View from the Foothills of France

Some personal views on living, working,
bringing up family and making the dream happen in the most beautiful region of France. View from the Foothills of France also includes some personal and professional thoughts and tips on finding and buying the perfect property in the Ariège and Haute Garonne regions.

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Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Skiday

After two years of enforced closure for French ski resorts, this year is proving to be a bumper season. We had early snow in the mountains in November which formed a good, solid base on the slopes and then some heavy snowfalls since with the rest of the time being mainly sunny days and cold nights, the ideal weather for the resorts to attract skiers and to be able to make snow overnight with snow cannons to keep the pistes in top condition.

What I love about living within striking distance of the Pyrenees is that ability to take a day off at very short notice and spend the day skiing when the conditions are perfect, and the slopes are empty. Of course, skiing is always going to be regarded as an elite sport and a luxury by most people but, at our local resort, we can still ski all day for under €25 and, if we take a picnic, that is not the most expensive day out. There are cheaper lift passes for children and retirees and it’s free if you are over 75. In the Alps, the cost of ski passes would be double as would food and drink on the slopes but skiing in our region is not seen as a luxury; it is something most of the locals do in the winter while in summer they will go for a walk or bike ride. Children are taken skiing with school from the age of 4 if the conditions allow and there is also a dedicated ski bus every day in the season from our main town that will take you to the ski station and back for €2. It would cost more than that to get a coffee in many parts of the world.

It is still magic to me that we can leave the house at 8am and be on the slopes by 9am with hardly a soul to be seen and then back home in time for a cup of tea on the terrace in the sun while looking at the snow high on the mountain where we have just been skiing. Life really doesn’t get much better than that.

If you need help in finding your home in France, please get in touch: nadia@foothillsoffrance.com

 

Reasons to be cheerful in France in 2022

If Covid has taught us anything over the last two years, it is to make the most of the good times. So, if one of your resolutions is to spend more time in France this year, then here are some things you can look forward to:

1. Markets and fresh food culture
Buying most of your food at local markets really does improve health both physical and mental. In this part of France, there is a strong culture of buying local, organic and seasonal produce so that’s a big tick in the better health box. But also, buying from local producers, talking to them face-to-face is the perfect antidote to all those zoom meetings and working from home. You get to interact regularly with local people, chat about the food, put the world to rights and remember the elements of everyday life that really matter.

2. Work-life balance
This is something that has been thrown into strong relief over the last couple of years, but the French already have this much better under control than most other countries. In France, you will find that, while people work hard, they also have clear boundaries and do not let their lives become consumed by their work. The French most definitely work to live and not the other way around.

3. Slower pace of life
While shops closing at lunchtime and on Sundays and having to queue while people write cheques can be frustrating, it does also teach you to slow down and remember that life isn’t a race and there is enjoyment to be found in taking one’s time and doing not very much. So, enjoy those leisurely lunches, the slow shopping at market and rambling Sunday walks and picnics; what’s the rush?

4. Excellent value restaurants
Talking of long lunches, you can still eat out in southwest France for incredible value; a three-course lunch with a glass of wine and a coffee is still available in most places for under €15 per head and you can take your time too; French restaurants serve between 12 and 2pm and only one service per table so you will never feel rushed.

5. Empty roads
Not something I really appreciate enough until I travel abroad, and I am shocked at how busy the roads are and how long it takes to get anywhere. Of course, we have jams around the cities here but, for most of the time, you will be cruising on empty roads and enjoying beautiful, unspoiled views, wide, open spaces and stunning scenery at the same time.

 

An unprecedented year for French Property in the time of Covid

It has been another very strange year for the property market in France; I hesitate to use the word unprecedented, but I have certainly never known there to be so much demand for country properties in France whilst, simultaneously, there being so few properties for sale. That is pretty much the definition of frustration for estate agents who have lots of buyers and nothing to sell them. It has been better for me as I tend to cover a larger area and can look at private sales and Notaire sales too but certainly I have had fewer properties to view for clients than usual this year. In addition, prices are rising fast; something that has not really happened in the property market here in southwest France since the early 2000s.

The demand looks set to continue into 2022 and it does seem that there has been a step change in what people are looking for in their lives and therefore their homes. Certainly, from the enquiries that I am getting, search criteria have changed with the majority of buyers looking for large properties in the middle of the countryside with lots of space, spare rooms or outbuildings for offices and big gardens and the potential for multi-generational living. Our values seem to have been reset and hence it looks as if the demand for a quality of life will continue to drive the demand for rural French property and continue to shift prices upwards.

In the meantime, we are looking forward to a very French Christmas here (despite the fact that the sun is shining, and it is 17 degrees outside). I always think that the French have adopted the best bits of Christmas while discarding the stress and overspending. In our region at least, people seem to just focus on eating, drinking, and enjoying time en famille. We will follow suit and, luckily for us, because we are so close to the mountains, we know that, while we will enjoy our aperitif in the sun on the terrace, we also can pretty much guarantee a white Christmas by driving a short way into the mountains to the snow for a walk, some sledging, some skiing, and some mulled wine.

Wishing you a very merry Christmas and a happy and healthy 2022

If you are thinking about investing in a French home next year, please get in touch: nadia@foothillsoffrance.com

How to choose a home for happiness and mental wellbeing

After many years of helping clients to find their perfect property here in France based, in the first instance, on a detailed list of their requirements, what I have learned above all is that a property can tick every box but still not be ‘the one’. While most of us have easily defined opinions about what we know we like and dislike and many of our reactions to a property are conscious and objective, it seems that others are far more unconscious and visceral, bound up with our less definable personal instincts and experiences.

What is it about a space that makes us feel at home? On the most fundamental level, human beings have a need for shelter and security. But beyond that we also want comfort, beauty, stimulation, and connection with those around us and with the world outside.

When children are asked to draw a home, they commonly draw houses with steeply pitched roofs, even when they themselves live in flats, according to Lily Bernheimer, a researcher in environmental psychology. The pitched roof symbolises shelter and enclosure, which we need to make ourselves feel secure. Our homes need to feel like a place of refuge from the rest of the world. This psychology informs, albeit often unconsciously, our reaction to a property.

As Alain de Botton discusses in his book, The Architecture of Happiness, we may seek beauty from design, but there are all sorts of other aspects that we may not even be conscious of that lead us to find buildings and objects attractive or unattractive: “Our feelings of contentment are woven from fine and unexpected filaments. It isn’t sufficient that our chairs comfortably support us; they should in addition afford us a sense that our backs are covered, as though we were at some level still warding off ancestral fears of attacks by a predator.” The same can be said for our home.

He goes on to say; “When we approach front doors, we appreciate those that have a small threshold in front of them, a piece of railing, a canopy or a simple line of flowers or stones – features that help us mark the transition between public and private space and appease the anxiety of entering or leaving a house.”

Trends in current research support de Botton’s assertion that when it comes to design, we are subject to a host of neurological responses we have no control over, and which we may not even recognise. “We’ve been optimising our environments too much for our cognitive mind in recent years, and we need to ignite our senses and bring more awareness to what feels good rather than what we think.” Perhaps what we think we want isn’t actually what makes us feel at home. For example, memories of home are usually associated with the things in it, which you can touch and smell (“the attic and the cellar, the fireplace and the bay window, the hidden corners, a stool, a gilded mirror, a chipped shell”) rather than the building in its entirety, which you can only see.

Which is all a very long way of saying that, while a detailed list of criteria is very important in choosing the right home for you, equally as important, once you have made sure your practical considerations have been taken into account, is to then allow your unconscious self and your feelings to take the lead when viewing a house. I have said it before, but it bears saying again that, while it is important to use your rational, thinking head in working out what you are looking for practically in a property and a location, once this is established, it is equally as important to let your heart have a say.

If you need help or advice with finding your home in France, please get in touch: nadia@foothillsoffrance.com