Monday 12 August 2013

August: A typical week of our new life

Monday, 5 August
Well, here we are, getting down to the usual routine. And what is that at the moment? Well, having spent what seemed like the whole weekend on Skype for Worldcon, followed by writing up summaries of the discussions, and John desperately trying to get the new website for Worldcon finished, we haven't really been getting up to anything much. 

The routine is settling down into me digging in the garden for about an hour before the sun gets too warm and then cutting down hedges before starting up the Barbie about 1 p.m. John is usually working in the gite to finish off the kitchen during this time. Remember, we don't do early mornings, so get up about 9ish, and by the time we've had breakfast it's gone 10 before we start work.  As an aside: I love having all our meals out in the garden - including breakfast. It's not just the weather makes it easier, but also the physical location - the garden table is right outside the kitchen door and so it.) Then we stop for lunch until about 2-3 p.m. and John gets onto the computer for the rest of the day and evening. Me, well, after playing cards on the computer, and possibly going out and doing some more work in the garden, I'm not sure what I do, so I think I will start today to list exactly what I'm doing.

Today is slightly different since it's raining (pretty spectacular torrential rain we get here). (Note: must check the pigeon in the guttering is OK - yes, appears to be at the moment.) I came in at 12.30, made a coffee and started doing this whilst John is still in the gite kitchen.

God, that rain's really heavy and been going on for over half an hour now - I feel really sorry for that poor pigeon. Still, I have noticed one difference in my reaction now - instead of thinking "Oh bugger" my first thought was "Well, that should help keep the well water topped up!" At the moment we are being very eco because we are only using water from the well in the garden. No, not going each morning to collect a bucket full! There is a pump which takes the water automatically into the gite kitchen from where it is pumped throughout both houses. It means we don't pay any water rates since the waste all went into a septic tank. We have a liability to get the house connected to mains sewage by December, and then we'll obviously have to pay. If/when the well dries up (which I assume it will, because the main river in the town - L'Autise - dries up. When we first came to see the house last September it was completely dry.) we'll have to start using mains water which is again paid for by usage over here.

13.30 Just about ready to start lunch now - listening to Round the Horn on Radio 4 Extra if John's ready. And I can continue playing cards!!

Sad News - Tuesday

Noticed this morning that the pigeon wasn't in the gutter any more. Then noticed a small dead chick on the patio. What a shame!! Poor mother/father had sat there in the pouring rain and hot sunshine protecting the eggs, for it to all end in tears. Or else the chick was born and the mother/father decided it had had enough and chucked it out! We'll have to get up there some time to get rid of the nest. It'll be interesting to look if the water still pours over the gutter next time it rains.


Sunday
Yes, well, daily entries was a bit of an optimistic target - but if you don't aim high, you'll end up even lower (or something like that!).

What have we done? - the kitchen, the kitchen, the kitchen, Worldcon, Worldcon, Worldcon.  Today due to finish the last of the painting of the kitchen walls, and 'perhaps' do the doors. But the aim is to have a 'finished' kitchen by the end of today. Finished is in inverted commas because the end near all the water filter and softener gear cannot be finished until we have it all looked at by the company that installs it. Until then John's using bottled water in his Ricard because he's not too confident about the quality of the well water.

We've started cleaning out the main bedroom in the gite in readiness for it to be painted since that's where we'll have to live once the electricians start on the main house. That should be 16th September and they anticipate it will take a month to rewire the whole thing. So mid/end October we should be able to start on the main bathroom and hopefully our Christmas present to ourselves will be to be able to live in the main house!!

Went to the Saturday market in Fontenay le Comte yesterday morning - they have a good, though small, covered market which deals mainly in meat & fish, though there are artisanal bakery stalls. Outdoors there are all the veg stalls, and surprisingly a couple of Chinese food stalls. Not something we expected to see in France at all, since Indian and Chinese restaurants are very rare. There is also a British pie maker!!! It was really weird the first time we went there, there I was trying my broken French, and he turned out to be British. Well, I knew the company was - Markey's Pork 'n' Pies! -  but that didn't mean the person serving would be. We had a fantastic salmon & asparagus pie from him (though expensive - €6!!) and have now tried one of his pastis - cheese, onion & leek.

Decided to have a bit of a rest and so no major work in the kitchen or the garden. About 7 p.m. there was a knock on the door, and three people were there, asking if they could stay the night, and be given an evening meal! I couldn't quite understand all of it, but there is something going on where people walk around the Vendee doing special exercises. I think it's for charity but I'm not sure. There are two people in a team, and a third person who is the referee to ensure they don't cheat. Anyway, this weekend it was in the Marais Poitevin, and on Saturday finished here in Nieul, so they were all looking for somewhere to stay (about 50 of them, from the numbers we saw down by the Abbaye). We explained that we were in the process of redoing the house and there was no shower, only mattresses on the floor, and they'd  have to use the kitchen sink for washing in the morning since the upstairs sink, though working, is disgusting!! They came in and saw we were not joking, and decided that they'd see if they could find somewhere else, but would use us if there was no alternative!

They also asked that we not take anyone else in in the meantime - which we did when another 3 people knocked on the door about 30 mins later. We went out for a walk to the bottle bank, and when we came back found a note saying they'd found somewhere, but could we put up the other three we'd turned away!! They obviously had met up and explained the situation, because when this 2nd three arrived, they said they'd found somewhere where they could have a shower, and an evening meal, but could not sleep there! So we put the mattresses down on the floor and they stayed the night.  They said the Mairie was putting on breakfast for all the 'contestants' and the people who put them up, next day, but they did not know where! They had a sealed envelope that they were not allowed to open until 7.15 a.m. on Sunday, which would tell them where they had to go and by when, and what their challenge for the day was. We declined the invitation for breakfast - we don't do 7.30 a.m. unless it's really necessary!!

I woke up just before 7 a.m. and could hear the pump going in the garden (every time some water is used, the pump in the well refills the water reservoir) so they were obviously up. Hope they managed to sleep last night since we had the 'dogs choir' going on until after midnight. I can now see why in the circular from the Mairie, it mentioned not only when you could not use lawnmower's etc because of the noise, but also specifically mentioned dogs shouldn't be allowed to  bark in the gardens. We have a collection here, and when one starts, it gets all the others going! I don't know how the owners can put up with the noise, unless it starts because the owners aren't there. We have a noisy Rottweiler opposite our house, but it only barks when someone walks past, which isn't very often. And we found if you used Cesar Millan's advice (the Dog Whisperer) and just ignored him, looking the other way and continuing en route, he shut up!

OK, so that's used up an hour of my time, it's now noon so I'd better get into the kitchen to do the last coat of paint on the walls before we stop for lunch!

Monday, 12th

The week's up and THE KITCHEN IS DONE!!! (well, almost, I still haven't painted the doors and their frames, but that doesn't really count considering what we have done.)  And I've managed to keep to my weekly schedule - let's hope this is the start of something . . .





Thursday 1 August 2013

Good Intentions

8 July 2013
There I was, all keyed up to write a regular blog so I could read it in my old age and relive all the exciting things we do (and in my dreams be a 21st century Samuel Pepys - a female version, of course. Hah, what dreams!!). Then life got in the way so I didn't record any of the important things that have happened recently. Still, never one to be put off, I thought I'd start now. It's helped by the fact that the days are so warm here that it's impossible to work or sit out in the garden from about 12 noon until early evening! At first the afternoons were taken up by watching Wimbledon and the Grand Prix, but now it's only the Tour de France which doesn't need as much concentration - and today it's not even on since it's a rest day. Now there's nothing to stop me, apart from playing computer games, but I'm determined not to let myself get into that rut.

But what?? Here I am just one paragraph in and we're off to Brico Depo to buy the remainder of the things that we need to complete the gite kitchen.

Main house is 2 sections on left,
gite last on right
Isn't it amazing how one develops a 'code' to help identify different things - we do it all the time. In this house we've bought in the Vendee, there are so many rooms it's vital to be identify which one we are talking about . . . so we a have the main house, which has the main bedroom ('our bedroom'),  spare bedroom, studio, kitchen, lounge, salon, pantry, boiler room and wine cave. The attached smaller house (although still 3 bedrooms like the main house, but smaller) we intend to let out as a gite in the summer months, and that has a gite kitchen, gite lounge etc.


27 July
Boy, that trip to Brico Depo was a long one, it took 19 days! So, what has happened to keep me from the blog? Well, playing cards on the computer has taken quite a few hours, or even days! But NOT TODAY!! So, what has happened over the 2.5 weeks? Lots. Used to hear about people who basically had no life once they'd retired - work had been their reason for being. Not for John and me. For the first time in our lives we can make decisions that are totally our own - it sounds awful to say, but with both sets of parents dead, there is nothing holding us back, we are free to do whatever we want. And believe me it is good to be able to have a totally free choice for the first time in your life - it's only taken me 62 years!

Gite kitchen as we originally saw it
Having got all the electrics replaced in the gite, we bought the kitchen units and set ourselves a schedule which would mean we'd have the whole thing finished for when Dave and Emma came round for a barbecue. They are the couple who own the chambres d'hotes we stayed in whilst looking for the house and then during the buying process - so they've lived this expedition with us. They also know exactly what we're going through in the renovations, since their house was a derelict tannery when they bought it.

We hired a van for three days and had a quick visit up to Le Bourg Dun to pick up the washing machine, some more kitchen stuff and our double bed. (A 'quick' visit means mainly spending hours on the motorways. It takes about six hours to drive from here (including stops) on the motorway, and costs about €45 each way. What appears a good thing in France - no road tax - is not quite so good when you do a lot of motorway driving. The downside consequence is that most of the major motorways are toll roads to raise money for maintenance which makes the trips quite expensive for us. Travelling on the ordinary roads, however, would add about another two hours, so difficult when doing just a three day trip.) Hopefully this means we can have a proper kitchen (not just surviving with a microwave and a barbecue) and also have a spare bed for visitors - though having a bathroom in the gite would be another prerequisite!

Well, we didn't make that deadline. Though it didn't matter too much since poor Emma fell down the stairs and broke her wrist and jaw, so they had to cancel anyway. (Actually a good thing since I realised after that we didn't have any decent crockery!). I did say that it would have been easier and definitely less painful just to pretend they had no time if they didn't want to see us!!

1 August
At least the gaps between my comments are getting shorter - pretty soon they may even be daily!

Following the accident, we arranged another date with Dave and Emma to come round for coffee (Emma can't eat anything solid yet) which was Tuesday, and we were using that as a new deadline to get the kitchen done - guess what!


Today had roast chicken for lunch!! At least the bottom units, oven and hob are working now, so hopefully we'll have a fully operational kitchen early next week. Then we'll go back up to Normandy for a few days to get the work progressed there, and bring back the rest of the kitchen 'stuff' to fill all the cupboards here.



August schedule is:
  1. Finish the gite kitchen.
  2. Get the gite upstairs bathroom finished (new everything, including plumbing) so we can live there in September when the electrics and heating is being done in the main house.
  3. Take out all the asbestos cement panels in the main house in readiness for the electricians and plumbers. Luckily the rubbish tip at Fontenay le Comte actually accepts asbestos! That is very rare, and we thought we'd have to leave them stacked up in the back yard. This wouldn't have been as bad as it sounds since they are OK so long as they don't start to break up.
  4. Put in a shower room on the ground floor of the gite - not vital since there is a downstairs toilet already, but it would be nice to have all the messy work finished. If not, we'll just have to keep the door shut when Mike and Pat Meara and the Skeltons come for an overnight stay in early September.
Not much really, probably spend most of the time sunbathing in the garden!



Interesting Things No.1

We had torrential rain one evening with rain pouring out of the guttering. Thought we had a problem till we saw the pigeon who has made a nest right next to the downspout. Hope the eggs/youngsters don't get washed away! Not the safest place to nest.