Child’s Play

Well I did it! It cost a lot of money, but its fantastic, mows and collects wet grass and you can empty the collecter without even getting off your seat!

It is so simple to use that my son, Hugh, mowed the lawn today

Hey, that’s great, no more lawn mowing. As a single mum, I’m all in favour of child labour – hey look he can empty it, too!

 

 

 

 

By |2017-11-11T19:57:01+01:00octobre 31st, 2007|Life at Brittany Gites|0 Comments

Tools of the job

One of my most important tools of my job is my lawn mower. I have over 1.5 hectares of land mostly laid to lawn and it takes me around 4.5 hours per week to keep the grass cut neatly. The tool for the job is a sit-on lawnmower with a cutting width of 120cm and three rotary blades. The cut grass can either be mulched by attaching a flap over the exit hole, which forces it back into the blades to be chopped up further and left on the lawn, or collected through a side mounted tube which throws the clippings up over the back of the mower into three collecting bins mounted at the back.

When I bought the mower they told me that it wasn’t quite big enough for the size of the ground, but at 3,500 euros, I considered that it was within my budget, whereas the alternative started at 10,000 euros. Mistake!

I have been riddled with problems with this mower, drive belts breaking regularly, pulleys needing replacing, springs breaking. I think that (a) its not a brilliant machine (badged generic mower with Briggs and Stratton Engine) and the work that it does it just cannot cope with.

This weekend, after a short holiday away from the gites, I tried to mow – the battery was flat, so I jump started it from my car. I mowed for about 5 minutes and the blades cut out (after a bit of investigation, this was also due to no power in the battery. I charged the battery overnight, but no joy. I bought a new battery and charged it, then started to mow again. After 10 minutes, the secondary (but also important) drive belt for the mower bed snapped.

I managed to find another belt at my local lawn mower shop and I fitted it today -it took around 2 hours.

The main problem with my lawns is that they are sown on what was farm land, very well cultivated and heavily fertilised with nitrates during the 1970s, before the Agricultural control boards began to regulate the use of fertilizers. Nitrates promote green growth in plants, ie lots of grass!

Whilst I was in the lawn mower shop, they informed me that a customer who has 5 hectares of land around a lake had bought a Wolf A100K, a semi professional mower with ability to cut and collect wet grass. This customer has found that this model is not big enough for his land, so he wants to buy the next model up, he is selling his second hand 25hour usage mower for 8,000 euros. A lot of money, but one of the most important tools of my job.

I havent decided whether to buy or not yet, I can go and try the mower out first, then decide. I’ll post the result.

 

 

 

 

By |2017-11-11T10:30:32+01:00octobre 15th, 2007|Life at Brittany Gites|0 Comments

Changeover days

Saturday is the busiest day for the gites, I ask holiday makers to vacate their gite before 10am and the new clients are able to arrive from 4pm onwards. I have five houses (total floor surface of 320m2) with a total of 11 bathrooms to clean. Beds to change for 27 people, welcome packs to provide, washing to do, guests to say goodbye to and new guests to welcome and show around. I do have a lady to help me, but it’s all carried out on a very tight timescale.

I think today was the hardest day in 5 years. Last week I had a family of fifteen people occupying 3 of the gites – they were very nice and had a lovely holiday. They ate together in one of the gites, and consequently crockery, cutlery, glasses and all cooking implements became displaced and muddled. They helped me sort it out – its fairly easy as most of the gites have distinct crockery,etc and also I provide an inventory, so that we could check off what goes where. The children helped me move all the items to the appropriate gites, whilst their parents packed the car.

This week I have another family of 15 occupying 3 gites (but not the same three as last week!) so next week I have to do the same again.

It was also difficult this week as people started to arrive for their holidays at 11am (not 4pm), and although they were happy to just drop off their luggage and disappear for lunch, it all takes time out of a very busy schedule.

Tonight I am waiting for the last family to arrive then a large glass of wine and early to bed!

 

 

 

 

By |2017-11-11T10:29:50+01:00août 18th, 2007|Life at Brittany Gites|0 Comments

Beach rider

One of the girls staying at the gites last week had a dream to go horse riding in the surf on the beach. I arranged for her to have a 2 hour ride at a stables near St Brieuc at the Centre Equestre de Plerin. They are allowed to ride on the beaches after 7pm, and it was only possible on Friday, as earlier in the week the tides were too high in the evenings.

She spent one hour in the woods and one hour galloping across the sands on a deserted beach, accompanied by a dashing army horseman who wanted to practice his English with her! She said that it made it the best holiday she had ever had! (I’m thinking about treat myself to a ride there, too!)

 

 

 

 

By |2017-11-11T10:24:18+01:00août 18th, 2007|Demo, Tourism|0 Comments

Little Egret

Today one of the gite clients went to St Jacut sur Mer, the lady is a keen bird watcher and had spotted a bird that at first she thought was a Heron, but there were a group of them fishing in the sea. She asked me if I could lend her a bird book and I brought out my Readers Digest Book of Birds and she identified the bird as a Little Egret, rare in these parts, but apparently moving North due to climate change.

 

 

 

 

By |2017-11-11T10:24:25+01:00août 14th, 2007|Blog, Brittany|0 Comments

Gardens

The gardens have really taken over this year, we had a dry and sunny April, but then it rained a great deal during May, June and July. I have 1.7 hectaires of land here (approximately 4 acres) and also lots of it is lawned (4.5 hours of mowing each time) I have planted a large flower garden. The gardens were created in 2004 and on a limited budget I planted a few plants that I bought and lots that I took as cuttings from other people gardens, at first they were really sparse.

This year the gardens have been hard work, everything has really grown and needs serious pruning, which I should have carried out in the winter or spring, but will have to wait until the autumn now. I have spent much more time this year, trying to keep things tidy and trying to get the lawns mown. Of course, there is also the constant battle against the moles, I’ll talk about that later!

Here is a picture of the gardens now, I suppose that the most impressive for me is the hedge in the foreground, I took 80 cuttings of a Lonicera nitida about 10cm long, dipped them in potting compost and in three years a fantastic hedge – it does need lots of trimming, but is very easy to manage if you keep on top of it (it does need a trim on top at the moment!).

By |2017-11-11T11:23:10+01:00août 7th, 2007|Property updates|Commentaires fermés sur Gardens

Harvest

In our commune (village) there are 1000 habitants, so not so big, however there are 34 farms in the commune – so a large proportion of farmers. My partner, Yves, is a dairy farmer with around 50 hectares (100 acres) and 45 milking cows. Most of his fields are either pasture for the cows and heifers, or sown as maize for silaging forage for the cows to eat. The remaining fields (this year 8 hectares) are sown with wheat, mainly for the straw for the bedding in the winter, but also to sell the wheat. This week has seen the harvest start for Yves, it has been going on all around us for about three weeks, but as most of the farmers are small business, they cannot afford to buy large machinery like combine harvesters, so have to use contractors. The problem here is that everyone wants the contractor to come and harvest on the first sunny day that the wheat is ripe, so Yves has had to wait his turn.

In the mornings, the dew is heavy in Brittany, so generally it is not possible to start combining until after 3pm when the dew has been dried off, then all is clear (weather permitting) until the dew falls again, normally at about 4.30am. Yves’ first slot came at about 10pm on Sunday evening (very sociable!!). So we all went along to watch the Fiat combine start his large field of 6.5 hectares. The Fiat is very small and very old (it literally clatters along!), it has a cutting width of 3 meters as opposed to the modern machines of 5 or 6 meters, although the larger machines get the job done quicker, they have to process the wheat a lot quicker, so this means threshing it much more violently – this tends to break the straw and give a poorer quality bedding.

They worked through the night and had to finish at 4am in the morning because of rain. There is still one and a half hours combining left to do.

 

 

 

 

By |2017-11-11T10:24:54+01:00août 7th, 2007|Brittany|0 Comments

Leicster Spokes Cycle Club

Last week, Leicester Spokes Cycle Club stayed in 3 of the gites, Cerise, Fraise and Pomme. 15 cyclists made up the group, and they visited the area using the local cycle paths, disused railway lines and canal paths and also the trains to go further afield. Some of the rides that they did were to Hédé, Mont St Michel, Dinard, Rennes and Combourg.

They were a very friendly group and I really enjoyed hosting them here and helping them with their route planning. You can visit their website at http://www.leicesterspokes.org.uk/

By |2017-11-11T11:23:02+01:00juillet 3rd, 2007|Tourism|Commentaires fermés sur Leicster Spokes Cycle Club

Welcome

Welcome to my blog. A short history of why I am here : I was working in the computer industry in England with two small children Elizabeth and Hugh (2 and 4 at the time) and never quite seeing enough of them. I had a nanny, so they were well looked after, but never really profitted from my life as a Mum.

Just before Elizabeth started school, my husband, Ian and I decided to “jump ship” and move to France. We bought La Lohuas in December 2002 and worked furiously in the first half of the year to create three gites. This worked well but didn’t bring enough money in to live, so at the end of 2004 we started to renovate the barn at the side of the property to make two more gites. These were finished in spring 2006.

The major change during this time was that Ian and I split up in October 2005 and he moved out. I am now running the business on my own and am in the process of buying Ian’s share of the house and business.

To see the full layout and photos of the gites, you can visit http://www.brittanygites.com/

By |2017-11-11T10:25:11+01:00juin 28th, 2007|Life at Brittany Gites|0 Comments