Archive for the ‘Society’ Category
The english couple
If nothing else, creating the blog version of this little newsletter has upped the number of readers somewhat. We had a couple of hundred folk looking at it in the couple of days after I put it on.
We had an English couple with us all week as part of a mini-package with breakfast, lunch, evening meals and transfers just about every day which is certainly a lot more profitable than people just staying the night but definitely creates a whole lot more work. The days just disappeared on us and we hardly got anything done.
As a result of them, it took us three goes to make it to a meeting with the bank manager. Still, at least he’s now got a chunk of stuff that needs doing for us. We still can’t accept Amex or Diners Club (“deeners cloob” here) as the applications haven’t been processed yet which isn’t really surprising as banks here are incredibly slow. They’re also about 30 years behind the times in most respects. As a small example of this, Credit Agricole updated their computer system a few months ago and just decided to start charging all their customers EUR 5 per month just for having an account simply because the new computer system would let them do that. That’s in addition to the EUR 40 that they already charged for a debit card on the accounts. So now we’ve to pay EUR 100 just to have an ordinary account. Another example of backwardness is that they’ve just started to issue credit cards (yes, really: 30 years after the rest of the world!). Naturally, they come with a charge (EUR 30 or so), penal interest (17% which is pretty high considering that Eurozone rates are somewhat lower than the UK) and a MAXIMUM limit of EUR 8000 (about £5000) which is lower than the minimum limits on some UK cards: I don’t think he believed me when I said that some UK cards have maximums up to £50,000 on ordinary cards (and those kind of limits are definitely achieveable too whereas the EUR 8000 max of Credit Agricole is rather difficult to achieve). Oh, and the “overdraft limit” is only applicable during the month ie you need to clear your overdraft each month so it’s really just to cover bills arriving before your salary.
We’re intending to update two rooms each year so that we don’t end up having to replace the stuff in all the rooms in a few years time (ie we’ll update the whole hotel every five years or so). Normally we’d have done that in the new year but the big end of year booking is forcing us to bring that forward a few months so we were off bedroom shopping during the week. Anyway, first to get the refresh is our proposed “honeymoon suite” which will have a really nice set of furniture before Christmas and we’re also replacing one knackered bed in a room which we’ve yet to use but expect to be using regularly next year as it’ll be our only non-ensuite room when we create the little suite by adding a connecting door between the other non-ensuite room and one of our double rooms. We weren’t even going to bother offering the non-ensuite rooms but they’re very popular with the people booking through the Ryanair/FlyBE system.
Nothing doing with the vaccinations. We went along to the clinic but they decided that both James & John were running a temperature and therefore couldn’t be given the vaccines so it’s back in early December to try again. The reason that they were pretty warm (as were me & Wendy) is that it was 29C that day. They don’t allow for people not being used to the high temperatures here. When John was born they insisted on putting three layers of clothes on him (including one rug type effort) plus blankets on top. I’m sure you’ve heard that babies can’t sweat. Normally that’s true but they put so much on him that the sweat was dripping off him!
We’ve one of those google alerts set up to keep an eye on the bridge developments so we can see that it’s being quite widely reported in the UK. I think the folk in Millau are incredibly optimistic when they think that people will come to their town to see the bridge. A fantastic feat of engineering, maybe. Worth a special trip to see, no. At the very least they’re going to see a heap of their shops closing over the next few years.
It’s a public holiday here tomorrow (Monday) so we’re intending to head off to Spain for the day to stock up on a few things. The English family ate their way through a lot of beans on toast. You might think that’s a cheap meal. Not here: beans are really expensive. So, we’re going to try and get a box of tins of beans in Spain (they aren’t quite at UK prices but are definitely a lot cheaper than in France). Also, Wendy has fallen in love with “sillic bang” which cleans up chrome like new and has made quite an improvement in the appearance of our bathroom fittings.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Nudist colony
You’ll probably be quite amazed to find us listed as number four at Take a Break Nudist Retreats ! Haven’t pulled in any punters from that site just yet though.
We have just been accepted by the Ryanair activity breaks site so are busy working on some packages to put onto it. Most likely the first will be a Christmas short break, so if the in-fighting re the location of the Christmas do is still ongoing, you may as well plonk Mas Camps into the fray! Any suggestions folks?
Some folk were asking about an archive of these little mails. How does something like Mas Camps News grab you? I haven’t added them all yet but should get up to date later this week.
We’ve been busy sorting out our “to do” list for the period up to next summer (so it’s a biggie!). We’ve now got more than enough on it to keep us out of trouble for quite a while but at least it’s giving us a chance to see that things are moving ahead.
One thing that’s really going to feature bigtime in the activities for the next couple of months is a massive booking by a French family. They’ve booked the entire building for the evening of the 31st December through to lunchtime on the 2nd with all meals. We’ve not nailed down the final menu but have just received a EUR 600 deposit cheque so I guess we better get going on the planning. They’re even using a couple of rooms that we never planned on using so we need to tidy those up a bit.
James & John are getting their first French injections tomorrow afternoon. No problems with MMR vs separate injections over here: you just ask for them and they give you the prescription to get them. You’ve to pay for the vaccines that you get in the chemist but £15 for three is something of a bargain as compared to £80 for just the measles one in the UK. Those with kids who are interested in the three vaccine option could probably manage to do it on holiday over here for much the same price (the NHS would refund the 70% that normal French health plans refund; you can claim the refund here or, more easily if you’ve not got a French bank account, when you get back home). There’s no waiting time either: in the UK we were on the measles list for about six months; here we just popped into the chemist and could have even had the injection the same day if we’d organised the appointment that way.
We’ve not forgotten about the deportation issue but there haven’t been any developments on that front lately.
I see that “the bridge” is being opened by Chirac on December 17th. It’s part of the Paris-Barcelona highway but unfortunately they’ve not even started on the bit between Beziers and Perpignan so effectively the traffic jam will move from Millau (and boy is it dreadful there!) to around Beziers. Still, at least the roads around Beziers are considerably better than the awful mess through Millau.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Deportation!!!
We got an “interesting” call from the mairie on Thursday relating information which the prefecture (county council) had related to them…
One: I need a Titre de Séjour (work permit).
Two: Wendy will be getting deported in January unless she provides them with a long stay visa because otherwise she is here illegally.
As you may have gathered from “one”, the prefecture are over 20 years out of date with European law. Anyway, I asked how to apply for it. They want passport, proof of address, proof of business registration and proof of income. That also shows that they are a good 10 years out of date with French law: it’s illegal for them to require me to provide proof of income (just as well really as I can’t get any of the documents that they were looking for). They’re also a good while out of date with their own procedures as the week before they sent me a document saying that Titres de Séjour are no longer issued for European citizens as from last November. We’ll be off to the mairie tomorrow with our little printout from the European Commission (yet again) pointing all this out to them.
They’re none too familiar with the visa rules either. The French foreign ministry say that we never needed a visa for Wendy as she’s related to a European citizen (ie James) and can stay as long as she likes without a visa. No, it doesn’t matter that James is only two because they don’t ask the age of the European citizen on their forms.
Yet another one of those times when we need to sit down and consider the plus points of them knowing diddly about foreigners living here.
Weather-wise, I’ve had to wear the long trousers two days in a row now. Only for the mornings and evenings though as the “shorts weather” kicks in around 10am.
We’ve got a tentative booking for 22 adults, 3 kids and 4 babies for the December 31st and January 1st to include all meals. Our prices mustn’t be too far off as they’ve given us a big list of names and the rooms that they need. It’ll be ALL of the rooms, including three that we don’t normally count. I think we’ll need a holiday afterwards to recover! They’re more into the new year thing here than Christmas so we’ve not had any enquiries re Christmas, though that may change as we’re hoping to run a Christmas short break throughout December with a traditional British Christmas dinner/lunch (so, if you’re still fighting over the location of the Christmas lunch, you could always stir Mas Camps into the pot!).
Arnold
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Back home
Last week was seriously exhausting!
I’m glad that I arrived back in Belfast the day before the exam. No way was I awake at exam time on Wednesday!
You’d think that we’d be all organised for the exams as that was the third one. Nope. Well, we were all organised but it all fell apart on the day.
Jackie: worth reading for an OU newbie…. The OU are VERY structured in everything. So, when it comes to organising the oral they do it in a very structured way. You get four passages in French a month or so before the big day and on the day itself they give you one of those to present. The selection is supposed to be random but, as noted, the OU are very structured. Sooo, what they do is give the examiner a pack of the four articles and instruct them to hand them out in a clockwise manner so everyone knows (if they think about it) that the first article goes to the person sitting on the left of the examiner, second to the person to the left of the first etc. Anyway, that means that you can basically select the article that you’re doing when you walk into the room. You can even select the group you’re in if you sign in for the exam together and we managed to do that the first year: it worked brilliantly too. Failed miserably to organise that last year so we’d big plans for this but, of course, we all ended up in different groups as we didn’t walk into the building together. Oh well: Jackie can learn from our mistakes. Incidently, don’t forget to tell me your new e-mail Jackie!
Walking out of the signing up room, I joked to one of our group that we may as well get up and walk out if the exam was on the last book (which nobody could understand seeing as it was all in weird French accents). Naturally, the question was on the last book :(( Net effect was that a considerable number of people didn’t even know where to begin. One very, very good student (nope, not me) only wrote 150 words, another didn’t write anything for 90 minutes (and the exam is only two and a half hours). Who knows what the results will be like?
Anyway, Friday and Saturday were shopping days which resulted in an enormous heap of stuff to bring over. So much in fact that a slight bit of underhand repacking was required after checking in. So if any of you are going by Jet2, it’s possible to get away with 20kg checked luggage, 10kg legit handluggage and another 10kg slightly illegit handluggage. I’d recommend a wheeled carryon bag: 20kg is a LOT to carryon!
In said handluggage is the breezeblock Spanish dictionary (yes, Jackie, you should get one of those) for the level 1 course and the German dictionary & grammar for the beginners German. No, I’m not daft enough to do both in the one year but I’m not currently totally decided which of the two courses I should go for. From a practical point of view, I think Spanish is the way to go as I reckon I could get to fluency with that reasonably quickly and also we get quite a reasonable number of Spaniards staying. On the other hand, since we don’t get many Germans staying at the moment you could argue that I should do German so that I could increase our marketing in German (one of our booking sites has the page in German but we’ve not had any bookings from Germans via that site).
What’s missing from the luggage is the four boxes of soap that I bought in Makro (the Perpignan Makro doesn’t have great soap and doesn’t have it very often either). If any of you are coming over, we’d be grateful if you could bring one or two boxes with you.
Bookings-wise, we are getting quite a lot of bookings for the second half of October (usually we only get bookings a few days to a week ahead). We’ve also received our second enquiry re December. This one is a biggie: it would completely fill the building for three days. That’s actually slightly overfull as we’d need to move out of a couple of rooms that we’re currently using to store some things. It’s including all meals too so we’d have some serious cash to start off the new year if we can pull it off.
We’ve also had our fourth South African booking. It looks like he’ll not be able to get here either but he’s really determined and has paid the full balance up front as supposedly that’s required to get the visa. Can’t see him getting it in time though as he’s due here on Saturday and only got to the French embassy on Monday morning.
Got our first “rates” bill this morning: EUR 1250 which ain’t bad considering the scale of this place. Have to fork out EUR 800 for our new sheets and towels too so it’s not a good week expenses-wise. Still, I should be getting the £1.80 for the travelling expenses to the exam from the Civil Service soon to put towards it. Yeah, dopey amount to claim I know and it’s the first time I’ve ever claimed for the exam trip, but I need it to indicate to the Inland Revenue that you guys are still paying me which will affect their decision re my Crown Servant status which in turn affects John’s nationality amonst other things.
Weather: it’s almost the same as Belfast again. I’m still in t-shirt, shorts and sandals but I had to put socks on this morning.
Arnold
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Winter mode bumper issue & itinerary
I’ll start with the itinerary as I’ll be getting going on that next Tuesday:
– Tuesday pm, get the plane in Perpignan and finish up in Belfast in the late evening
– Wednesday am, meeting in town in the morning then open a few carpetbagging accounts for our latest addition and get a few things in town
Siobhan: I could probably catch up with you sometime that day
– Thursday, French exam; we usually get away from that relatively early as they do the oral part in the afternoon
– Friday am, probably working my way down Wendy’s shopping list; pm probably calling in to see the folk in Rosepark
guys: remind me to leave £40 for Eric!!
– Saturday, “at liberty” as they say in the travel trade but more than likely filled up with calling to see folk
– Sunday lunchtime, on the plane to Barcelona to try out Jet2, getting there early evening and back here around teatime
With the departure of our last house hunter on Tuesday a week ago, we were planning on switching to “winter mode” ie getting stuck into the backlog of things that we’ve not had a chance to do since June. We had even made a start on writing out our “to do” list for the winter months. And then we got some more bookings for October which has since started to fill up quite nicely.
We finally picked up a booking from the hotel website that we’re on. I’d really high hopes of that but we’ve been on it since late August and so far only the one booking (though it is for a week). Now that we’ve actually picked up a booking via the hotel site, we found out that they’d a duff room description for our main type of booking room (what did they think a “double shared bathroom shared” was? They’re fixing that now so we should start to get more bookings from them over the winter and, all being well, lots more in the summer. The other little problem that they had was that they’d recorded us as having no rooms available which certainly doesn’t help the reservations. Anyway, we’re getting the room type sorted, have updated the availability and changed a couple of rooms over to “instant booking” from “on request” which collectively should bring in a whole bunch more people.
They’re actually our eighth house-hunter since about mid-July which is a fair old number considering that we’re only one of the hotels in the area. Of those, three have already bought houses in the three villages closest to us, two more are in the process of buying a little further afield and one is in “area hunting” so won’t be buying for a year or so. As you can imagine, all this activity is lifting the house prices and I read last week that the prices in Languedoc-Roussillon went up 28% in the last year, mainly due to the English. Still, we did see quite a reasonable house for sale in Estagel for EUR 50 000 the other week so it’s still possible to pick up a bargain. Funnily enough, only one of those folk booked as a result of our ad in French Property News and seeing as they only stayed two days, we may as well not have bothered with it.
We had SNOW last week!! OK, more sleet than proper snow but even so, it’s not really something that you expect in the south of France in September, is it?
The banks here are really dreadful to what we’re used to. In all ways: the maximum withdrawal limit is around £300 per WEEK vs the £250-£500 per DAY in the UK; they’ve got monthly spending limits on debit cards; they charge for debit cards and the few sort-of credit cards are a) charged for b) have MAXIMUM limits lower than the minimum limits on some UK cards and c) have interest rates getting on for twice the UK rates (the mortgage rates are higher too: so much for lower euro-zone interest!). Way back at the end of June we thought we’d settle in with local accounts so opened accounts with Credit Agricole. The cards arrived in a few weeks but we still haven’t seen any sign of the chequebooks. Anyway, on Thursday a little letter arrived from CA saying that I’d to sort out my EUR 50 overdrawn by Monday or they were blocking all transactions on my accounts. Well, that was that. Off we went to close it and give them a piece of our minds. For a start, the account was to have a EUR 1000 overdraft limit (Wendy’s account came with EUR 450, none apparently for me) and seeing as I needed the chequebook before I could use the account, the entire EUR 50 was all bank charges. Didn’t go down well with CA in St Paul. For a start our “relationship manager” wasn’t there; I said “close it anyway, and the savings account too”. I don’t think people go in and close accounts too often. Anyway, less than 20 mins later we got a call from M Martin (our relationship manager) asking what was the problem. He’s assured us that the chequebook will be with us by Wednesday. We got the impression that he’d told the **** who sent out the letter to wise up: blocking the accounts of somebody who pays several thousand euro a month to the bank for a mortgage when he’s overdrawn by EUR 50 is not a good move.
Oh yeah, the “to do” list… Well, this is what we have so far:
1. Move into print advertising.
We are already listed in “GeoGuide Languedoc-Roussillon” courtesy of the previous owner but will be adding at least one more guidebook (well, a series as we’re shooting for an international listing). The French “guidebooks” are truly dreadful as they are just advertising with next to no editorial but it’s handy from our point of view as we can just pay so many euros and get ourselves in. Most likely we will go with Petit Futé although GeoGuide and Routard are both in the frame. Petit Futé would be around £500 but that’s for three years and also enters us in four or five international equivalent guides as well; we’ve not checked out the prices for the other two although I imagine that they pale into insignificance with the £500 for cheznous. Actually, French Property News isn’t far behind with it’s £60 a month (and so far only one two night booking for £120 expenditure!).
2. Get going on maintenance
We’re planning on restarting our “live in a room for a night” programme with a view to sussing out what needs done to each room. The biggest problem is the gite which, although it’s the newest “room”, looks incredibly basic in comparison to the rest of the hotel. We don’t really book it much as an apartment so in parallel with sprucing it up a bit, we’re hoping to create a little suite by adding a door between two of the rooms. That will also give us a lot more flexibility in coping with larger groups: we had to turn away several groups of four during August when the gite was full; in principle it will also let us book the gite as a gite rather than as a hotel room although we did very well over the summer just booking it as a hotel room.
3. Visit the neighbours
We just started doing this when the bookings took a jump; the plan is to work our way around the various vineyards, say “hi”, and maybe expand our wine list for the restaurant by buying a box or two at each place. We’ll be using these visits to try and build up a group of vineyards for our proposed wine tours.
4. Build up the guide
Our regional guide at www.mascamps.com/region/en.htm isn’t bad but I’d like to beef it up some more as we get a lot of hits via it and also because it should encourage people to stay a bit longer. We’ve the easy places done already so this will probably mean quite a bit of travelling around and combing the local tourist offices for information. I’m also hoping to make the event list (www.mascamps.com/event/en.htm) a whole lot more comprehensive although that will be far from easy as they are simply dreadful at promoting any kind of event or festival over here.
5. Tidy up the “house”
The hotel was and is tidy but the house side of the place needs a LOT of work. We could do with some furniture for a start and we could do with sorting out a lot of new lightbulbs as it’s getting to be too dark now.
6. Get the admin sorted
This has been sidelined for several months now so it’ll take me a while to catch up with it all. We also need to get ourselves properly sorted in respect of the French authorities with the stuff that I talked about earlier. It probably wouldn’t do any harm to track down our drinks license.
7. Build up the activities list
We’re hoping to have a reasonable number of activity-breaks built up over the coming months. So far, we’ve used the “specials” facility on the hostel booking site but we’re hoping to add those more directly onto our own website and also on an activities booking system. We haven’t had a lot of direct success with these but have made quite a bit of money through people seeing the “special” and booking direct with us (we don’t have to pay commission that way). At the moment we’ve several variants of our “Ryanair seat sale” package online to cover the whole period of their seat sale up to February but it’ll be another week or so before that appears on google so we’ve not had any takers as yet.
8. Website development
The next “big thing” will be the arrival of the vineyard pages, probably with the initial version online by late October. I’ve been taking more photos for that during the week. I’d liked to have had it live before Michel goes to the wine fair but that’s not too likely as I believe that’s early October. Oh, he (and possibly us) might be on French TV by the time you read this. Seems that his “separator thingy” for the grapes is the only one in the region and the local paper (the Independant) was here on Thursday to do an article on it. The harvest pages will be the first to go live as the sheer volume of text in them should get us a reasonable ranking in google. Haven’t really given much thought to the structure of his bit of the site yet but there will, in due course, be a www.mascamps.com/cave/en.htm page corresponding to the existing www.mascamps.com/hotel/en.htm page. Once his pages are up and running, we might run up a totally new www.mascamps.com/en.htm page to act as a gateway into both halves of the website but ’tis early days for that.
9. Website promotion
I’ll be restarting my “Sunday Searches” again to find free/cheapo places to promote the site. Have to see how to go about promoting the vineyard section as well. You would be amazed at how many different places you can pick up in two or three hours searching. You’d also be amazed at how many websites charge astronomical amounts of money for incredibly naff listings. We actually only paid for one site listing this year (all of £30) which has given us a really impressive looking entry with them (www.greatbedandbreakfast.com), lots of enquiries and no paying customers. At the other end of the scale, £200 on www.cheznous.com has, so far, given us one hit, no enquiries and no bookings. We’re actually going with cheznous again but this time we’ll be in their printed brochure (another £500!) which should hit the streets around Christmas (that’ll be their last chance).
Where are our customers coming from anyway? Well, it’s hard to say as the mix has changed significantly since April. April/May/June most customers were driveby (though the most profitable was via the website), early July was a mix of phone and driveby and August/September have been almost evenly split between phone, website and Ryanair (with virtually no drivebys). For the coming months, it looks like we’ll be mainly getting people from the Ryanair site though we’ve been getting significant numbers of enquiries via the website and should be having our very first repeat booking in December. In practical terms, we work on the assumption that the bulk of the phone reservations are effectively customers of the previous owner which means that for this summer we’ve had getting on for triple the customers that he would have had and that doesn’t seem too far off the mark as we know we had more reservations than both of the local competitors put together from mid-July through to the end of August (that’s the entire period for which we had their figures). If we can manage to keep that up we should do pretty well if next year is more normal (this year was dreadful for hotels all over France) and, of course, we are still increasing the number of places that list us.
10. Sort out our registration
In an ideal world, we’d like to be listed as a “hotel restaurant” but we’re not sure if that’s possible in one jump so we will be making enquiries to see what we’d need to do to acquire that listing. The plus side is that we could then legitimately run the restaurant but on the downside we would, over time, need to redo a lot of our existing registrations: cheznous wouldn’t take us anymore for a start (OK, so that would save £500 a year). We’d also need to change the Ryanair entry to move onto their hotel pages which may or may not be a good idea: we’ve only had one booking from our proper hotel listing (on www.venere.com) yet got our first booking from the B&B/guesthouse/hostel listing the day after it went live and have done very well with it ever since.
11. Have a look at Spanish
I’ve already got the pre-course course for the OU Spanish diploma but need to have a look at that to see whether or not I could realistically start the diploma in February. We get quite a lot of Spanish guests so it would be useful. On the other hand, we get next to no Germans so perhaps I need a German language website? Hard to say, as I’ve already got a German version of the Ryanair mini-site and we’ve yet to get anyone booking through it (a friend of a friend translated it for me).
Anyway, most head on to get ready for the Danish folk who should be here in another hour or two. They always quote 6pm arrival times but it just ain’t feasible to get from Denmark to here in a day and arrive that early. I reckon 8pm will be closer to the mark.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.