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Maison Famille, 09240 Durban-sur-Arize, Ariege, France
Maison Famille
Maison Famille: Gite/House to rent
La combinaison du paysage pyrénéen et le climat méditerranéen conduisent à des vacances merveilleuses toute l'année ronde chez Maison Famille. C'est un paradis pour ceux qui recherchent des activités ou la relaxation juste. Apprécier la saveur de la vie française dans notre maison affectueusement reconstituée et explorer les vues dans un secteur qui est outstandingly beau, trempé dans l'histoire et a son propre microclimat.
Customer Comments
The friendliest people from Derbyshire I have met this year….In truth the kindest most helpful people I have met in a long time, wonderful accommodation.
- Nigel Armstrong, Surrey
Au sujet de nous
Notre maison est plein du charme et du caractère avec les feux ouverts pour chauffer toi en hiver et les raisons superbes avec les arbres bien établis pour vous ombrager en été. La piscine vous attend pour apprécier par le beau temps chaud.
Nous avons actuellement 3 chambres à coucher d'en-suite et une autre chambre à coucher avec sa propre salle de bains privée. Nous pouvons approvisionner des mariés à travers à une famille jusqu'à de six dans une de nos salles. Nous pouvons offrir les lits grands, doubles et jumeaux si vous préférez. Toutes nos chambres à coucher sont élégantes et confortables. Toutes nos salles offrent le thé et les équipements à café.
Notre salle à manger donne sur les jardins avant privés, tandis que notre salon confortable et détendant assure un endroit de la paix et de la tranquilité suivant les activités du jour.
Chambre d’hôtes/B & B
7 September, 2009 Author: Terina Bilby

My apologies to you, but Maison Famille is no longer taking bookings as a Chambre d’hôtes/B & B.

If you enjoyed your stay at Terina and Brian’s house or like the look of the property look out for it as a gite/house to rent from Easter 2010. Enquiries can still be made via the contact email address. A big thank you to all our guests, who left as friends, for staying with us.

Terina and Brian



July 2008 to Dec 2008
27 May, 2009 Author: Terina Bilby
 
July 2008
July is the start of tax de sejour. A tax that you have to charge visitors to the Chambre D’hotes. They have to pay a set fee each night they stay depending on how many and what age etc. It also depends on how many stars your property has been awarded. Well of course I would award myself the 5 it deserves, but seeing as I have not been assessed it makes the price 20 cents a night for each person over 13 yrs. With it goes a whole load of paper work to fill in. All funds go back into improving tourism for the area.
 

Brian was due to arrive on 9th July but at the last minute the council in our area came up with a property for his dad. So the move to France was delayed while he moved his dad from one flat to another. We put the flat up for sale with hope of getting some funds to help with the new conversion of the barn.

 
Amelia is doing well and feeding from me. Its difficult fitting in feeding around guests, it takes so long. I am not the most stylish of breast feeders, I look really awkward and need lots of cushions so it's best done out of sight in the bedroom. 
 
After a big mess and a poorly car Brian finally arrives at Maison Famille and meets his daughter for the first time………………
 
Lewis is over the moon to have his dad back.
 
Brian hits the ground running and is straight out to give some quotes for doing some tiling work. The plan is to build up some clients and register a business.

Off to a good start.

 
The month is busy with guests but we do get a week at the end of the month to ourselves to spend as a family.
 
August 2008
August is rammed and there is only one day in the whole month were we have no guests. I cannot complain though as this is what we signed up for. All the running about helps me start loosing those extra baby pounds.

I have to go shopping every three days to cope with all the fresh fruit and veg we are getting through. Mum and dad are in the caravan for most of the month.

 
Brian takes a booking over the phone, which makes us over full, double booked, bursting at the seems. After some discussion we move out our bedroom lock stock and baby into the barn. It is a good job it is the hottest month, I think I got most of the spiders and bugs off the walls and floor prior to moving in the beds. We had to use a torch as the barn has no electric plumbed in and we had to use a bucket for you know what as no toilet plumbed in…………..it was the last time I let Brian deal with a booking.
 
Mum has packed most of her stuff up, the boxes are ready for the return to the UK. I am not thinking about it and avoid talking about it.
 
I have to stop breastfeeding as just cant master it. Amelia has such a strong suck, I am in a mess and the pain is unbearable. She takes well to the bottle. Lewis adores her, although she spends a lot of time asleep. She is no trouble at all and when she is the guests argue over whose turn it is to cuddle her.
 
Lots of friends and family visit this month and we have a ball, even though it is very hard work, and I am exhausted. Night feeds, early mornings and late nights are taking its toll. Still I can sleep sometime during November when we have no guests………….
 
September 2008
The last of the summer guests leave on 17th September giving me a chance to catch my breath.
Amelia has her 1st cold which she catches from Lewis, which he caught in his 1st week back at school. He is pleased to be back at school with all his friends. He gets bored over the holidays and we have been so busy I think he has missed out on some quality family time.
 
Lewis has his 5th Birthday this month, it sees 13 kids a mixture of French and English in the house as it is chucking it down with rain.
 
Mum left at 6am on Thursday 11th Sept. It was an emotional moment as no plans as to when we will see her again. I know we need our own space and time as a family and my mum needs to be with my sister and brother in the UK and her family that she misses. It doesn’t make it any easier though.
 
The central heating is finally finished. We have our 1st fire. My god it is brilliant, easy to start, it stays in over night. (those of you with experience of a log burner will appreciate my comments) meaning less work the next morning, it has ash pans to empty which means you never have to be without a fire…………I am so excited about being warm this winter. It will be our third winter here this year.
The wall in the living room is plastered and smooth. The entrance to the kitchen is not just a hole in the wall any more it actually resembles a door. New wooden steps have been laid and boxes purpose built for storage either side is now finished.
 
Oct 2008
October sees three men from UK here full board for 10 days. They are brilliant with the kids and adore Lewis. He has been spoiled with gifts from every trip they have been on. They have taken him walnut picking and we have bags full, I am not sure we will eat them all.
 
I start a bit of painting hoping to make it look a bit cleaner. I buy a pot of deep red paint for a few accent walls. I paint the wall above the fire. It dries into a colour I can only describe as brothel pink!!!!!!!!
I cannot get a sample pot of paint in any of the DIY stores here. I was not going to make the same mistake again by buying the wrong colour. I have to resort to asking mum to send me a sample pot of brown paint, I add this to the “nice” pink colour and voila the perfect deep red I was wanting.
The snug looks so much better for adding a bit of colour to it.
 
So far work for Brian is going well. The need for another form of transport becomes apparent as I am stuck in the house all day long when Brian has the car.
 
Nov 2008
 
The month doesn’t go by without guests, 11 Bikers from Kudu expeditions. The house was one big dorm for boys on bikes. Leathers and boots and helmets everywhere.
 
Brian finds a van on the internet. It is for sale about a 4 hour drive away. He contacts the owners and it seems just right for what he needs. Not to expensive and big enough inside to fit in plaster board and heavy tiles for his work. We drop him off at the train station and he will be collected at the other end by the seller, who is an English guy with a gardening business. Brian was not due to be home till about 2am so I go to bed with the phone. At about 1130pm I get a call from Brian saying the van has broken down, more or less at the same place the car did. I could not believe it, how can this happen to us again.
I left it with him to sort out recovery. I got a call next morning from a very cold Brian who had spent the night on a chair in the recovery garage reception. He wants me to fetch him. He is about two hours away. I am mortified I have both kids and do not know where I am going. I manage to dump kids on a friend with plenty of bottles for Amelia, just in case I get lost. I set off to find Brian; I drive through Toulouse which is my worst nightmare. I follow the instructions Brian gave me and much to my surprise I actually find him without going wrong. Anyway the van gets repaired and we fetch it three days later.
 
The fire and rads are excellent. In fact dare I say…..? we are to hot. We have had to have our bedroom window open all night and have turned the radiator off as it was unbearable. (How good to be to hot in this house, not something I thought I would ever say)
 
December 2008
 
The boys from Kudu expeditions return, so I think this year we have had guests every month. Not bad for our second year.
 
Christmas is looming and my mum asks if we are making a visit back to the UK. We are being really careful with money as it has to last us through the year. Not like we are getting a monthly wage anymore. What we make in the summer has to last all year, and with all the work we have had done on the house it is very tight. So no plans to go home and no plans for anyone to visit. No guests either. I was at a bit of a loss and was thinking is it worth all the effort for just the three of us. Amelia would be in bed at dinner time and a Turkey would be way too big for us.

Then I snapped out of it and realised this will be our first ever Xmas as just a family. We had never been on our own so we would make most of it. I did a big turkey with all the trimmings. We had crackers and hats. We opened presents galore. The kids had loads brought them from family and friends and were very lucky. The day was perfect and turned out to be the best Xmas day I have ever had. Me and my little family living in our dream house, living our dream life what more could I ask for.



Brians Journey to France, written by Brian Bilby
28 January, 2009 Author: Terina Bilby

 

July 08

It has been very eventful as after leaving work I had notification that I could move my dad on the Monday, which was the day before I supposed to travel to France.  Therefore the journey was delayed until the Thursday.  It took 3 days to move all of my dad’s belongings, carpet his bungalow, buy and fit his cooker and trim his garden.  

So on the Thursday I set off.  The journey was good to Dover where I had my last fish and chip dinner.  The ferry was delayed for an hour that meant I did not start to drive in France until 9.30pm.  

Now pin your ears back for a tail of woe that will have you crying with laughter or if you really did like me, sadness.

I took a recommended route, from a friend that was described as beneficial as you missed Paris and it only took 20 minutes extra. B*******, at best I would describe it as scenic, in the pitch black, and it took an additional 1hour 30 minutes to get to the same point on the south side of Paris.  

I decided to grab 30 winks at that point as it was 1am.    The service station car park was packed solid with 18 wheelers and many unsavoury people, bloody hundreds of them all looking at the contents of my car.  So I bottled that stop and pushed on down the A71.  

As I approached Limoges there was a strange maneuver by a French driver that put his car on its roof in the centre lane, that woke me up I can tell you.  As I approached Limoges there was an almighty thunder storm ahead so I decided to try to sleep for a second time. I grabbed 30 minutes and set off again at 3.30am.  After driving for 30 minutes I woke up drifting across the auto route toward the central crash barrier, so I thought it best not to mimic my French friend from earlier and I pulled in again.  

0600 on the dot I set off for what I thought was the final leg, silly me.  The thunder storm was still there, waiting for me.  Aqua-planning at 80 mph with a car that is loaded with its own weight in luggage is not an experience I would like to repeat or recommend.  

Anyway I pulled into a service at 8.30am to have breakfast and ring Terina.  Breakfast was a slice of my energy bar and a cup of sludge that passes for coffee from a vending machine.  The pay phones only accept credit cards that are FRENCH, so Terina had to wait for an update.  I arrived at the toll booth outside Montrauban at 9am to find that my car had decided to play games in that I could not get the gears and the clutch to work together and all my efforts some how drained the battery.

I was promptly removed from the auto route by "scams are us" at a cost of 118 euros.  They then decided it was a good idea to tell an Englishman who was tired and fed up that Citroen batteries do not charge Vauxhall batteries.  I'll let you decide what my response was.  They then tried to sell me a battery, a Citroen battery at that, and yes I did suggest that by their logic it would not work in my car but they failed to understand my sarcasm.  Anyway they asked for 197 euros for a battery………….. they are still asking.  

Finally the car gave up the ghost and was transported to the local Opel dealership.  The Opel mechanic said he could fix the problem, price unknown at this time.  The dealership were very friendly as by it was now midday and I was in fear of collapse without food so they pointed me to the local bistro.  Cheap and cheerful and just what I needed.  I returned to the garage to find that the car could be repaired, yippee I cried, and then they said it would be in a fortnight, and then I just cried.

I rang Terina to tell her my joyous news.  She decided to send Colin to collect me. I settled myself down in the waiting area of the dealership and within minutes I was gone.  I woke two hours later dripping wet with a throat that resembled the Sahara.  Anyway Colin arrived shortly after and we transferred over all my belongings and set off home.  

I arrived at 6pm, about 10 hours later than planned.  



The next six months
16 September, 2008 Author: Terina Bilby

January 2008

After xmas Brian left us on Monday Jan 7th and the same day Lewis started back to school.

Lewis goes to his 1st French birthday party. It was very different to an English party. No sarnies and jelly and ice-cream, no fancy birthday cake. It goes along the lines of…... Invite a load of kids. They go and play. At around 4pm have cake and a drink, watch the birthday girl open her presents then have a few games. One was musical chairs but no pass the parcel. No prizes for the winner or sweeties for the losers. Still Lewis thoroughly enjoyed it and I got to practice my terrible French with other mums.

We totally redecorated the 1st floor landing. Glossed, wallpapered and painted. We moved my wardrobe and draws onto landing to make room for a cot in the bedroom as now 3 months pregnant and feel the need to start getting organised. .

 

February 2008

Mum and dad went to UK for 2 weeks. Me and Lewis spent a week on our own. It was strange being in the big house just the two of us, but was also nice to have the place to ourselves. Brian joined us for the second week and his 1st job, in the rain, was to chop wood as I had used the stash dad had done for me, it had been so cold.

Found out at my 4 month scan the new arrival was going to be a girl. Brian said he did not want to know but I was bursting to tell someone and that someone was Lewis, after that everyone in the world new about it…….mmmm I guess a 4 year old can’t keep a secret.

Lewis and I went back to UK with Brian for 5 days on a whistle stop tour. We didn’t see many people but I did have a lovely curry on Valentines Day. Lewis has had 3 weeks off school this month due to the trip to England and his 2 week half term. (This is when all the French go skiing; even the school arrange trips to the slopes)

I Ordered a swing, slide and wooden play house for Lewis as going to build a play area for him and any guests that come to stay.

Feb was also our 1st visit from a group of bikers on tour from Paris to Dakar. (9 of them this month) Organised by a company called kudu expeditions,(see www.kuduexpeditions.com)  we didn’t know it but we were to see a lot more of them over next few months.

 

March 2008

We purchased a new (I say new it’s actually an antique) great big proper farm house kitchen table with benches. Will go with my new farm house designer kitchen….the one in my dreams.

The radiators were delivered for the new central heating. Not being fitted yet as to cold to take out the fire and fit a new one with back boiler.

Spring cleaned and decorated the living room ready for the summer season, nearly five months pregnant but still feeling good and managing to do all my jobs.

Collected a host of papers from the Maries office. We would like to convert a barn to new accommodation for us and a gite. I would then be able to rent out in the summer for self catering accommodation (not this summer but maybe next) I have found out I do not need an architect but have to do lots of scaled drawings and maps. I am doing this myself to save money.

 

April 2008

The bikers revisit us on the return trip, Dakar to Paris, again 9 blokes for bed, breakfast and evening meal.

We have had some nice hot days this month so I painted the walls in the back garden to make it all look clean and fresh for summer. Dad painted the walls on the front.

I spend many a day in the barn with chalk and a tape measure on my hands and knees, not good in my condition. Then many a night in the kitchen doing scaled drawings of what the extension will look like inside and out. I also have to do maps of the area to scale. It hasn’t been too hard but just takes time. I am actually enjoying planning what it will look like.

 

May 2008

Tax month AAAARRRRGGGGGHHHHHHH. In France May is the month of taxes and bank holidays (this month they also threw in a couple of strikes here and there)

So it is the 1st time I have had to fill in tax forms. Luckily a news paper called connexions (very informative for expats in France by the way, or those considering a move here see www.connexionfrance.com ) had a special pull out that had a detailed account of how to fill in the 2042, 2042c and as I found out in our case the 2047. Also luckily for me my French friend was going to the ‘hotel de finances’ with her forms so I tagged along and she translated. I ended up being sent away with another form and told I needed to bring evidence of Brian’s wages that he was earning in the UK. What has that anything to do with what I pay living in France?????? An appointment for us to return with all the correct documents was made.

Brian leaves after a week for the last time. I will not see him for about 6 weeks or more (July 9th he is due to return for good) His career break has been authorised and we now have 3 years as of 1st August to make our new life work or head back to our old jobs in the UK.

The new fire with back boiler for the central heating system arrived but, stored in the garage till the plumber can come to fit the radiators. Ordered some fencing for the pool. After a visit from SMDEA last year we were told that we had to have pool security fencing around the steps with a self closing, locking gate. I sent out several emails to different companies but was dealt with most promptly and professionally by David Britten at Du Toit. See www.dutoit.fr the site is in English also and David was very helpful. The fencing was not the cheapest but he was true to his word and everything was delivered when said and the after care was also good. I can recommend him.

Still not heard anything about the swing, slide and house for Lewis so we go to the store to find out they don’t have the house and can’t get it, and just didn’t bother to ring us about the swing and slide. Sometimes I could scream, I am sure this wouldn’t happen in the UK. To top it off the same shop charged me 124 euros to much for some decking I brought, I would never have known but needed an extra piece, when questioned as the price as was so cheap for the one plank realised the mistake from the day before and spent an hour (in my terrible and limited French) trying to sort it out. I did get my refund, hurrah for persistence.

I have lost track of when Lewis is at school and when he is not. Had to check the calendar every night as last year as i took him to school when it was a bank holiday, did not want to make same mistake this year, pregnancy brain is in full gear now, you ladies out there will know what I mean.

Also this month we have been packed out with guests, which has been great!!!!   

 

 

June 2008

Another busy month for us here at Maison Famille. Play area completed, slide, swings, trampoline and baby stuff all in place with a nice soft landing of bark.

Pool Fencing and decking all complete, just need a visit from SMDEA in July to make sure it is all approved.

Central heating being fitted, even though the beginning of June is cold and have had rain like I have never seen. So jumpers still being worn as now have no fire.

Have had my 1st French hair cut in the local hairdressers at La Bastide. I haven’t been to a salon for years as my sister is a hairdresser and has always done my hair. Unfortunately she doesn’t live in France and not due to see her for months, can’t carry on blowing my fringe out of the way every few minutes.

 I revisit the ‘hotel de finances’ for our appointment but the whole building have gone on strike for 2 days and didn’t think to cancel any appointments gggrrrrrrrr

A few days later I return after making a new appointment. Good news though my bill will be smallish and nothing to pay for Brian’s earnings in UK (thank god)

I am now 8 months pregnant and have slowed down to nearly a stop. I have such a big bump I waddle every where now.

Just to end the month on a high note. During the night of Thursday 26th June my waters broke….aaaahhhhhh a month early. No contractions but thought it best to get to the hospital. Two days go buy with no pains so I was induced with drugs via a drip. Drip started at 11hrs, Amelia Rose Bilby 2760 grammes was in my arms by 1325hrs (the French drugs must have been good stuff) My husband was still in the UK so missed the birth, mum was busy with the guests and looking after Lewis so my friend Laura stepped in and held my hand through the pain. A 5 day rest in hospital with time for Amelia to establish feeding and put on weight, then arrive home to get straight back to work. I here you all say “your supposed to rest after giving birth”, but 5 days on my backside was enough, it drove me mad not being able to do anything. So taking it easy but loving being home with my little family. Just need the daddy to get here now and all will be well in my world………..



Our first Year (2007)
3 March, 2008 Author: Terina Bilby
Jan 5th – At 730pm myself and all our family and friends gathered at the Albion Centre in our home town of Ilkeston for a farewell party. It was also my younger sisters 30th birthday so we combined the two events.

I have to say I have never cried so much in one evening. I didn’t have doubts about we were about to do but I realised how many friends we had and how badly I would miss them all. I felt like I was saying goodbye forever. Of course I wasn’t and I have seen many of them since.

Jan 6th- No turning back now, the 45 foot lorry arrived at 1030am and we started to load our two houses onto the lorry ready for shipping to France. George the driver was great and I would recommend his services to anyone. www.georgewhiteeuropean.co.uk 

It was a miserable cold day and to top it off it rained on all our card board boxes. We finished loading all our belongings by 430pm. That night we sat on the floor with my brother and his family, my sister and her husband, my mum and dad and ate our last take away curry.
Jan 8th- At 1040hrs dad and Brian were all packed up in the car with the three family dogs and towing the caravan. They were driving to France ahead of me, mum and Lewis. My Mamma, dads mum, made it just in time to say goodbye to her son, she hadn’t made it to the party and we feared we wouldn’t see her at all. We waved them off knowing we would see them in a couple of days. It was still hard though, I think I was still emotional from the party, saying goodbye to people was the hardest thing I had had to do, up to that point.
Jan 10th - Me, Lewis and mum got on the plane at east midlands airport to fly to France. I didn’t know when I would next see England again.
We landed at airport about 11am. We were picked up by Brian and had about an hours drive to pick up dad and the caravan. After that we had another hours drive to our home. We dumped the caravan, mum, dad the dogs and Lewis and headed for the bank to pick up the deposit for the house. We were supposed to be at the Notaire for 1400hrs but arrived late at around 1430hrs due to the bank being closed till 2 pm. (this we were to discover is the norm for France, everywhere closes at 1200 and reopens at 2pm.

Eventually after much paper work and signing we got back to the house at 1730hrs. We entered the house that was all shut up. For my dad it was the first time he had seen it. The place was freezing and we had no heating. We attempted to light a fire but the wood was damp and we were not prepared with anything else. We had some tea and then went to bed, it was the warmest place to be. Still I tried to remain positive things will be better in the morning.

11th Jan - George arrived with our belongings in the lorry. It did not take as long to off load as it had done to load. A tractor came along the track beside our house were George had parked. He tried to move the lorry but because we had taken out all the weight he got stuck. What a sight a 45 foot curtain sided lorry stuck up a lane. After a lot of manoeuvring and a nice farmer later George did get out.

The next few weeks were unpacking boxes, getting a telephone and internet connection sorted out, getting wood as we were freezing, all things I say with ease now but at the time and our few language skills was a nightmare at the time.

On January 23rd it snowed, it came down while we were in the supermarket, it settled and was 6 inch deep within an hour. We got home from the shops only half an hour away to find just a dusting of snow that melted within half hour.

The weather where we are is very strange. We found it could be minus 8 in the mornings but by lunch time you were in t shirts because it was so hot and this was January. We had a couple of days were it was minus10 and didn’t go above minus 4. Our pipes froze and I have never worn so many clothes, I could barely move.

 

February was miserable, it was wet and very cold, and the house was freezing and didn’t seem to warm up even though we had worked out how to light a fire got wood. I wasn’t sure I could live like this. The first doubts were creeping in.
Then came the time to say goodbye to Brian. He had to go back to England and work. He would commute out to France for a week every month. I thought it was hard saying goodbye to friends but I found it near on impossible to say bye to Brian. We had never been apart in all the years we had been together. A lump comes to my throat just thinking about it.
Still I survived, just, Lewis and the house kept me busy.
Lewis who was 3 yrs at the time started school in The February. A French school were his teachers did not speak English. He was to go every morning apart from Wednesdays as no school in France on Wednesdays. It took a few traumatic weeks
for him and me, but he eventually stopped crying when I left him. A year on he is in school full time and loves it. I drop him off at 9am and pick him up at 5pm. He has friends and I have met some nice mums.  
Our web site was up and running by this time and we took 3 bookings which was really encouraging.
 
By the middle of March the weather was a lot warmer, we had our first guests. Three Dutch men who just pulled up at the gate and wanted a bed for the night plus an evening meal. I was really nervous and wanted everything to be right. It went like clock work and they really enjoyed there stay.
 
April was a good month the guests were no rolling in and more enquiries were being made via the web site and through some advertising companies we had chosen to go with.
 
May was a busy month for Guests and things were ticking along nicely. We had met two more couple who were English who lived in the village, they were a big help to us with information and translation on certain occasions. Then came the big blow. A letter from the Marie arrived telling me I had to get a new septic tank sorted out, and that I had to do by the end on June. That was just over a month away. I went to over drive looking up on the internet what I had to do and trying to sort things out but it was impossible. You cannot get anything done in a month in France, especially when you don’t speak the lingo.
 
June was another good month for guests.  Work started on our barn roof. It leaked and needed insulating and tiles replacing. We hoped to convert it in time to more rooms or a gite. The septic tank saga continued and I was summonsed to the Marie’s office, to give an update. An English lady went with me and explained what I was trying to do. My research had found I needed soil samples, maps, work permits and hole host of stuff, I didn’t know were to start and was terrified of upsetting the Marie. Everyone had said how important they were and I knew he could shut me down if I did not comply.

Turns out he was really nice, said I did not need any of the stuff I mentioned as it had all been done for the village as a whole. He showed me maps and said my soil drainage was good, he made a phone call and told me I would get a visit from SMDEA (I call them the water police now as they are responsible for over seeing everything to do with water) They came and checked out the garden, discussed with Marie and some workers I found about what was needed. I was then told not to do anything until till I received a plan of works. Easy I thought…….

 
On 4th July Lewis broke up from school for 8 weeks of holiday. The guests were still coming and we had got nicely into a routine of cooking and cleaning. Our guest book was full of encouraging comments so I felt we must be doing something right.
 
August flew by, although I still had not heard anything from the SMDEA. August was fete month and every village held one, also in August everything (businesses) closes down for 2 weeks as the French take there holidays.
 
September and Lewis was back to school. The Marie wanted an update so I told him I was still waiting for the plan of works from SMDEA. A few days later a new man from SMDEA arrived and said I would not be able to have a soak way septic tank as there was not enough room on the front garden and there were too many trees. I was told I needed a micro station. So a few weeks later a man arrived with a bunch of info and measured up for a micro station. Shock horror, the 6,000 euros I thought it would cost for a septic tank turned into 17,000 euros for this all singing all dancing station that would be suitable for the bed and breakfast as you could alter how it worked to accommodate the number of guests.

What choice did I have????!!!!

 

In October mum and dad went back to England for a visit, Brian came to France and it was the first time we had been alone as a family for nearly a year and half. (We had lived with my parents for a year while house hunting) We fitted new double glazed windows in the kitchen and a new double glazed door to help stove off the cold. I wasn’t looking forward to another cold winter.  The Micro station was put in, and the Marie was pleased. He probably thought thank god the English have done as they are told (I found out that someone in the village had been complaining to him and he was put under some pressure to get it sorted)

 

In November I made my first trip back to the UK. I spent two busy weeks catching up with friends. I also found out I was pregnant. Oh my god, that I was not expecting or planning. How was I going to have a baby and run a business while my husband was still working in the UK. I can’t speak enough of the language to even say I was pregnant, let alone give birth in France. My initial reaction was to run back to the UK for the birth, but then how impractical, Lewis would have to be taken out of school, you cannot fly after 6 months, and I would still need to see a doctor before then, how would the b and b run without me?????

I did clam down and am now under a great Gynaecologist and have a scan every month, the care so far has been great. I couldn’t have done it without a great friend of mine though, she is French but speaks English. She is brilliant and has helped me no end, I owe her a lot.

 

December saw electric radiators fitted on the top floor as it was cold and any guests would have been scared away, never to come back. Trouble is ever since we have had them fitted we cannot have many other electrical items on at the same time or the electric trips out. A common problem in France it seems, not enough power coming into the house. Something I still have to sort out. A new window in the roof for room one, with some insulation and plasterboard put up.
Christmas came and went, our first in France, different to what we had at home as not so much family around. Still we had friends over and a good day was had by all. Boxing Day we all went for a walk and had a buffet tea with guests over.
New Year was spent at some friends although Lewis and I could not make it till midnight.
 
 
 





"Notre but en tant que famille est de s'assurer que vos vacances avec nous demeureront une mémoire très plaisante pendant des années à come."


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