Archive for the ‘Places’ Category

Christmas markets in Belfast compared to France

Christmas markets in BelfastThis year, Belfast has put on a Christmas market with a continental theme in front of the City Hall. One of the things that we found a little peculiar about it is that it actually has more French stalls than the Christmas markets in Perpignan. Of course, it also has substantial representations from Germany, Italy and even China. That’s something that you don’t get in France. For the most part, it’s either French or it isn’t there.

That applies to pretty much everything in fact. In a French supermarket, you get French cheese. In a UK supermarket you get UK cheese, Swiss cheese, German cheese and, of course, French cheese. Whereas even the largest French supermarket has only a tiny “ethnic” foods section, a typical UK supermarket doesn’t have an ethnic section at all because the food in the aisles is from everywhere. There are hardly any Australians living in Belfast yet it’s possible to buy Vegemite in Tesco; in France you’d need a really major supermarket to stock it.

Some would say: why shouldn’t it be French food in France? Well, obviously you would expect to have more French food in France than anything else but in every other country in the world you seem to get a reasonable representation of a selection of other cultures. The closed mentality in France makes that the rare exceptions to the “France only” rule very pale in comparison to the equivalent elsewhere.

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.

Merry Christmas from France

Merry Christmas from BelfastAndrew Stewart's 80th birthdayAs you’ll know if you’ve been following our saga, we were off to Belfast to see my Dad on his 80th birthday.

Of course, as we were there pretty close to Christmas it was a good chance to do some Christmas shopping and even more so as we had, in theory, up to 100kg luggage allowance between us. The usual flight delays meant that it was after midnight on the 11th before we reached the Great Southern Hotel at Dublin airport. Definitely an excellent airport hotel for a late night arrival as they have a 24 hour shuttle service (most of the airport shuttles only operate up to about 9pm or so which is far from clear from their websites).

Next morning it was off to Belfast though with an early lunch in the airport as the bus trip takes getting on for three hours. Had it been France, there’d have been no lunch as, aside from the likes of McDonalds, the restaurants just won’t serve you lunch outside noon to 2pm.

Our late arrival meant that we ended up getting Dad’s birthday presents on the morning of his birthday before having a very nice meal in the Jurys Inn in the city centre that evening.

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.

Non-standard computing: the Sharp Zaurus

Sharp SL-5500 ZaurusAfter using Windows for so long, you get used to having to load new drivers for every new piece of hardware that you pick up but that’s not the case for other operating systems.

For instance, we were heading off to the UK for a while I thought that it would be an idea to get a little modem for my Sharp SL-5500 Zaurus. Anyway, a quite hunt round e-bay turned up maybe a half-dozen compact-flash modems. Would they work though?

A quick search on google revealed next to nothing about connecting such things to the Zaurus. Anyway, I figured that the HP modem would be pretty standard and at £5 wasn’t a massive outlay either.

So, what do you need to do to install it? Nothing, just plug it in and off it goes. That’s how Linux handles such things. So no need for the CD that came with it to add the Windows drivers.

Of course, as we’re in France, it’s not quite so simple to start surfing. We used to use tiscali as a backup dial-up service but they’ve now ditched that so I’d to sign up with freesurf before I could get surfing with the Zaurus.

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.

What happens to the childrens’ English when you move to France?

The vast majority of people don’t seem to consider what will happen to their childrens’ English when they move to France. They seem to just assume that they’ll grow up bilingual without any effort. After all, they’ll learn English at home and French at school.

That’s not what actually happens though.

In practice, children end up speaking the English of about an 8 or 9 year old if they’ve moved here prior to that age. For those older (and this includes adults!), their English basically stops at the level it was when they moved to France.

Surely I can’t include adults in that statement? Well, yes. Think about it. If you’d moved here even 10 years ago, chances are you’d not know the English words for Internet, e-mail, Child Tax Credit, etc. So, yes, your English stops developing too.

Don’t forget the education that children here won’t get. If they move over between 11 and 18 then they won’t learn the English versions of all those words that they’d have picked up during their GCSE and A-levels. In fact, if they went to age 16 here and tried to move back to do A-levels, they would have a very restricted range of subjects that they’d be able to do. History? No chance: they’d be taught that Nelson was the enemy for instance. Geography: would they know that the Etats-Unis was America? English: no chance, naturally, as they’d have been taught English as a foreign language. In fact, apart from French, it’s doubtful if they would be able to do A-levels.

The effect is much more noticeable in younger children. Try talking to someone who was born here to English parents. Unless their parents have done something about it, chances are that you’d find it very difficult to speak to them. Such children are rarely fluent in English.

What can you do about it though?

Up to age 11 it’s fairly easy. Just get the likes of the Ladybird books and read to them and let them watch UK TV. That should keep them fairly much up with the English that they’d have spoken if they’d have remained in the UK.

Beyond that, it’s much harder. I suspect you’d need to send them to a bilingual school (note: international schools are quite different).

Anyway, something to think about. Most people don’t get as far as thinking about it so you’re way ahead already.

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.

Christmas shopping in Belfast

We’ve been planning on going over to Belfast for my Dad’s 80th birthday for a while now so no more FP’s next week as that’s where we’ll be.

As Ryanair consider anyone over 2 years old as an adult, we’ve managed to amass a potential 100kg luggage allowance between the four of us. Not that we could actually carry quite that much! However, what we’ve been doing over the last few weeks is to use my parents house as a delivery point for Amazon and Ebay purchases to save on postage so it must be something like Santa’s grotto by now!

Wendy’s planning on taking over an empty suitcase to bring at least some of that stuff back but that’s not even counting the stuff we’ll probably pick up whilst we’re there.

We’re still looking for books & magazines for the little guys, so if you’ve anything suitable around the 2 to 6 age range, let me know as we should be able to pick it up while we’re there. Wendy wouldn’t say no to girly magazines either…. Heat, Cosmo, Hello, etc.

Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.
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