It will also find out how expatriate children’s lives differ from the lives of the friends they leave behind.


Paul Say, Head of Marketing and Communications at HSBC Bank International, said: “Living in foreign countries means expats often don't have the normal outlets to express their point of view about their unique lifestyle. This project aims to gather these viewpoints and capture them on an unprecedented scale. As well as giving voice to the expat population, the study will provide new insight on their needs which will help HSBC Bank International to improve its services and products for its customers.”



To make your opinion heard,, and I am sure you do!, please go to the
  • survey
  • . The questions are non-intrusive and filling in the form is easy and quick. It is your interest -- and mine!



    Click on Link:

  • Chateau Lalinde : The perfect venue for your event

  • Relocation Orientation in France



  • Sunday, March 30

    Direct Flights to Dordogne from London, Brussels and Amsterdam



    Wonderful news for visitors to the Dordogne!

    From this month there are two direct flights from Brussels, Belgium - (Charleroi Airport) per week with Ryanair -- on Wednesdays and Sundays --- for as little as €43 return.

    And from 15 April, there will a direct air link between Amsterdam and Bergerac with www.transavia.com:
    5 flights per week, on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays - until July 2008
    3 flights per week (Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays) during July and August 2008
    5 flights per week in September and October.
    The return ticket to Amsterdam will be in the region of €160.

    There is already a wide choice of flights between England and Scotland with Ryanair and Flybe. The once-cheap flights, unfortunately, are not cheap any longer, whereas the standard of customer service, never very good, has dropped markedly. However, the passengers may mumble and grumble - and with good reason, but at the end of the day, all will agree that having such easy and convenient transport right into the heart of the Dordogne, where so many people from Britain as well as Holland and Belgium have their second-, retirement or holiday homes, is a bonus that would be hardf to do without.

    Related posts:
  • Flybe adds two flights to its schedule

  • List of all flights between the UK and France



  • Click on Link:

  • Chateau Lalinde : The perfect venue for your event

  • Relocation Orientation in France



  • Watch out for April Fool's Day and the Poisson d'Avril!



    The French have a lovely way of celebrating the first of April --- April Fool's Day. They stick a picture of a fish on your back and wherever you go, people point at you and laugh! What better way to get everyone to at least smile!




    Click on Link:

  • Chateau Lalinde : The perfect venue for your event

  • Relocation Orientation in France



  • Saturday, March 29

    The Color Orange - Show that you care



    Everyone who has a conscience and feels any compassion for his fellow man, wishes to show his objection to what is happening in Tibet, but most of us do not wish to go demonstrate in the streets, or write letters to newspapers, or do anything that may endanger our 'safe' position in our community.

    Now there is a wonderfully easy and effective way to show your objection :

    All you have to do is wear something orange, add an orange button or pin to your outfit that you wear, carry an orange purse or tie an orange scarf around your neck, plant orange flowers in your garden this spring, write with an orange pen - on orange paper,
    ---- or ----
    what about dying your hair orange?

    That is what I intend to do -- dye my hair a bright vivid orange -- to show the world that I care about what happens in China and in Tibet,
    to make my statement about man's inhumanity to man,
    to affirm that I am willing to speak out for that which I believe.


    What will YOU do?


  • The Color Orange werbsite will explain what this worldwide campaign is about.


  • Click on Link:

  • Chateau Lalinde : The perfect venue for your event

  • Relocation Orientation in France



  • Thursday, March 27

    The Brits make their mark: From 'Dordogneshire' to Normandy, Brits race for French office


    In a recent article, in the run-up to the elections, Sophie Kevany follows the campaign trails of Brits who have joined the race for French office in the local elections.
    This from AFP and the Expatica.com site:

    Armed with impeccable French and a mover-and-shaker ethos, a winegrower, a tile-maker and a football-mad businessman are among a growing number of British expatriates running for local office in their adoptive homeland on Sunday.
    The Dordogne, a deeply rural swathe of southwestern France dotted with picturesque farming villages and known for its hearty cuisine, has earned the nickname "Dordogneshire" for its thriving British community.

    The region counts between 5,000 and 10,000 British residents, and 800 British entrepreneurs, drawn by a laid-back lifestyle, warm climate, and lower cost of living -- and who increasingly want a say in local affairs.

    With 200 British families out of 2,600 inhabitants, a British population that swells to 900 in the summer months and a dozen British small businesses, the village of Eymet is at the heart of the trend. "In the old days, people down at the market used to speak Occitan," the regional dialect, said Jean-Raymond Peyronnet, one of the mayoral candidates in Eymet. "Now it's more likely to be English."
    Even though just 42 British locals have registered to vote on March 9 and 16, Peyronnet and his two rivals, all running on non-partisan tickets, have signed up Britons to stand for the position of town councillor -- keen to reflect the demographic shift.

    "I really wanted two English people on my list. They can provide a point of contact for the community," Peyronnet explained.
    "It was amazing, everyone wanted me," smiled Julian Urriata, 41, a Briton
    with Basque roots who recently opened a local stone and marble tile store, and is one of five expatriates running for office in the town.

    "It's time to give something back," said Tim Richardson, a 42-year-old winegrower, who says he was warmly welcomed to the region 17 years ago.
    For most of the British candidates in Eymet, next month's contest is firmly about local issues: Urrutia pledges to tackle dog mess and slash car speeds in the town centre if elected.
    Estate agent Terrie Simpson, 47, mother of a teenaged son, says she is running to help find ways to "attract more young people with children" to balance out the population of retiree expatriates.

    European Union nationals can register to vote in French local elections, with some 240,000 EU nationals including 24,000 Britons signed up across the country. In 2001 Europeans won the right to run as town councillors, although they need French citizenship to stand as mayor.

    But Susan Dunnachie, a British councillor in charge of tourism, education and culture in the well-heeled Riviera town of Mougins, warns would-be candidates of the workload involved.
    "I had no idea, when I stood, that this would be so much work," said the 59-year-old, who has spent seven years officiating at weddings and commemorating French war dead.
    "As an outsider, you can seen things that 'indigenous' people don't notice anymore. But you have to point them out gently," added Tracey Glowinski, 47, town councillor in the town of Bar-sur-Loup on the Riviera.

    "The other councillors were amazed when I said I wanted to talk to the bride and groom before the ceremony -- I found these chain marriages so sad!" agreed Dunnachie.
    But Glowinski also said she felt her track record -- as an outsider -- needed to be "spotless."

    "If you knew how many war commemorations I attended -- often as the only member of the town council! And the meetings until 2:00 am, often to say nothing at all," sighed Glowinski, who has decided not to stand again.
    At the other end of France, however, 62-year-old Ken Tatham is not afraid to seek a third mandate as mayor of Saint Ceneri le Gerei, a Normandy village of 150 nhabitants -- and is also aiming for a larger goal. The white-haired, trim bearded Leeds United football fan took out dual citizenship to allow him to become France's first English mayor in 1995. Running on a centre-right ticket, Tatham is seeking a seat on the district council for the Orne department, or administrative region, responsible for a
    quarter of a million people.

    "I retired recently so I've got the time to do this," Tatham told AFP. "The person in the job at the moment has been there for over 18 years and it's time for a change."

    Well done to all of you, fellow Expats!


    Click on Link:

  • Chateau Lalinde : The perfect venue for your event

  • Relocation Orientation in France



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