The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

24
August 2015 - Issue #26 Dordogne Don’t let the banks cash in! www.hifx.co.uk Save time and money by sending your international money transfers Consistent bank beating exchange rates online or over the phone. Move money, pay people and settle bills within seconds. Make and track payments 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Norton security used by 97 of the world’s top 100 banks. HiFX Europe Limited is authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority under the Payment Services Regulations 2009, registration 462444, for the provision of payment services. Develop a healthy one that actually saves you money! We all have bad habits. INSIDE > > > The Bugle Business Directory 4 pages of listings for local English-speaking business- es - your essential guide to finding just what you’re looking for >> Pages 16-19 A ccording to recent fig- ures, this summer saw the hot- test June globally since records began in 1880. The Dordogne was certainly not spared the heat- wave and in July the mercury rose even further: the 38.7°C officially recorded in Berger- ac on the 16th July was a re- cord for the month. In nearby Brive-La-Gaillarde, the tem- perature topped 40 degrees for the first time in the Limousin region when 40.1°C was reg- istered. Nationally, the heatwave is being blamed for a 7% rise in the number of deaths seen al- ready this summer, 700 more than the yearly average. The incredible heat, com- bined with an unprecedented lack of rain, has led to a series of problems across the Dor- dogne. Brief storms did bring some rain towards the end of the month, but this was not enough to alleviate the prob- lems faced by the department. “It was largely insufficient, only 1 mm on average across the department and 5 or 6 mm around Sarlat,” explained Rémi Rinck, director of Mé- téo France for the Dordogne and Lot-et-Garonne, speaking on 23rd July. “It is already 38 days since any significant rain- fall. In terms of drought, we will very soon be approaching the levels seen in 2013. We are in a very rare situation that looks likely to continue.” “With the lack of rain and the heatwave seen last week, the situation is only getting worse,” agreed Éric Sourbé from the Chamber of Agricul- ture. The tourism industry is also suffering from the lack of >> continued on page 4 Following several heatwaves and over a month with no significant rainfall, the recent weather has caused a host of problems for the region. Record temperatures have seen an increase in the number of deaths, low water levels in the department’s rivers and a series of forest fires. Record temperatures, drought and fires Popular Dordogne lake forced to close A virulent outbreak of algae has forced the closure of the Lanquais lake, one of southern Périgord’s most picturesque bathing spots. >> Page 5 NEWS - EU roaming charges slashed again It is now cheaper than ever to use your mobile phone abroad as French operators bring in free EU roaming ahead of enforced changes in 2017 >> Page 10 Bilingual - The Eiffel Tower of London We take a bilingual look at the London Eye, the tempo- rary attraction that still dom- inates the London skyline 15 years later >> Page 15 NEWS - English speaker is new Scrabble champ An English speaker from New Zealand has won the French Scrabble Cham- pionship after learning the French dictionary in just 9 weeks! >> Page 12 Corks are popping in the Champagne region after finally being admitted into Unesco's world heritage list >> Page 7 © Brent Hofacker - Fotolia.com

description

Your local newspaper for the Dordogne. News, views and events from across the region.

Transcript of The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

Page 1: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

August 2015 - Issue #26

Dordogne

Don’t let the banks cash in!www.hifx.co.uk

Save time and money by sending your internationalmoney transfers

Consistent bank beating exchange rates online or over the phone. Move money, pay people and settle bills within seconds. Make and track payments 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Norton security used by 97 of the world’s top 100 banks.

HiFX Europe Limited is authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority under the Payment Services Regulations 2009, registration 462444, for the provision of payment services.

Develop a healthy one thatactually saves you money!

We all have bad habits.

INSIDE > > >

The Bugle Business Directory 4 pages of listings for local English-speaking business-es - your essential guide to finding just what you’re looking for >> Pages 16-19

According to recent fig-ures, this s u m m e r saw the hot-test June

globally since records began in 1880. The Dordogne was certainly not spared the heat-wave and in July the mercury rose even further: the 38.7°C officially recorded in Berger-ac on the 16th July was a re-cord for the month. In nearby Brive-La-Gaillarde, the tem-perature topped 40 degrees for the first time in the Limousin region when 40.1°C was reg-istered. Nationally, the heatwave is being blamed for a 7% rise in the number of deaths seen al-ready this summer, 700 more than the yearly average. The incredible heat, com-bined with an unprecedented lack of rain, has led to a series of problems across the Dor-

dogne. Brief storms did bring some rain towards the end of the month, but this was not enough to alleviate the prob-lems faced by the department. “It was largely insufficient, only 1 mm on average across the department and 5 or 6 mm around Sarlat,” explained Rémi Rinck, director of Mé-téo France for the Dordogne and Lot-et-Garonne, speaking on 23rd July. “It is already 38 days since any significant rain-fall. In terms of drought, we will very soon be approaching the levels seen in 2013. We are in a very rare situation that looks likely to continue.” “With the lack of rain and the heatwave seen last week, the situation is only getting worse,” agreed Éric Sourbé from the Chamber of Agricul-ture. The tourism industry is also suffering from the lack of

>> continued on page 4

Following several heatwaves and over a month with no significant rainfall, the recent weather has caused a host of problems for the region. Record temperatures have seen an increase in the number of deaths, low water levels in the department’s rivers and a series of forest fires.

Record temperatures, drought and fires

Popular Dordogne lake forced to closeA virulent outbreak of algae has forced the closure of the Lanquais lake, one of southern Périgord’s most picturesque bathing spots. >> Page 5

NEWS - EU roaming charges slashed againIt is now cheaper than ever to use your mobile phone abroad as French operators bring in free EU roaming ahead of enforced changes in 2017 >> Page 10

Bilingual - The Eiffel Tower of LondonWe take a bilingual look at the London Eye, the tempo-rary attraction that still dom-inates the London skyline 15 years later >> Page 15

NEWS - English speakeris new Scrabble champAn English speaker from New Zealand has won the French Scrabble Cham-pionship after learning the French dictionary in just 9 weeks! >> Page 12

Corks are popping in the Champagneregion after finally being admitted into Unesco's world heritage list >> Page 7

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Welcome toThe BugleSo after one of the best

races that I can remember, a British rider has won the Tour de France for the third time in four years.

If you are a fan of cycling and/or you follow French media, then you will be well aware of just how big the Tour de France is in this country.... huge!! For most of July each year, the news bulletins lead with little else and countless hours of prime time television and kilometres of column inches are devoted to each day's racing. It is safe to say that the French love their cycling, but for recent decades being a French cycling fan has been a bit like watching Wimbledon as a Brit in the pre-Murray era (although you'd also have to imagine that Sampras, Agassi and Federer were all habitually doping, but let's not cloud the analogy). The French have now not won cycling's biggest race since 1985

and the glory days of Hinault, Fignon and Anquetil must feel as distant as those of Moore, Hurst and Stiles do to the English. It is perhaps this frustration that has led to the recent French media frenzy over suspicions of doping that surrounded Team Sky - and Chris Froome in particular - for the duration of the Tour. The media are absolutely 100% convinced that Team Sky are cheating, trotting out a series of former cyclists (who were themselves banned for doping!) and “scientists” to “prove” on prime time television that the only way Froome could be achieving the results he was during this year's race, was through illegal drug use. It is very hard to prove a negative, something that placed Team Sky between something of a rock and a hard place. Say nothing and that will be taken as an admission of guilt; deny the allegations and make public your

own very private and confidential biometric data (which they did) and you simply fan the flames of the debate. All of which led to the shocking scenes of Froome's team-mate, the Australian Richie Porte, being punched in the face during one stage and Froome himself being repeatedly spat at, and on at least one occasion having urine thrown at him! Disgraceful!! I should add that of the millions that lined the roads of the race, the vast majority were just having a good time and only a handful were behind these acts which brought shame on France. The riders themselves appear to fully back and respect Froome, who you have to say handled himself remarkably well throughout. I can understand the French public's frustration to an extent. The reputation of professional cycling has been eroded by a series of drug scandals, most notably involving Lance Armstrong. Confidence in the sport is fragile at best, although most do now agree that the cheats are becoming the exception and not the rule that they were a decade or so ago. Others in the media have suggested that it is not Froome that the public dislikes, nor the fact that the old enemy have once again crossed the Channel to win their race, but simply that they do not like dominance in the Tour - by anyone - and prefer maverick riders with flair and panache. Team Sky have been incredibly dominant of late

and Chris Froome is probably best described as ruthlessly efficient. I don't buy this however. Would the Brits have been unhappy with a 6 foot 10 inch serve-and-volley expert boringly aceing his way to Wimbledon glory? Would England fans complain if the team played 7 defenders at the next World Cup, drew every game 0-0 and won the tournament through a succession of penalty shoot-outs? I suspect they would be delighted and knight all involved on the spot. I'm also fairly sure that if the Kenyan-born Froome had a French mother, rather than a British father, then he would currently be a national hero and hailed in the press as the saviour of modern-day “clean” cycling.

Until next month!

Steve Martindale, Editor

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3 AUGUST 2015 ○ THE BUGLE ○ www.thebugle.eu LOCAL NEWS ♦

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Dordogne Resistance hero dies Divorcee battlesex-husband for2 million poundsOne of the last war-time

French Resistance lead-ers has died in the Dor-dogne. Roger Ranoux,

code-named Hercule, passed away in hospital in Saint-Astier on the 9th July, aged 93. He was born in Terrasson, on the edge of the Dordogne, into a work-ing class family, where his father was a railway man. In 1943, when the Nazis reneged on their treaty with the Vichy gov-ernment and occupied the whole of France, Roger and his brothers remembered General de Gaulle’s appeal of 18th June 1940 and deter-mined to resist the Occupation. Roger immediately joined the Re-sistance and rapidly became chief of a local FTP group (Francs Tireurs et Partisans Français), later becoming the number one in the FFI (Forces Françaises de l’Intérieur). This or-ganisation worked closely with Brit-ish and American armies in liber-ating the whole of France in 1944. Ranoux also fought on the front line for the liberation of Périgueux. He was demobbed from the FFI in 1944 in Metz but returned to the Dordogne. In 1956 he was elected deputé (MP) for the Communist Party and then was voted in as may-

or of Montrem, east of Périgueux, a post he held for 30 years. He was exceptionally tall, hence came his war-time code name and his nick-name of Double-Mètre. The 19th August in Périgueux will be the 71st anniversary of its libera-tion. Back in 1944 Paris was freed by the FFI and de Gaulle’s troops by the 25th August, and almost all of France had won its freedom by the

end of September. La Rochelle in the “Atlantic Pocket”, however was freed only the day before the Ger-man surrender on 8th May 1945. Hercule, his life and achieve-ments were recently celebrated at a service in Trélissac, near Périgueux where more than 400 people gath-ered to remember this outstanding Frenchman. ■

by Brian Hinchcliffe

A Dordogne divor-cee has hit the headlines in the UK over claims

her ex–husband has taken £2 million that should be rightfully hers following their break-up. Jennifer Francis, who lives in the couple’s former holiday home in Chassai-gnes, has obtained a ruling from the High Court in Lon-don that her ex, who made his fortune from a fencing firm in Dubai, pay her the money. But Paul Grundy, who has a new Ukrainian partner many years his junior, has liquidated the couple’s joint assets and, according to Mrs Francis, has squandered much of the cash. In an interview in the Daily Mail the British expat said: “Although I own half the company, Paul regards it as

his alone. He thinks I should just be grateful for whatever scraps he feels like doling out to me. But, as the judge stated, it was a business made during the marriage.” In a divorce settlement in London in 2012 the court ruled that Mr Grundy had £2.5 million of assets availa-ble to pay over to Mrs Fran-cis, but he has since claimed he is unable to sell the busi-ness to pay her. Mrs Francis admits she is not in penury. “I know I am luckier than many ex-wives who still have to watch eve-ry penny,” she says angrily. “Yet Paul is still living the life of Riley in Dubai with his girlfriend, while I’m on less than £2,000 per month. I live in a three-bedroom cottage, while he’s in a luxury apartment on Palm Island.” ■

by Adrian Lithgow

Roger Ranoux and his Resistance colleagues

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www.thebugle.eu ○ THE BUGLE ○ AUGUST 20154 ♦ LOCAL NEWS

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rain. One of the most popular pastimes in the Dordogne is canoeing down the depart-ment’s various rivers, but the press has been full of images of stranded tourists getting out of their canoes to push their boats through ankle-deep water. “Many people are coming down, seeing the water levels and it has certainly put off one or two,” explained Florence Musitelli, owner of a canoe business on the Auvézère river. “It does make it a bit more of a chal-lenge and I do let customers know this. The lack of a current, or having to get out and walk for a bit, is adding about an hour to what is usually a two-and-a-half hour trip, but it is still a pleasant day out.” Most worrying for the region has been the large number of fires that have broken out, although the Dordogne has been spared any

major disasters for the time being. One of the worst fires seen was at Saint-Jean-d’Illac, to the west of Bordeaux, where 580 acres of forest were on fire for 5 days. It is already one of the worst fires in France for at least five years. As fires broke out across the region - and the rest of France - arson was believed to be behind an alarming number, and sev-eral arrests have already been made. Arson has not been ruled out at Saint-Jean-d’Illac and it is known that the fire began close to a main road. One hour north of Saint-Jean-d’Illac, two men were arrested shortly after a fire broke out near Naujac, in the Médoc. The men subsequently admitted to starting a number of other fires in the region. In the Var department in the south-east of the country 10,000 campers were forced to flee as wild fires approached a popular tour-ist area. ■

An association of traders and business people in Sarlat are again running their unique service for visitors, up to 22nd August. Avenir Sarlat are providing a fully fledged shuttle bus service between the car park of the Lycée

Pré-de-Cordy and the city centre. At the bus stop in the high school car park, there is a reception and information centre, toilets, a drinking water fountain, and most important of all, a navette every 30 minutes. The lycée car park/bus station is at the south end of the town on the Bergerac road and buses depart daily (except Sundays and bank holidays) from 9 am to 5:30 pm, every half an hour, with returns from the Place du 14 Juillet, by the post office, every thirty minutes from 9:15 am to 6:30 pm. A further return service has been added this year at 10 pm, with an additional last bus leaving at 10:45 pm on the peak days of 6th, 13th, 20th August. In the past, as visitors poured into Sarlat to enjoy its medieval streets in the summer season, parking has become a real headache for drivers and their families, often faced with a long trek back to the car at the end of their visit. Organizers are already thinking of future ways to extend their ser-vices to visitors and locals during the summer, including bike hire

and a children’s city centre play park. Association president Étienne Aussedat said: “This kind of park and ride is unusual in the region and we have had enquiries about how it works from other towns with seasonal traffic congestion is-sues.” With free parking, a shuttle return ticket at 3 euros and under 12s free, it must be a winner. ■

by Brian Hinchcliffe

Dordogne battles record temperatures>> continued from pg 1

Newly-wedsto get sweethoneymoon gift The city of Périgueux has good news for all brides and grooms to be. Workers at the municipal garden glasshouses, the source of much of the plantings around the city, are buzzing with excitement about their bees. Four hives are kept to help with pollination in the gardens and there are another two near the hospital. A recent weigh-in of this season’s hon-ey shows a bumper harvest.

The gardeners are overjoyed as the year began badly for bees with torrential rain at critical moments. Lucette Dufour of the local bee keepers’ club, Le Rucher du Périg-ord, declared it to be “a magnificent harvest!” She explained that the suc-cess is largely due to an excellent flowering season and abolition of pesticides. The honey will be placed in pots ready to be presented to newly mar-ried couples in the Dordogne, a tradi-tional take on the honeymoon and a sweet idea! ■

by Brian Hinchcliffe

Park and ride for Sarlat-la-Canéda

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5 AUGUST 2015 ○ THE BUGLE ○ www.thebugle.eu LOCAL NEWS ♦

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British couple extradited to UK for trial A British couple who were hid-ing out in a Lot-et-Garonne camp-site have been extradited back to the UK to face fraud charges. The husband and wife, who have not been named by the authorities, were arrested in mid-July on a Eu-ropean arrest warrant. They were remanded in custody by a Tribunal in Fumel pending an extradition hearing which formally took place on July 15th. The court heard that the pair had run a taxi firm in Cornwall and were wanted by Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs to answer charges of tax evasion. It is understood the sums run into the hundreds of thousands of pounds for non-payment of VAT, corporation and personal taxes. In addition it is understood the pair were also claiming benefit while running their taxi business and that once in the UK further charges will be brought against them. The couple were returned to the UK on July 21st. ■

by Adrian Lithgow

Local Britishcouple involved instabbing incident A married expat couple were in-volved in a domestic incident in Javer-lhac-et-la-Chapelle-Saint-Robert, in the north-east of the Dordogne, in ear-ly July, which resulted in one of them requiring hospitalisation. The usual peace and quiet of this little town was broken when a vio-lent row broke out between the cou-ple, both in their 60s. Around teatime the husband was alleged to have been heard striking his wife after a drinking session. The Gendarmerie were called to their home to separate the pair and restore calm. Later that evening, trouble broke out again, with the husband apparently again attacking his spouse. This time she had taken a bread knife and the man received a wound to his arm. Local law enforcement arrived for the second time and the couple were both arrested to avoid any further vio-lent outbreaks; the husband’s wound, which is not thought to be serious, was treated in hospital in Périgueux. The case remains under considera-tion and the 63-year-old wife is claim-ing self-defence. ■

by Brian Hinchcliffe

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A virulent outbreak of algae has forced the closure of one

of Southern Périgord’s most picturesque bathing spots. The lake at Lanquais has been emptied because of a bloom of Spirogyra and will remain closed for at least the entire season and possibly next. The news is a bad blow for the village which relies on the lake as an important source of tourism in addi-tion to the splendid Châ-teau which stands above it. Little-known by Brit-ish residents and tourists alike, the Lanquais lake is a favourite with the French and offers bathing and a beach, a bar and cafeteria and a water slide, all in a wonderfully quiet envi-ronment. But it is its setting, above all, in the shadow of the Château known as the Louvre of the Périgord, that makes the place so

special. Lanquais mairie has voted to allocate €50,000 to clean up the lake and is

in discussions with the op-erator over compensation for the closure. ■

by Adrian Lithgow

Lanquais lake forced to close

...Further north, a much-loved and frequented lake near Nontron has been hit with a swimming ban. The 7-hectare Lac des Nouailles has lost its lifeguard cover and a bathing ban has been imposed. The lake has a holiday village, with cabins and chalets, and a large area of open public access to the lake and its surroundings. While the privately owned holiday village has its own lifeguard service, the public area, operated by the Communauté des Com-munes, has lost its water safety budget. Without lifeguard cover, public bathing cannot continue. ■

by Brian Hinchcliffe

Page 6: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

www.thebugle.eu ○ THE BUGLE ○ AUGUST 20156 ♦ LOCAL NEWS

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Question: In 2011, Futuroscope’s 4D adventure attraction Arthur was awarded a prestigious TEA* award. Which of the following attractions, in which strange characters accompany visitors on a journey through space and time, recently became the park’s second winner of this international award?

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Hollywood comes to Sarlat for Disney film

A touch of glamour came to the Dordogne in July, when Sarlat-la-Canéda was used as the setting for the upcoming Disney live-action remake of the classic film Beauty and the Beast. Filming took place

over two days at the Sainte-Marie church, with the city now set to feature in the blockbuster. The film stars Emma Watson as Belle, who was on set in the Périgord Noir on the 10th and 11th July. The actress became internationally famous for playing Hermione Granger in the Harry Potter films and since the con-clusion of that series has been branching out into other film roles. Beauty and the Beast is set for release in 2017. ■

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Champagne added to Unesco heritage list

Wines to be stored at sea

Following a six-year campaign by producers, Unesco has an-

nounced that the “hill-sides, houses and wine cellars” of the Champagne region will be added to the organisation's list of world heritage sites. Ac-cording to Unesco, the world heritage status cov-ers “the places sparkling wine was developed us-ing a second fermentation method in the bottle from the beginning of the 17th century until its early in-dustrialisation in the 19th century”. In the dossier, Unesco drew attention to the his-toric vineyards of Hautvil-lers - where local legend has it that the monk Dom Perignon invented the fermentation process that gives champagne its fizz - and the grand Avenue de Champagne in Épernay, the heart of the industry. Frédéric Dufour, presi-dent of Maison Ruinart, the first established cham-pagne house in the region, hailed the announcement: “We are delighted with this news. It recognises our commitment to up-holding our heritage all the while encouraging us to respect it and keep it alive. We are very proud of this classification... it is a very special distinction for all the men and women

who have developed the region. They were driven by their passion, courage and the pursuit of excel-lence.” It was not only in Cham-pagne that corks were pop-ping, with the vineyards of Burgundy also receiving the same recognition. French President Fran-çois Hollande said the awards were “a mark of international recognition of the exceptional heritage of these regions and shows the diversity and energy of these lands that are the wealth of our country”. As well as being a pow-erful tourist draw, inclu-sion on the Unesco world heritage list will likely fur-ther boost the local econ-omy as sites get financial assistance towards preser-vation. The list of 1,022 Un-esco world heritage sites includes the Taj Mahal in India, the Great Wall of China and Machu Picchu in Peru. In Britain, West-minster Palace and Abbey, Kew Gardens and Stone-henge are among the 28 listed sites. Elsewhere, there was cautious optimism in the Bordeaux wine region af-ter China announced that it would officially recognise the “Bordeaux” appella-tion during a recent visit by Prime Minister Li Ke-qiang to France. This es-

tablishes a legally defined and protected geographi-cal marker used to identify where grapes are grown. The move, which was described as an “historic advance”, is a big step in the battle to stop fake Bordeaux wines being sold in Asia. As China's burgeoning middle classes have developed a taste for red wine, the amount of counterfeit wine bearing the Bordeaux label - es-pecially prized in China - has exploded, much to the consternation of the re-gion's wine producers. ■

Does the wine you buy have a shelf life that can be measured in hours, or do you have a wine cel-lar full of dusty vintages? If your bottles make it as far as the wine rack, how much importance do

you put on where that wine rack is placed? Experts have long debated the best conditions in which to store your wine, with light, temperature and movement all being key factors in how a wine ages. In recent years, the quest for the perfect bottle of wine has led many in the industry to experiment with the world's largest cellar... the sea! In the latest study, a number of fine wines from Bordeaux and Burgundy have been lowered to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, off the coast of Brittany in western France, where they will be stored for a number of months at a depth of 90 metres. Among the grand crus are bottles of 2011 Château Grand-Puy Ducasse, 2011 Château Meyney and cases of 2011 Château Blaignan. The wines, which belong to Crédit Agricole Grands Crus, are being stored by Amphoris, a company that specialises in the ocean storage of wines and champagnes. The bottles will remain at the bottom of the Atlantic for between nine and 24 months.

“The sea brings together the ideal conditions for ageing and improving wines,” said a statement from Crédit Agricole Grands Crus. “The wines have been specially chosen for age-ing under water, which can bring changes to the bottle as well as the product. At the end of this lengthy submersion a special wine tasting will be organized, to compare the wines to those that remained in their châteaux cellars.” In 2010, divers at a shipwreck in the Baltic Sea found bot-tles of champagne that dated from pre-revolutionary France. “We brought up a bottle to be able to establish how old the wreck was,” diving instructor Christian Ekstrom told The Associated Press at the time. “We didn't know it would be champagne. We thought it was wine or something.” When they opened one bottle on the boat they found the champagne, believed to have been made by Clicquot (now Veuve Clic-quot) between 1782 and 1788, was still in remarkably good condition. “It was fantastic,” said Mr Ekstrom. “It had a very sweet taste, you could taste oak and it had a very strong to-bacco smell. And there were very small bubbles.” The bottles had been perfectly preserved in a dark environ-ment, with little tidal movement and constant temperatures and eventually sold at auction for over €100,000. ■

Page 8: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

www.thebugle.eu ○ THE BUGLE ○ AUGUST 20158 ♦ NATIONAL NEWS

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Pioneering cross-Channel flightsA row has

e r u p t e d over ex-actly who

it was that recently made the first electric powered flight across the English Chan-nel. Airbus had been building up to a cross-Channel bid since the maiden flight of its two-seat battery-powered E-Fan plane in March of last year. The company has al-ready invested €20 million in the elec-tric flight project and their test pilot Didier Esteyne took off from Lydd Airport in Kent before landing safely in Calais some 45 minutes later. The controversy erupted shortly af-terwards, however, when it emerged that celebrated stunt pilot, Hugues Duval, had himself made the jour-ney the night before in his one-seater Cri-Cri - a plane that he devel-oped himself - pulling the rug from under-neath Airbus' high-profile media event. Trying to play down the issue, an Airbus spokesperson con-gratulated Mr Duval, before discounting his effort. “We applaud the intrepid aviator that did this, although the actual details are

yet to be confirmed. We are not worried. It would not count be-cause we understand he set off from anoth-er plane.” It subsequently emerged that Duval's Cri-Cri had indeed had a little help get-ting airborne, tak-ing off attached to another plane before detaching and making the crossing under its own power. After landing the Airbus-backed air-craft, Mr Esteyne said the flight was “almost perfect” but declined to be drawn on the

upstaging of his at-tempt by rival Duval. “I don't have to talk about that,” he said. “We did something today. It's important to us and that's the most important thing. The flight was almost perfect and of course I feel good. We did it and now the journey is done.” Describing the ex-perience of flying the aircraft, Esteyne said: “It is closer to a glider because there is less noise than an aeroplane. Also, there is no vibration at all. It's smooth and very

quiet.” The rival teams were seeking to rec-reate Louis Bleriot’s pioneering flight in 1909, when the French aviator be-came the first person to cross the Channel in a “heavier-than-air” machine. The two-seat E-Fan weighs just 550 kg when empty and has a maximum speed of al-most 120 knots - about 222 kph - though it cruises at about 160 kph. It has a wing-span of just less than 10 metres and its 120-cell lithium-polymer

battery system can power the aircraft’s twin-ducted fans for between 45 minutes and an hour, depend-ing on the amount of power the pilot uses. With no fuel burden, the plane can be land-ed, its batteries un-plugged, and immedi-ately take to the skies again after having a spare set fitted. It is believed that when production models are first available in the coming years, the plane's limited range will mean that flight schools will form the primary market. ■

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Nike finedover Churchill statue stunt American sportswear giant Nike has been handed a hefty fine for desecrating a statue of Winston Churchill in Paris. The 3-metre-high bronze statue of the British wartime leader was adorned with a sleeve-less T-shirt of the French national basketball team in September 2011 to mark their qualification for that year’s European Championship and the following year’s London Olym-pics. The national team was photo-graphed in front of the statue, with Churchill in the background wear-ing the number 9 vest, usually worn by France’s star player Tony Parker, who is an NBA superstar with the San Antonio Spurs. The publicity stunt was carried out with the help of events company Ubi Bene. The sculptor behind the statue, Jean Cardot, was not consulted, was not impressed and took both Nike and Ubi Bene to court for defacing his work of art. In a recent ruling, a Paris court agreed that using the statue for commercial ends was defiling it and ordered each firm to pay the artist €67,500 in compensation. The statue, which is on the Av-enue Winston Churchill, just off the Champs-Elysées, was unveiled in 1998 by the Queen and its plinth bears the words: “We shall never surrender.” It is modelled on a photograph of Churchill marching with Gen-eral Charles de Gaulle along the Champs Elysées on 11th Novem-ber 1944. It cost €300,000, which was paid for by donations from the French public, and is one of the few statues in Paris of a non-French public figure. ■

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9 AUGUST 2015 ○ THE BUGLE ○ www.thebugle.eu NATIONAL NEWS ♦

Page 10: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

www.thebugle.eu ○ THE BUGLE ○ AUGUST 201510 ♦ NATIONAL NEWS

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Roaming charges falling fast Warnings over fake policeHow many

people have quickly bab-bled the fol-

lowing when answer-ing their mobile phone? “Can you make it quick...? I'm in the UK so this is costing me a for-tune!” Well, statements like this could soon be a thing of the past as a price war in France is gradually bringing in free European roaming ahead of proposed EU legislation. The EU has long been battling with the major telecoms companies to introduce free roaming within member states and originally had hoped to enforce this through legislation at the end of 2015. This met with re-sistance, however, and has now been pushed back to June 2017 as part of a compromise deal. When the plans were first announced last year, a coalition of networks representing

45 million consumers warned that the legisla-tion was so badly de-signed that the cost of domestic calls could rise to pay for it. “There is a risk that domestic tariffs for European consumers will increase,” claimed the coalition, which in-cluded France's Free as

well as Three and Vir-gin Media in the UK. “Roaming might not be subject to surcharges anymore, but the overall level of tariffs would in-crease, and non-roaming customers might effec-tively foot the bill for roaming customers.” French telecoms com-panies were particularly concerned that they

could be unfairly pun-ished by the new rules as France is Europe's primary holiday desti-nation, meaning that a disproportionate number of foreign visitors would receive free and unfet-tered access to their net-works. Something appears to

have changed, however, and several French mo-bile operators are jump-ing the gun and are al-ready offering free EU roaming to their custom-ers. The latest is Free Mobile, the fourth larg-est telecoms company in France, which is now offering free calls, texts and 3Gb of internet ac-cess across all of Europe

as part of its €19.99 con-tract. The “Pass Destina-tion” deal is limited to 35 days’ usage in each country. Bouygues, SFR and Orange already offer a similar deal, although only on higher rate con-tracts. Expensive mobile phone bills when return-ing from abroad were once a fact of life, but the EU has cut roam-ing charges by 80% since 2007. Today, calls from EU countries are fixed at a maximum of 19 centimes per minute, receiving a call is 5 cen-times per minute, a text message costs 6 cen-times and data cost 20 centimes per megabyte. Regardless of the appar-ent price war breaking out, from April next year these will again be cut to 5 centimes per minute for making calls, 2 cen-times per text message and 5 centimes (plus VAT) per megabyte of data. ■

The Gendarmerie Nationale has issued a warning to drivers on French motorways, particularly on holiday routes. There have been several cases of miscreants, claiming to be plain clothes police officers, stopping

cars on the motorway in the early hours of the morning. Reports suggest that they usually have a van and some sort of flashing light. “Sometimes it can take less than a minute and often they purposefully rob mobile phones and the keys of the car, so the victims cannot raise the alarm,” explained Alain Archaimbault, a captain in the Gendarmerie, speaking to France Info radio. Claiming to be performing a drugs check, the fake cops often shine torches into the faces of their victims, expecting them to be overawed and disoriented in the early hours of the morning. A gang wearing fake uniforms was recently arrested in Béziers with a haul of valuables from multiple cars. “Firstly we would never perform plain clothes operations on a motorway, and we would never use unmarked vehicles in this way,” explained Captain Archaimbault. “Gendarmes and Police will always be in uniform. A cap with 'Police' on it is not a uni-form. Secondly, if you do stop, keep the doors locked and the windows up, and ask for identification. Asking a gendarme to produce credentials will never be taken amiss.” Drivers and passengers have been instructed not to open doors or windows unless they are absolutely certain who they are talking to. The Gendarmerie equivalent of the British plain-clothes CID, known as the Brigade des Recherches, are a uni-formed branch. If in doubt call 17 or 112 if your suspicions are aroused, whether you are stopped or not.

by Brian Hinchcliffe

Page 11: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

11 AUGUST 2015 ○ THE BUGLE ○ www.thebugle.eu NATIONAL NEWS ♦

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Les Guignols face the axeThe French pub-

lic have reacted with outrage at news that one of

the country's most popular comedy shows may face the axe. Les Guignols de l’info (The News Clowns), was inspired by the Brit-ish satirical show Spitting Image and can be best de-scribed as latex puppets reading the news. Les Guignols, as the programme is most often referred to, first hit the French airwaves in 1988 and is currently in its 27th - and possibly last - season. Les Guignols quickly be-came hugely popular, de-fining the image of count-less public figures and sparking both amusement and indignation among those it lampooned, much like Spitting Image in the UK; John Major never es-caped his “grey man” im-age created by the show. Over the years, Les Guignols has attracted some of France's top com-edy writers. Former French Presi-dent Jacques Chirac was one of the show's biggest stars, portrayed as a beer-guzzling corrupt rogue who transforms into the hero “SuperLiar” when his country needs him. “They are very clever, very po-litical, very fierce,” Chi-

rac told AFP in a 2009 interview. “It's true they weren't always tender with me... But mostly I find my puppet pretty likeable.” The move to axe the show appears to be the de-cision of businessman Vin-cent Bolloré, who owns the Canal Plus television channel that it appears on. Bolloré recently criticised “the spirit” of Canal Plus, saying it went too far with its mockery and derision. He is also France's 10th richest man and many have accused Bolloré of

planning to pull the plug on the show as an offering to his powerful friends, many of whom have felt its satirical sting. Radical-left leader Jean-Luc Mé-lenchon took to Twitter to accuse Bolloré of single-handedly censuring Les Guignols. Support for the show poured in from politicians and celebrities alike, with the hashtag #TouchePa-sAuxGuignols (Don't Touch The Guignols) soon trending. Even National Assembly

President Claude Bartolo-ne called for the show to be “saved”. “Les Guignols has an acerbic side that us politicians react badly to when we are the target but that lightens the news and political commentary,” he said. The massive show of support for the beloved programme appears to have bought the show a lifeline, with Bolloré sub-sequently suggesting it may be the format and/or time slot that may change in the short term. ■

Thieves stealarmy explosives

T here was confusion in France recently after thieves apparently broke into a military site in the south of the country and stole plastic explosives, grenades

and detonators. With the country on its highest state of alert following a series of terrorist at-tacks, the theft comes as a major embarrassment to the military and the government. According to judicial sources, “very well in-formed” thieves broke into the Miramas arms depot, north-west of Marseille, southern France, in the early hours of the morning after cutting through two wire fences. Marseille prosecutor Brice Robin said an investigation had begun into charges of “theft with break-in carried out by a criminal group” and “fraudulent entry into a mili-tary compound”. Although initial reports were sketchy, it is now believed that the thieves made off with as many as 40 grenades, 180 detonators and plastic explo-sives. “It wasn’t cotton candy that was stolen,” said Frédéric Vigouroux, the mayor of Miramas. “These are dangerous munitions. Everything is inherently dangerous.” The defence ministry has also launched an ad-ministrative inquiry into the worrying robbery of enough explosives to “blow up any bank or, worse, commit a large-scale attack at a time when the terrorist threat is high in France,” according to TF1. The investigation is reportedly focusing on or-ganised crime gangs as most likely being behind the theft, although they have not ruled out that the arms may have been stolen by would-be terrorists. A spokesman for the French military said the site was protected by guards with sniffer dogs that patrol behind two fences separated by a “no-man’s-land”. The outer fence, which is visible from the nearby road, does not have any CCTV, however, and whilst up to 250 civilian and mil-itary staff are present during the day, there are only a few guards at night. ■

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www.thebugle.eu ○ THE BUGLE ○ AUGUST 201512 ♦ NATIONAL NEWS

English-speaking man wins French Scrabble Championship

Woman fined over flip-flops

T here was shock at the recent French-speaking Scrabble Championship when the tournament's winner took to

the podium and gave a short speech... in English. The reason for this was simple: New Zealander Nigel Rich-ards does not speak a word of French! Richards, who has won the Eng-lish World Scrabble Championship three times, the US National Cham-pionship five times and the UK Open six times, beat a rival from French-speaking Gabon in the final held at Louvain in Belgium, after he appar-ently learned the French dictionary in just 9 weeks! The tournament's organizers were understandably gobsmacked. “We were all incredibly surprised,” said Antoine Rousseau, a spokesman for the French Federation of Scrab-ble. “It's hard enough just to win the

championship, but then to consider that he learned the whole French dictionary in nine weeks... it's really incredible. Especially considering he can't speak French. To learn the words when you don't understand the meaning, to learn all the sequences of letters and their arrangements... it's almost impossible!” Competitive Scrabble players say the game, when played at a high lev-el, is not in fact a test of language, but one of memorisation, which could go some way to explaining how Mr Richards pulled off the victory in a language he does not understand. “For living room players, Scrabble is about language, a test of vocabular-ies,” explained Oliver Roeder in an article for a specialist Scrabble web-site. “For world-class players, it’s about cold memorisation and math-ematical probabilities... Words exist

merely as valid strings with which to score points.” Memorisation is certainly a strength for the new Francophone world champion, who began playing Scrabble aged 28 at the request of his mother, who was frustrated that his photographic memory was making their card games too one-sided. One other advantage that the na-tive English speaker may have had was use of the letter “W”, worth just 4 points in English Scrabble, but 10 points in French where it is less commonly used. In fact, the highest scoring word in French Scrabble is “Whiskeys”! So, what was the key to his success and what are the tricks you should use to memorise a dictionary? Unfor-tunately, according to Mr Richards, there is no secret: “I just saw them and remembered them.” ■

A woman has been fined €90 by Gendarmes for driving in flip-flops, apparently under new road safety rules that came into force in July this year. “They stopped me to check my papers and

looked in the car to check everything was in order,” the woman told local newspaper La Dépêche du Midi. “It was a female police officer who stopped me. I opened the door and she noticed my feet and said to me: 'I am obliged to give you a fine. You are not allowed to drive with this kind of shoes, that are not attached to the feet'. I really thought she was joking. But no. I left with a €90 fine - the price of a pair of shoes!” Article 412-6 of the French highway code states drivers must be in a position to “execute all necessary manoeuvres conveniently and without delay” and the officer in this case issued the fine on the grounds that flip-flops come off too easily and could get jammed under a pedal. This is not the first time that a driver's choice of footwear has hit the headlines. In 2014, France's Supreme Court ruled that a female driver from Corsica should not receive a €250,000 compensation payout for injuries sustained in a car accident in 2002, because she had been wearing high heels at the time of the crash. ■

A 12-year-old British schoolgirl has died af-ter an accident on a school adventure holi-

day in the Limousin. Jessica Law-son, from Wolfreton School in Hull, fell into a lake near Meymac in the Corrèze and later died in Li-moges Hospital. The tragedy happened as the group of 24 schoolchildren were jumping from a pontoon on the lake at the end of a day’s activities during the 5-day trip. Witnesses said that the pontoon overturned as the children were jumping from it and several of the group became trapped underneath. A lifeguard dived down twice before locating the girl, who was brought to the surface. Emergency services were able to revive her and she was transferred to Limoges Hospital by helicopter, but she succumbed to her injuries the following day. A postmortem examination has been scheduled and French authori-ties have launched an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the incident.

Jessica’s family described her as a “beautiful and outgoing girl”. Her sister Polly, who travelled to the re-sort shortly after the accident along with other members of her family, wrote on Facebook: “Just thought I should let everyone who knows me and my family know that the girl in this accident was unfortunately my sister Jess. We are in France doing everything we can to get her back into the country. Remember who she was not who she could have been, it is important we respect and cherish the memories we had with her. Thanks everyone again.” Hannah Davison, another sister, said: “We are all heartbroken and devastated. Jess was the most beau-tiful and outgoing girl and I am proud to be her sister. I will live my life to the full just like she would have done.” Dave McCready, head teacher at Wolfreton School, called the death a terrible tragedy and a “dreadful shock to the whole school com-munity”. “As a parent myself I can only begin to imagine the pain felt by her parents and family at

her death at such a young age,” said the headmaster. “Our heartfelt thoughts and prayers go to the fam-ily at this very difficult time.” The adventure holiday, organ-ised by the Activ4 tour operator, in-cluded opportunities to kayak, sail, mountain bike, and rock climb. One of the conditions for going on the trip was that pupils had to be able to swim 50 metres unaided. Steve Scott, managing director of Activ4, said the exact circum-stances surrounding the accident remained unclear, but that he be-lieved the incident occurred while the group was swimming after ac-tivities scheduled by Club Corrèze staff had finished. “The owners of the activity centre and senior man-agement from Activ4 are working closely with the local authority and the school to provide all necessary support and assistance,” he said. The tragic accident has once again ignited the debate over the dangers of school trips, both at home and abroad, although others have warned against panic. Steve Lenartowicz, chair of the Outdoor

Education Adviser Panel high-lighted statistics from the Royal Society for the Prevention of Acci-dents which show that on average one pupil a year dies during activi-ties on school trips. “Now that one pupil is too many, obviously,” he told the BBC’s Today programme. “But there are 114 who die in road transport accidents, there are 24 who die in fires, and we’ve got

to balance the benefits against the risks. There are so many benefits to young people getting involved in sporting activities, in outdoor education; health benefits, benefits to developing their confidence and character and so on and while ob-viously one accident is too many, we really need to make sure we understand those benefits as well as the risks.” ■

British schoolgirl in tragic accident

SEARCHWORDOKU © - by Anthony Parson

Complete the alphabetical Sudoku grid to the left using only the letters already shown, then use the result word-search grid to find: A planet

How does it work...?Complete the Sudoku grid in the usual manner, using only the 9 letters already shown. Once complete, you will be left with a 9x9 wordsearch grid, in which to find the final piece of the puzzle.

See the completed example to the right, the clue for which is "An English county".

Be careful not to jump to conclu-sions, as with the letters available, the answer could be SURREY, SUS-SEX, ESSEX, or as it turns out in this case... SOMERSET.

Solution on page 20

© w

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tour

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Page 13: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

13 AUGUST 2015 ○ THE BUGLE ○ www.thebugle.eu FRENCH LIFE ♦

Mon JardinGardening essentials and giftware

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- Tools- Garden Essentials

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- Seeds & Bulbs- Gift Ideas

Managing Editor: Steve MartindaleEditor-in-Chief: Steve MartindaleRegistered Address: Les Quatre Chemins 23150 St-Yrieix-les-Bois FranceSIRET: 514 989 748 00017Printed by: Charente Libre 16340, L’Isle d’Espagnac FranceMonthly circulation: 12,500 copiesAll copyright, unless stated otherwise, is re-served to The Bugle. Reproduction in whole or part of any text without permission is prohibited.Dépôt légal à parution.

Directeur: Steve MartindaleRédacteur-en-chef: Steve MartindaleSiège Les Quatre Chemins 23150 St-Yrieix-les-Bois FranceSIRET: 514 989 748 00017Imprimé par: Charente Libre 16340, L’Isle d’Espagnac FranceTirage mensuel: 12,500 copiesTous droits réservés. Toute reproduction, totale ou partielle, des articles et illustrations du présent numéro est strictement interdite.Dépôt légal à parution.

The Bugle cannot accept responsibility for the claims of advertisers or their professionalism. We strongly advise readers to verify that the company you are dealing with is a registered trading company in France or elsewhere in the world.

In the garden - jobs for Augustby Michelle Pierce

A t the time of writ-ing this, much of Europe, and cer-tainly France, has

been experiencing several weeks of «une canicule», a heatwave, with extraordinar-ily hot temperatures, and dry-ing winds. Even at night the thermometer hasn't dropped much, and so many things have suffered, gardens obvi-ously included. So what is there to say? All normal advice for this time of year can't really apply until the weather changes. Firstly, how to stop things dying? Well, if you have the time, the energy and the money you can try to water as much as possible, at the end of the day, at dusk. Containers and plants which have been planted recently are evidently going to need more than estab-lished things that can get their roots well down into the soil. But not everyone can water widely, so if you can't, pick your specimens, and water different things each evening. Beware any water restrictions in place and check with your mairie if in doubt. Mulch is the gardener's friend in these extremes, and many things can be used: in-stead of putting your weeds onto the compost heap, pile them around the base of things in a thick layer. They'll dry to a crisp by the end of the day, releasing their water content. Or you could use this year's bracken leaves, hedge clip-pings, lawn clippings (except that for most of us the grass is a shrivelled dry brown car-pet that doesn't need much mowing!) You could also use straw or hay, or compost, etc... These usually attract slugs but I guess these have either gone right down into the depths of the soil, or died with the drought, because we haven't seen many around for weeks! The textbooks will tell you it's better to mulch on top of wet soil, but needs must, and a thick layer of mulch helps to protect the soil surface (and therefore the roots of your plants) from the heat brought by the sun's rays. It will really

help things stay alive when they'd otherwise die. Alternatively, look at tall plants such as the asters and campanulas which were in their full growth spurt when this «méteo» started. Or roses, shrubs, etc. If they look like they're really suffering, cut them back (by half for the perennials). The less greenery a plant has to maintain, the less water it needs and so the better it feels. It will regrow when the rain comes back, and the name of the game is to keep the plants alive. Put the chopped off bits directly round the base of their mother plants. Pondweed is multiplying frantically at the moment, and this can also be skimmed off and used round the base of plants. Keep an eye on water quality, and make sure the pond water levels don't fall too far. Many things are in advance,

thinking that they're in late August, so seeds have set early, and can be collected for next year. But the bugbear is that all the sowing and planting out for later in the year, the win-ter, and the spring is pretty much on hold unless you do it in modules – but even then it gives extra work watering - and a day in a greenhouse with recent temperatures is enough to kill a whole host of seed-lings, as I know to my cost!! So hold off and wait until it's a good few degrees cooler. The same goes for transplant-ing and dividing your peren-nials, which we might other-wise have been thinking about starting. In the veg garden, you can clearly see which plants have had enough water to fruit well, but that has got to be a minority, really. We really are in a pretty unusual and dra-matic time, because it's been

a good long while since we saw regular temperatures in the 40°s, so make sure you do «tout le nécessaire» to save your treasures. Evidently, all bonfires are prohibited so leave any rub-bish that needs to be burnt in a pile out of the way. And be choosy about the times you go out to work in your garden – avoid the hot-test part of the day, and re-member that it's better to do several short bursts during the

day than get overheated, sun-stroked or sunburnt! Speaking of which, the tem-perature this evening is more manageable now so I'm going to stop and spread more mulch around.

Good gardening! ■

Please remember to leave some shallow plant saucers or containers of water out for the hedgehogs and other wild-life...

Where are the insects...? With the recent extreme temperatures, many of us across the region have had our doors and windows thrown open until late at night, if not all night long, to cool the house down. Normally you'd have your ceil-ings covered with bugs, moths of all sizes and shapes fluttering round the light sources, hornets bumbling round... There is a dramatic absence of the above in my village. And I have just had to rescue a meagre handful of moths so far this summer. Ca-tastrophe! What are the bats living on? And the nocturnal birds, the owls, etc? Insects being the base of the food chain, it really will have a significant impact.

Advertise your business in The [email protected]

Page 14: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

www.thebugle.eu ○ THE BUGLE ○ AUGUST 201514 ♦ PRACTICAL

If you want to sell, be sure you’re a seller!With sellers in the Dordogne housing market hugely out-stripping potential buyers you have to be prepared to compromise if you want to sell your home, writes Adrian Lithgow.

The most common and difficult con-versation estate agents have with

people wanting to sell in to-day’s market is to hear why the exceptional nature of their property justifies a price that in reality has no basis on what buyers are prepared to pay. It can by truly heart-break-ing to hear about the money and effort that has gone into a property – only for all that investment simply to main-tain the value at the price that was paid at the top of the

market 7 or 8 years ago. Yet this is what hundreds if not thousands of homeown-ers in the Dordogne are fac-ing if for one of a myriad of reasons they now wish to put their property on the market. But while buyers never see – and certainly don’t care – about all the blood, sweat and tears that have gone into renovating a property (if that is indeed what you have done) there are ways of ap-proaching a sale that can help you in the current climate. There is no doubt that if it is your intention to remain in France rather than return to the UK you are likely to find the situation a lot easier. The first ray of sunshine is that the fall in the value of the Euro from around 1.18 to the pound at the beginning of the year to over 1.40 reached

last month means buyers coming from the UK have a hugely increased budget. The fall in the Euro has po-larized positions. For those wanting value for money they have even more. For those who are risk averse there remains the feeling that if the Euro plunges even more, they will lose on their investment. So for homes to live in, rather than turn as an invest-ment, the fall is good news and there is no doubt there is an increase in the number of UK and non-Eurozone buyers right now. If you are not going to go back to the UK, my advice is to work out what it is you want to do and how much margin you need when you come to buy your next prop-erty. Focus on this, rather than

the absolute price, and when you become a buyer take ad-vantage of market conditions to get the very best possible deal you can to recoup. The hard reality is that you can very probably pass what you feel to be your ‘loss’ down the line to the person you then go on to buy from. Adjusting to today’s prices is hard for everyone. And it is particularly so for those who have over-invested in their homes. Yes, I said over-invested, because I see time and again how proud home owners have tried to inflate the value of their homes but ended up giving it too high specifications that then make them too expensive. The maximum price per square metre is only ever go-ing to top €1,800 in the most exceptional circumstances

and this will be less to do with the finish than the externals such as location, amenities and period. Finally, there is a lot you can do to present your home well. Get rid of personal clut-ter. You want to get a viewer to imagine themselves already living in the place - that it is theirs, not yours. Take heart from the fact that there is a little bit of bounce back in the market - but you cannot rely on this alone. You and your agent must still work hard to sell your home. ■

Adrian Lithgow is Channel 4’s A Place In The Sun prop-erty expert in Dordogne and runs the Issigeac office of Valadié Immobilier. He can be reached on 06 02 24 92 62 or email [email protected]

I f you are enjoying your retirement years in France, your pension funds and income will play an important part in financing your life here. There

are two key issues you need to consider and understand: what the options are for your funds, especially following the UK pen-sion reform, and how pensions are taxed in France.

Taxation in France

State retirement and pensions

UK state retirement pension is always taxable in France and will be paid gross in the UK. Income from retirement and disability pensions are taxed in the same way as in-come from employment, and are therefore subject to the scale rates of income tax. The tax rates currently range from 0% for income under €9,690 to 45% for income over €151,956. There is a 10% deduction (maximum €3,707) for private pensions. In France you are taxed as a ‘household’, which benefits couples where one spouse receives a much higher income than the other. Social charges may also be payable, see below.

Occupational pensions and annuities from personal pensions

Occupational pension income is taxed in the same way as state retirement pensions.

Government service pension

Unlike other pension income, UK gov-ernment, civil and military service pen-sions remain taxable in the UK, and so are not directly taxed in France, unless there has been a transfer out before the pension commences (and usually before age 59). Although the income is not taxed in France, you still need to declare it. The in-come is included in the calculation of your taxable income and a credit equal to the French income tax and social charges that would have been payable is given.

Drawdown from Personal Pension Schemes

This is a grey area as no similar arrange-ment exists in France, but regular income

drawn from the fund should be declared as ‘pensions’ and will be taxed as such.

Pension lump sums

Large one-off lump sum payments from overseas pension funds are now taxable in France. There is one exception, which is if you exercise your right of withdrawal be-cause of an ‘accident of life’. Lump sums from UK pensions are taxed at a fixed 7.5%, provided there is no possi-bility of taking another lump sum in future. So if you take your entire UK pension at once as a lump sum, it will be taxable at 7.5%; otherwise it will be taxed as income.

Social charges

Besides the tax rates above, all pension income is subject to social charges at 7.4% each year. However, if you do not yet have access to the French health system or have EU Form S1, your pension income is exempt. You are entitled to Form S1 once you start receiving your UK state pension.

Receiving your pension without UK tax

So that you do not pay tax twice, you need to arrange to receive your pension (other than government service) and annu-ity income gross. You need to file a form FRA/INDIVIDUAL (FD5) with your local French tax authorities, who will stamp the English part to confirm that you are tax resident in France. This is then sent to HM Revenue & Customs who advise your pen-sion provider to pay the income gross.

UK pension reforms

The new “pension freedom” regime from 6th April 2015 provides pension holders with many more options for their pension funds. If you have a defined contribution scheme and are aged over 55, you can now make withdrawals of any amount when-ever you need to, with the balance remain-ing invested. You can take regular income through income drawdown. You can even take the whole fund out as one lump sum. You also still have the option to take a se-cure regular income through buying an an-nuity. You can transfer from a defined benefit

to a defined contribution scheme, but be aware that you may lose valuable benefits so need to weigh all the pros and cons. And you must take advice from a financial ad-viser authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority in the UK before taking action. You need to carefully consider each of the options, how they affect you person-ally, and the tax implications in France. The potential 7.5% tax charge on pension lump sums could provide opportunities in France, depending your situation and what is suitable for your circumstances and ob-jectives. Your situation is unique, so do not pre-sume that what someone else is doing will be right for you. What you do with your pension fund now is a major decision, and you need to get it right. This is a highly

complex area, and if you get it wrong you could at best pay more tax than necessary, at worst lose your pension savings. Seek specialist, and personalised, advice. ■

Blevins Franks, the leading interna-tional tax and wealth management advis-ers to UK nationals living in Europe, with decades of experience advising British ex-patriates moving to and living in France www.blevinsfranks.com

Tax rates, scope and reliefs may change. Any statements concerning taxation are based upon our understanding of current taxation laws and practices which are sub-ject to change. Tax information has been summarised; an individual is advised to seek personalised advice.

UK pensions and living in France

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Page 15: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

15 AUGUST 2015 ○ THE BUGLE ○ www.thebugle.eu BILINGUAL ♦

LEARNING FRENCH VIA INTERNET

TRANSLATION SERVICES ALSO AVAILABLE

Perhaps you would like to learn French in comfort at home or from your offi ce? You are not in France and you wish to communicate with a native French person for one hour per week?

LONG-DISTANCE LEARNING is the answer. You only need internet access and a free Skype account.It can be a one-to-one lesson or you can share the lesson with a person of the same level.

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Millennium Wheel - the Eiffel Tower of London?T he “London

Eye”, also known as the “Millen-nium Wheel”,

is a giant Ferris wheel on the banks of the Thames river that was constructed to celebrate the new mil-lennium. It was initially planned to operate for just 5 years, but was so popular that it is now a permanent fixture of the London sky-line. The entire structure is 135 metres tall and when it was built it was the tallest Ferris wheel in the world, although this record was subsequently beaten by a number of other wheels, most notably the 167.6 metre High Roller in Las Vegas. It is still the tallest Ferris wheel in Europe. For a long time, the Lon-

don Eye was a controver-sial project. Many people claimed it was a waste of public money and that it would become irrelevant once the millennium cel-ebrations were finished. In fact, the public and tour-ists fell in love with the huge wheel and today it is the most popular paid tour-ist attraction in the United

Kingdom, with over 3.5 million visitors annually. The wheel has 32 sealed and air-conditioned cap-sules that can carry 25 peo-ple - each capsule weighs 10 tonnes! The capsules move very slowly – 26 cm per second to be precise – which means that a trip around the wheel takes approximately 30 min-

utes. In fact, they move so slowly that the wheel does not even need to stop to allow passengers to get on and off. It is, however, occasionally stopped to allow disabled or elderly passengers enough time to embark and disembark safely. The London Eye is situ-ated on the south bank of

the river Thames close to Westminster Bridge. It of-fers unparalleled views over central London, par-ticularly of Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament which are nearby on the

opposite side of the river. Today, the attraction re-mains a popular cultural symbol of London. In a book about the London Eye, award-winning ar-chitect Sir Richard Rogers described its importance as follows: “The Eye has done for London what the Eiffel Tower did for Paris, which is to give it a sym-bol and to let people climb above the city and look back down on it. Not just specialists or rich people, but everybody. That's the beauty of it: it is public and accessible, and it is in a great position at the heart of London.” ■

Le « London Eye » (l’œil de Lon-dres), égale-ment appelé «

La roue du millénaire », est une roue géante située sur l’une des rives de la Tamise. Edifiée pour célébrer le nouveau millénaire et prévue pour ne fonctionner que 5 ans, elle est devenue si popu-laire qu’elle est toujours ancrée dans le panorama urbain de Londres. Ses 135 mètres de hau-teur en firent la grande roue la plus haute du monde au moment de sa construction. Ce record fut battu plusieurs fois par la suite, notamment par la « High Roller » de Las Vegas qui mesure 167.6 mètres, mais elle reste

toujours le monument le plus élevé d’Europe. Le projet « London Eye » fut longtemps con-troversé car ses détract-eurs considéraient qu’il n’aurait plus de perti-nence à la fin des célé-brations du Millénaire et que l’argent public serait ainsi gaspillé. En réalité, le public et les touristes

tombèrent amoureux de cette immense roue et c’est aujourd’hui l’attraction payante la plus courue du Royaume-Uni avec plus de 3.5 mil-lions de visiteurs par an. La roue comporte 32 nacelles hermétiques et climatisées pouvant transporter 25 personnes (chaque cabine pèse 10

tonnes !) Elles se dépla-cent très lentement, préci-sément de 26 cm par sec-onde et un tour complet de la roue dure approxi-mativement 30 minutes. La rotation est si lente que les cabines ne marquent pas d’arrêt pour la sortie et l’entrée des passagers, exception faite parfois pour l’embarquement et

le débarquement en toute sécurité des personnes les plus âgées ou handica-pées. Implanté sur la rive sud de la Tamise près du pont de Westminster, le Lon-don Eye offre des vues imprenables sur le centre de Londres, notamment sur Big Ben et le Palais de Westminster situés

à proximité sur l’autre berge. A u j o u r d ’ h u i , l’attraction est un sym-bole culturel populaire de Londres. Dans son livre sur le « London Eye », l’architecte primé Sir Richard Rogers décrit ainsi son importance : « Le London Eye est à Lon-dres ce que la Tour Eiffel est à Paris. Devenus des symboles, ils permettent au public de s’élever et d’avoir une vue domi-nante sur la ville. Pas seulement aux spécial-istes ou aux plus riches mais également à Mon-sieur Tout-Le-Monde. Sa beauté réside dans son accessibilité à tous et à sa position fantastique au centre de Londres ». ■

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Directory Advertising is available either in black and white or colour, and in either small (30 words max) or large (45 words max) format.Directory adverts may only contain text - no logos, images or artwork are allowed. The minimum contract length is 6 months. Advertising is payable on publication. All prices are HT.

For more information on any of our advertising options, please feel free to give us a call on 05 55 41 17 76 or send an email to [email protected]

Large Directory Ad46mm x 71mm(Actual Size)45 words max

Small Directory Ad46mm x 46mm(Actual Size)30 words max

6-Month Contract 12-Month Contract

Small b&w Directory Ad €108(€18/month)

€162 (€13.50/month)

Large b&w Directory Ad €144(€24/month)

€216(€18/month)

Small Colour Directory Ad €162(€27/month)

€243(€20.25/month)

Large Colour Directory Ad €216(€36/month)

€324(€27/month)

Advertising in The Bugle Business Directory

The Bugle thanks French teacher, Sophie Arsac,for the translation of this month's bilingual arti-cle on a topical aspect of Franco-British culture.

Page 16: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

www.thebugle.eu ○ THE BUGLE ○ AUGUST 201516 ♦ DIRECTORY

Business DirectoryYour indispensable guide to finding local businesses & artisans

Animals & Pets

BuildingServices

Architectural Services

AutoServices

CONTINUED NEXT PAGE...

DOG GROOMING FOR ALL TYPES OF DOGS

Clipping, cutting, hand stripping, bathing, ear care & nail trimming.

INGRID GELAUDIE** New address **

La Baronnie, 24260 Audrix

06 31 98 92 07

[email protected]

05 55 41 17 76

SHAMPOOCHIENSDog Grooming Parlour

All breeds catered forClipping, hand stripping

and bathing30 years’ experience

24500 Eymet05 53 58 55 38

and home ofCANOUAN ENGLISH

SPRINGER SPANIELSPuppies sometimes available

Siret: 499 234 615 00015

ArchitecturalDRAWING SERVICERenovating yourFrench property?

New build?Dossiers prepared

Permis de Construire Déclarations Préalables

Tel: 05 53 52 36 [email protected]

www.latuspeter-architecturaldrawings-24.comSIRET: 493 770 358 00015

At Masterplans.eu we can help guide you through your planning application in France. From initial feasibility to completed dossiers. We will compile all the relevant drawings and complete the necessary paperwork to ensure

your application proceeds smoothly.We are equally at home working with clients

here in France or those living abroad.

Tel: 05 55 80 72 83Mob: 06 33 07 29 72Email: [email protected]

www.masterplans.euSiret: 790 016 984 00011

Suppliers of Car & Van Spares& LHD headlights, anywhere in France

Direct to France at big savings!also Mower Batteries and drive belts!

www.motorpartscharente.comDelivery via UPS direct to your door in France

JOHN SOWERSBY+44 (0)1377 255470 / +44 (0)7830 170761

[email protected]

MOTOR PARTSCHARENTE

BuildingServices

Electricians

[email protected]

05 55 41 17 76

[email protected]

05 55 41 17 76

BARWICKÉLECTRICITÉ

SHAUN BARWICK QUALIFIED ELECTRICIAN

Available for all types of electrical workSmall jobs, new builds,

renovations, rewires Consuel assistance and

certification service availableFully insured with 10 year workmanship guarantee

Based near Châlus (87230)

Tel: 09 72 35 74 73Email: [email protected]

@iret: 794 282 368 00016

BuildingServices

General

For more information on advertising in the

Bugle BusinessDirectory, give us

a call or send us an email:

[email protected]

05 55 41 17 76

For more information on advertising in the

Bugle BusinessDirectory, give us

a call or send us an email:

[email protected]

05 55 41 17 76

Solaire Power

Your contact in renewable energyUse the power of the sun and/or wood.

We sell, or sell and install,heating & domestic hot water systems.

For more information:www.solaire-power.eu

Tel : 05 53 56 66 61 / 05 53 91 85 3224340 Ste-Croix-de-Mareuil

siret : 511 301 038 00036

ElsaConception(Architecture/ Design/ Decoration)

Need interior design advice?Planning a project? Giving a space a makeover?

Need to submit a building permitor a declaration?

I can support you in all your makeover,renovation or construction projects.

Sarlat and surrounding areas (up to 100km) Tel: 06.87.09.38.94

Web: http://www.elsaconception.com

CHARKER DAVIDSpecialist in the renovation

and restoration of period and contemporary buildingsAll small works undertaken

Stonework, Traditional renderings in Lime, Doors and Windows,

Dry line walls, Zinc work, Electrical wiringand interior finishes

E-mail  : [email protected]: 05 53 09 42 18

No Siret: 402 444 871 00030

CHARTERED STRUCTURAL

ENGINEERPre-purchase & Structural Surveys.

Verbal & written reports.Structural calculations & drawings.Redevelopment ideas & solutions.Tim Haw B.Eng C.Eng M.I.Struct.E

FR: 0033 (0)6 05 56 42 81UK: 0044 (0)7448 466 662

Web: www.versineer.comEmail: [email protected]

Siret: 498 843 051 00018

Youradverthere

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ETS RICHARDESTABLISHED IN 2005ARTISAN IN RENOVATION AND

CONSTRUCTION WORK INCLUDING BARNAND LOFT COVERSIONS. SPECIALIST IN

OLD STONE WORK, ALL TYPES OF ROOFING, PAINTING, BATHROOMS, TILING,

GUTTERING, WOOD CONSTRUCTION, PLASTERBOARDING, INSULATION.

BASED IN PERIGORD NOIR

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T : 06 38 71 08 36 E : [email protected] more information please visit my

Facebook page : Entreprise Richard

HarlequinDevelopmentsAll aspects of renovationand refurbishment, big or

small, undertaken. Harlequin Developments are

a Distributor and Installerfor Solarventi,

solar dehumidifyingand ventilating products.

05.55.68.67.5606.06.60.46.97

[email protected]

SIRET: 494.501.067.00016

Please mentionThe Bugle when

responding to adverts

Please mentionThe Bugle when

responding to adverts

Page 17: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

17 AUGUST 2015 ○ THE BUGLE ○ www.thebugle.eu DIRECTORY ♦ADVERTORIAL

Insulated Micro Cabins

They have been designed as perfect Studio accommodation, with all the necessary mod cons and no compromise on the quality of craftsmanship that you would normally expect from any of the larger cabins. There are a number of dif-ferent applications and uses for the Mi-cro Cabins.

A perfect mini “Granny Flat” in your garden, where you can have the best of both worlds meaning you can continue to have the privacy of your own home and your relative can enjoy indepen-dence at arms length. Here is the perfect opportunity for your growing offspring to really get to grips with “leaving the nest” for the very first time. Young son or daughter can live their own lives and take upon themselves complete indepen-dence and responsibility as a “rehearsal” prior to perhaps renting or purchasing a property of their own at a later stage. If you happen to have a member of the family who works late shift-work, they will need to have their uninter-rupted sleep during the day. With much happening in a busy household, it can be very difficult to keep quiet simply because your shift-worker is trying to catch up with that all-important sleep in the next room. With a Micro Cabin you have a Customised Shift Worker’s Studio. A perfect night’s sleep – no in-terruptions and the family can enjoy the jollities of the day without restriction. On the commercial front, if you hap-pen to be an Hotelier or the owner of a Guest House, the Micro Cabin could provide you with that additional bed & breakfast income for those who are nor-mally after a single room. Single rooms are always at a premium and business is often lost because of insufficient avail-ability of single rooms. The Micro cabin provides a complete

“en suite” luxury apartment for a single person. The footprint starts at 5m x 4m and therefore really doesn’t take up much ground space. With two or three of these Micro cabins on show looking quite spectacular in the Hotel grounds, they will attract customers and provide you with some very good additional in-come. Very low maintenance and easy to clean makes it a breeze for either the user or the person responsible for care-taking. The Micro Cabins are just perfect to have as an additional bedroom for that sudden unexpected visitor requiring an overnight stay. Everything can be at the ready without having to disrupt any of the rooms in the main house. From €19,000 fully erected and insulated.

Grill Cabins

These are a perfect place to relax, have a small party or a family get-together. A lovely Grill Cabin provides both a comfort and an exclusiveness to the environment. It can be painted in any desired colour and therefore perfectly fit your garden.

High-quality materials ensure the longevity of a grill house and easy use. Cabin walls are made of rounded spruce boards. The roof is made of six elements and covered with bitumen shingles (dif-ferent colors can be selected). The cabin has three double glazed windows, one of which opens. Besides that, doors are decorated with an original hexagonal window. There are five benches in the cabin; two of these benches easily trans-form into holding benches: just turn over

the additional board. The floor is easily assembled from separate components.

There is a convenient wood or char-coal-fired grill with a table around it inside the cabin. Also one adjustable cooking platform and two special plat-forms for a kettle, frying pan, etc., can be found. Above the grill there is an ad-justable chimney. These cabins are also available as a sauna cabin. The interior is arranged for comfortable and safe bathing in the sauna. Inside you can find two-tier wide sauna benches along three walls, an electric or a wood-fired heater in the center and a protective fence installed near to the heater. Finally, the cabin is lockable and there is a small porch with a roof at the entrance. From €4,900.

Sauna Barrels

Original, functional and high quality, the Sauna Barrel is perfect for a garden or a backyard. It both decorates the envi-ronment and provides bathing pleasures. Also, regular use of a sauna has obvi-ous health benefits. The diameter of the Sauna Barrel can be chosen from 1.90 m and 2.20 m, and it has 3 or 4 m long walls, thus it takes up little space and is ideal for small gardens or backyards.

The Sauna Barrel can be made of spruce or thermo wood. Upon request, we can install a wood-fired furnace or an electric heater in the Sauna Barrel. The thickness of the Sauna Barrel's walls is 38 mm; the thickness of the solid wood flooring is 18 mm. The roof of the sauna can be made of bitumen shingles (black, red or green) or wooden shingles. The

overall height including the roof is 2.1 or 2.4 m. Also, there are 2 layout options for this Sauna Barrel: with or without the terrace, which means a shorter or longer sauna room. From €4,500.

Camping POD

Try camping in a high quality Camp-ing POD. This is the ideal choice for a camping place or additional room in the garden.

The Camping POD has a small en-trance and two rooms inside: a 2 m length sleeping room with a wooden bed of size 1600 x 1990 mm (which can be transformed into a sofa) and a 2 m long sitting room with 2 poufs (they are empty inside to store your things), one table and a bench; weight is 1600 kg.

The Camping POD is made from spruce and the thickness of the walls is 38 mm; the thickness of the solid wood flooring is 28 mm. The Camping POD is 2.4 m wide and 2.6 m high. The roof is covered with bitumen shingles of se-lected colour: black, red or green. From €4,900.

Sauna POD

The Sauna POD is a beautiful solu-tion for the garden with its "soft edges". It looks nice and is different from the popular Sauna Cabins or Sauna Barrels. It can also be built next to the Camping POD and make your camping place look smooth and cozy. The Sauna POD is divided into two zones: a relaxing room and a sauna room. In the relaxing room you can not only cool down after bathing, but also store things and get changed.

The Sauna POD is made from spruce wood. Upon request, we can install a wood-fired furnace or an electric heater in the sauna. The thickness of the Sauna POD walls is 38 mm; the thickness of the solid wood flooring is 28 mm. The roof is covered with bitumen shingles of selected colour: black, red or green. The Sauna POD is 4 m long and 2.4 m wide. Overall height including the roof is 2.6 m. From €5,900. ■

www.abrisboislv.fr05 87 77 95 57

(English spoken)ZA Sirvenon

87190 Magnac-Laval

Abris Bois LV - Your timber building specialistsAbris Bois LV are pleased and excited to present a superb selection of cabins that are both exceptional and affordable.

Camping POD - inside

Camping POD

Grill Cabin - inside

Grill Cabin

Sauna POD - inside

Sauna Barrel

Micro Cabin

Holiday DealsDuring the month of August

we can offer you special deals (limited offer) on all of the above cabins and pods. Please contact us for a free quote. We offer a full service: delivery, erecting,

base laying, turn key, etc.

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Page 18: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

www.thebugle.eu ○ THE BUGLE ○ AUGUST 201518 ♦ DIRECTORY

The Dordogne Chippy

Traditional Fish & Chips in a town near you

All venues are in the eveningbetween 6pm & 8.30 pm

Monday: Domaine des Mathevies (Jul/Aug)Tuesday: Tremolat

Wednesday: Star Inn, PérigueuxThursday: Eymet

1st & 3rd Friday: Lauzun2nd Friday: Ste-Alvère

Last Friday: DaglanSee our website for full details:

www.thedordognechippy.com05 53 74 01 91 or 06 19 99 25 62

siret: 444 925 630 00014

Computers& Satellites

Sat-ElecFormerly Electrosat

UK & French Satellite TVDishes & Freesat boxes always in stockTerrestrial digital aerial installationsFrom a single outlet to multi-point systems

TOOWAY BROADBANDApproved Supplier

Wi-Fi, Data Networks, CCTVFor sales, service or advice

call Mike G on:05 55 09 15 73

We only use our own qualified staff No call out charge Free quotations All areas covered

Quality work from qualified Staff5 Place de la Republique Sauviat-sur-Vige 87400

siret no 798 364 600 00014

Food & Drink

La PoutreBar & Restaurant

24400 Beaupouyet (N89 between Montpon & Mussidan)

French/International cuisine.Themed nights each Friday:

1st Friday - Curry night2nd Friday - Quiz night

3rd Friday - Fish n Chips night “best around”!!4th Friday - Live Music night

Open Tue - Fri: 11am - 9pm (except Wed eve)Saturday 6pm - 10pm

Sunday 12pm - 3pm, traditionalEnglish roasts served

For further details call Steve:05 53 80 29 54

or email: [email protected] facebook: Beaupouyet La Poutre

siret 537 415 903 00013

PLUMBING &HEATING ENGINEER

- Installation, from kitchen tapsto full central heating systems

- Breakdown / Replacement boilers

- Emergency plumbing repairs

- Full analysed testing

M : 06 72 47 88 00T: 05 53 20 64 02

E : [email protected] Artisan - Siret No: 480 857 853 00018

BuildingServices

Plumbers

[email protected]

05 55 41 17 76

General

SOS Helpanxious? stressed?

feeling down?call us up!

01 46 21 46 463 - 11pm daily

Confidential & Non-profitwww.soshelpline.org

Restaurant Le Commensal54 bis, rue du 26 Mars 1944 - 24600 Ribérac

Open 12h-14h & 19h-22hPrivate car park

TerraceHomemade fresh food

Holder of“Restaurant de Qualité”

award Tel: 05 53 90 46 28

Youradverthere

05 55 41 17 76

Stephen WisedaleWiFi Anglais

Solve your Internet,wireless and

computer problemsExtended wired and wireless networks for homes, gîtes and small businesses.VPN solutions. Windows and Mac OSX.

www.wifianglais.comEmail: [email protected]: 05 53 30 23 96

Mob: 07 78 52 20 46Siret: 800 525 040 00013

For more information on advertising in the

Bugle BusinessDirectory, give us

a call or send us an email:

[email protected]

05 55 41 17 76

BuildingServices

Painters/Decorators

Simon CarterPainter & DecoratorQualified craftsman with over 25 years

UK experience, now basedHaute-Vienne/north Dordogne border.

Specialist services:Interior & exterior painting &

decorating, wallpapering, plastering.FREE QUOTES

Tel: 05 87 19 91 50Mob: 07 81 26 88 65Web: www.sjcmontluc.fr

Email: [email protected]: 792.130.932.00017

Would you like to receive your copy of The Bugle by post each month?

Email us for more details - [email protected] visit www.thebugle.eu

We can deliver a copy to your door, hot off the pressFrance, UK and Europe - €16 per year

To advertise in The Bugle Business Directory, call 05 55 41 17 76

ADVERTORIAL

A simple solar energy sys-tem that runs on its own, even when you are not

there! – And provides a free heat supplement in winter. The Solarventi air panel was invented more than 20 years ago by Hans Jørgen Christensen, from Aidt Miljø, with the back-ing of the Danish government. He wanted to use the sun’s en-ergy for airing and ventilation of the thousands of holiday homes on the West coast of Jutland, - houses that were left empty and unheated for long periods - houses with damp problems, mould and bad odours - houses that left their owners with dis-comfort, lots of work and ex-pense. He wanted a system that would be safe, simple, without the need for radiators, water and/or mains electricity. Slowly but surely, the first Solarventi model came together.

How it worksThe principle behind Solarventi is simple: a small, built-in, so-lar cell powers a 12V fan that is connected to an air vent, a con-trol unit and an on/ off switch. Whenever the sun shines, the air in the solar panel is heated and the fan, receiving power from the solar cell, introduces warm, dry air into your home at the rate of 20 to 100 cubic me-tres per hour. The initial models were more than capable of keeping the cot-tages dry (and ventilated), even with the limited sunshine hours available in Denmark during the winter season. Since that time, the technology has re-ally come along in leaps and bounds. Now, more than 20 years later, the 3rd and 4th gen-eration Solarventi have exceed-ed all expectations. In Southern Europe, Solar-

venti is not only used for ventila-tion/dehumidification purposes; with far more winter sunshine hours, it also provides a substan-tial heating supplement. Sev-eral technical and governmental studies show that incoming air temperature can be increased by as much as 40°C.

A DIY Solution?The installation process is very straightforward and should only take two or three hours. All that is needed is a drill, hammer and chisel to make a hole in the wall. Roof installations are also possible. In fact, the Solarventi was originally designed to be a DIY product - in Scandinavia it still is. There are no electrical or water connections and it can be safely left running, even when the property is empty. Solar-venti requires no maintenance

- if the property is unoccupied during the hot summer months, then it can be left running at low speeds for ventilation and dehu-midification purposes or simply switched off. With a range of panel sizes, and the option for wall or roof mounting, Solarventi is suitable for all types of buildings, cara-vans or even boats!! Following the patenting of its design in 2001, Solarventi has only re-cently been actively commer-cialized. Over the last six years, Solarventi units have been in-stalled in more than 24 countries and demand is increasing rapid-ly. From Greenland to Australia, Solarventi is finally getting the recognition it deserves. ■

Units start from €630 TTC. Several ex-demonstration

models available at reduced prices, call for details.

SOLARVENTI - Available in the Dordogne and Lot from Harlequin DevelopmentsTel: 05 55 68 67 56Mobile: 06 06 60 46 97

“SolarVenti”- the solar solution to damp and humidity

Page 19: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

19 AUGUST 2015 ○ THE BUGLE ○ www.thebugle.eu DIRECTORY ♦

For more information on advertising in the

Bugle BusinessDirectory, give us

a call or send us an email:

[email protected]

05 55 41 17 76

Ivan Petley

3D Puzzle MakerHandmade, fully interlocking,

multi-layered 3D puzzles from just €9.Keyrings €2 plus other unique gift ideas.

Customisation and personalisation possible.Postal delivery options across France.

Tel: 05.55.80.29.88Les Bregères, 23150 St-Martial-le-Mont

[email protected]

Gifts & Crafts

CARPET /UPHOLSTERY

CLEANINGSpecialists in all carpet and

upholstery cleaningPROCHEM trained and Qualified

10 years UK experience - Covering depts 24/47/3306 32 32 64 54 / 05 53 58 00 98email [email protected]

siret: 512 614 306 00011

Youradverthere

05 55 41 17 76

Youradverthere

05 55 41 17 76

SECONDHAND CLOTHING

for the whole familyABJAT-SUR-BANDIAT

(opp. the boulangerie)Open: Tue & Thu, 14h-17h

alsoSun, 10h-12h in July & August only

By appointment outside these hours:

Tel: 06 79 04 10 21

'ROUSSIS MAID'APRONS

HAND-CRAFTED CARDS FOR ALL OCCASIONSQuality product at affordable prices.

Customized, if required, especially for you.Available blank or with either English or French greetings.Email: [email protected]

VISIT ME AT THE FOLLOWING MARKETS:PIEGUT (Wed), BRANTOME (Fri)

AIGRE, CHASSENEUIL & CONFOLENS (Monthly)FIND OUR CARDS AT: Magazin Artisanat, Confolens

Send an email to sign up to the newsletterTel: 06 86 89 81 02

siret 528 539 448

MICHAELS MOVERS

RemovalsUK ↔ France ↔ UK

Full & Part loadsAll size of vehicles

Storage facilities in SussexUK free phone:

0800 840 3058Mob: +44 (0)7808 338 386

Removals, storage& house clearance in Dordogne

06 73 96 38 39 (FR) www.michaelsmovers.freeindex.co.uk

Please mentionThe Bugle when

responding to adverts

Central France Pest Control

Dératisation, Déinsectisation,Désinfection

02 48 60 83 72 / 06 74 33 02 38www.applicateur3d.com

Email: [email protected]

Curative and preventativerats, mice, moles, flies, woodworm,

bed bugs, fleas, wasps, hornets

La Petite Barre, 18210 Bessais Le FromentalSIRET No. 498 544 741 00024

Pest Control

PropertySales

Transport,Removals & Storage

Man & VanTransport

Genuine/Reliable/HonestLocal + Europe + UK runs

Now also available for House/Barn clearances!

14m3 capacity4.2m load length

French Spoken

05 55 33 21 5987150 Oradour-sur-Vayres

www.frenchvanman.euSiret 530 213 644 00012

Eco Entrepotaka The Shed

32,000ft2 of great products incl. British Groceries, DIY, Housewares, Furniture, Clothing, Toiletries plus

loads more!!

05 55 68 74 73Open every day except Monday

Short ‘optimised’ web videos in English and/or French for your property sale or your business.

Contact Joanna:

www.VideoProFrance.comTe: +33 (0) 6 99 07 64 28

[email protected]

DSD Removals& Storage

The Removal ExpertsFrance ↔ UK

• All risk insurance cover• Full and Part load specialists

• Professional staff & modern vehicles

• Every vehicle from a Luton van to a full removals lorry• Prices from £3.63 per sq ft +44 (0)1274 724 [email protected]

facebook.com/DSDRemovals

bookstopQuality second-hand

books in English & French19 rue Victor Hugo24310 BRANTÔME

09 51 45 57 49Relax and browse in comfortHot and cold drinks served

Retail &Commerce

Please mentionThe Bugle when

responding to adverts

Directory Advertising is available either in black and white or colour, and in either small (30 words max) or large (45 words max) format.Directory adverts may only contain text - no logos, images or artwork are allowed. The minimum contract length is 6 months. Advertising is payable on publication. All prices are HT.

For more information on any of our advertising options, please feel free to give us a call on 05 55 41 17 76 or send an email to [email protected]

Advertising your business couldn’t be easier. Text only, boxed listings are available in our Business Directory from just €13.50/month. Alternatively, why not spotlight your business with an Advertorial, available from 1/6 Page (€50 HT) up to Full Page (€300 HT). Both Directory Adverts and Ad-vertorials represent a cost effective way to put your brand in front of more than 25,000 pairs of eyes each month!!

Large Directory Ad46mm x 71mm(Actual Size)45 words max

Small Directory Ad46mm x 46mm(Actual Size)30 words max

6-Month Contract 12-Month Contract

Small b&w Directory Ad €108(€18/month)

€162 (€13.50/month)

Large b&w Directory Ad €144(€24/month)

€216(€18/month)

Small Colour Directory Ad €162(€27/month)

€243(€20.25/month)

Large Colour Directory Ad €216(€36/month)

€324(€27/month)

Advertising in The Bugle Business DirectoryTo advertise in The Bugle Business Directory, call 05 55 41 17 76

Page 20: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

www.thebugle.eu ○ THE BUGLE ○ AUGUST 201520 ♦ COMMUNITY

MondayBeynacLe FleixLes EyziesSte-Alvère

TuesdayBeaumont du PérigordBergeracBrantômeCénac-et-Saint-JulienLanouailleLe BugueMareuilNeuvicRibéracSalignac EyviguesThenonTrémolat Villefranche-de-Lonchat

WednesdayBergeracHautefortJumilhac-le-GrandLa Tour BlancheMontpon-MénestérolMontignacPérigueux

Piégut PluviersRazacSarlatSiorac-en-PérigordVélines

ThursdayDommeExcideuilEymetLa Coquille LalindeMonpazierSt AstierSt-Julien-de-LamponTerrasson

FridayBergeracBrantômeCubjacLe BuissonRibéracSarlatVergt

SaturdayAgonacBeaumont du PérigordBelvès

BergeracLalindeLa Roche ChalaisLe BugueMontignacMussidanNeuvicNontronPérigueuxRazacSarlatSigoulèsSt AulayeThiviersVerteillacVillefranche du Périgord

SundayBergeracCouze St FrontDaglanIssigeacPontoursPressignac-VicqRouffignacSarlatSorgesSt CyprienSt GéniesSt Pardoux la Rivière

Market Days

Eymet Cricket Club is busy preparing for its 32nd season.At least 22 matches, either home or away, are scheduled

for this year.The club also has a very active junior section, coaching youngsters

and bringing them on to join the senior team.Full details of ECC, including a fixture list, past history, match

reports, contact details, etc. can be found on the website:www.eymetcricket.com

As always, new members are welcome, be they players, social members or just lovers of the game. Our teas - and tea ladies - are renowned

throughout the Aquitaine!

AQUITAINE CHURCH SERVICES – AUGUST 2015The Chaplaincy of Aquitaine covers the Dordogne,

Gironde, Lot-et-Garonne, and Condom (Gers). All services are held in English.

For further details, please see our website:www.churchinaquitaine.org

or contact Chaplaincy Administration:Amy Owensmith, +33 (0) 607 04 07 77

[email protected] 02 AUGUST

10:30 Service of the Word – Bertric Burée 10:30 Holy Communion – Bordeaux

10:30 Prayer & Praise – Limeuil 10:30 Morning Worship – Monteton11:00 Holy Communion – Doudrac

11:00 Morning Worship – Sainte Nathalène17:00 Evensong - Limeuil

18:00 Evensong – Bertric Burée

SUNDAY 09 AUGUST10:30 Holy Communion – Bertric Burée

10:30 Morning Worship – Bordeaux10:30 Morning Worship – Eymet Temple

10:30 Holy Communion – Limeuil10:30 Morning Prayer - Monteton10:30 Family Service – Négrondes

11:00 Morning Worship – Sainte Nathalène

Tuesday 11 August11:30 Holy Communion – Envals

Wednesday 12 August11:00 BCP Holy Communion – Bertric Burée

SUNDAY 16 AUGUST10:30 Family Service – Bertric Burée10:30 Morning Worship – Bordeaux

10:30 Holy Communion – Chancelade10:30 Holy Communion - Dondas10:30 Morning Worship - Limeuil10:30 Prayer & Praise – Monteton

11:00 Holy Communion – Sainte Nathalène

Thursday 20 August10:30 Holy Communion - Limeuil

SUNDAY 23 AUGUST10:30 Holy Communion – Bertric Burée

10:30 Morning Worship - Bordeaux10:30 Holy Communion – Limeuil

10:30 Holy Communion - Monteton10:30 Holy Communion – Négrondes

11:00 Prayer & Praise – Sainte Nathalène

Thursday 27 August11:00 Holy Communion – Condom

SUNDAY 30 AUGUST10:30 Special Service – Bertric Burée10:30 Holy Commmunion - Bordeaux10:30 BCP Holy Communion – Limeuil

11:00 Morning Worship – Sainte Nathalène10:30 Evening Prayer - Monteton

Indoor bowls at Eyzerac

Dordogne Short Mat Bowls Association is a small, friendly, indoor short mat bowlingclub which plays weekly at the Complex Sportif in Eyzerac near Thiviers

and we are looking for new members to join us on Thursdays.

At present, during the summer months we play in the mornings starting at 10 o'clockbut usually the matches start at 2 pm. It is not necessary to know how to play the game as team members

are more than willing to show newcomers.

For more details and contact information visit http://dsmba.dessoft.com

Page 21: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

21 AUGUST 2015 ○ THE BUGLE ○ www.thebugle.eu WHAT’S ON ♦

WHAT’S

ON

Fête du Cinéma en Plein Air en DordogneCiné-Passion has a programme of mobile open-air cinema for the summer season with 3 movie

teams visiting a score of venues across the department.

With tickets priced at €6 (reductions €4.50, Under 14s €4, block of 5 tickets €20) it seems a greatway to spend a hot summer’s night.

For programme and venue details visit www.cine-passion24.com

Exposition La Ronde des PaysagesIn the past month alone, more than 3000 art lovers have visited the latest exhibition in Sarlat’s old town.

The art show’s theme is the local countryside, with a guided commentary every Tuesday at 12h15.

Open daily from 11h-19h in the ancien évêché building, the exhibition offers a calm and cool space to get a new perspective on the Périgord Noir.

CHÂTEAU DE HAUTEFORT« La nuit, au chateau... »

Wednesdays (until 26th August)

Go off to explore the castle, at nightfall, in the company of Catherine de Hautefort, the sister of Marquis Jacques-François,

the owner of the château in the 17th century.

An unusual visit for all the family!

Ticket office 21h-22h (no booking necessary)Tickets: €12; 7-14s €7

« Créathèques » for young visitors

Creative workshops providing a fun environment where younger members of the public (from 6 years) come to learn about the

history and significance of the château.Using art materials they produce highly imaginative and original creations. These workshops,

lasting around 45 minutes, are run by artist Danielle Godart.

Wednesdays (until 26th August) from 14h30-18hTickets: no supplement (included in the entry price to the château)

For more information visit www.chateau-hautefort.com

Page 22: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

www.thebugle.eu ○ THE BUGLE ○ AUGUST 201522 ♦ WHAT’S ON

Exhibitionof talented

artists at theChâteau

de Saussignac

from1st to 16th

August

Open dailyfrom

14h30 to 18h30

www.cep-saussignac.com

This summer RoughCast brings “As You Like It” to the Dordogne. One of Shakespeare’sbest-loved comedies, it involves warring brothers, a cross-dressing lover and more comic turns than most of the other comedies put together. The heroine, Rosalind, disguised as a man, takes

full advantage of her male disguise to play the leading role in her romance with Orlando.Add in some of Shakespeare’s most memorable speeches, amorous shepherds and good-hearted

yokels and you have a perfect summer evening’s entertainment.

This will be RoughCast’s 12th Shakespeare tour since Macbeth in 1999. RoughCast tourSuffolk and Norfolk with productions noted for their pace, clarity and lively characterisation.

They perform in country houses and gardens, on village greens, in theatres, at zoos and castles, bringing classic plays to life with vibrancy and zest.

Exhibition ofphotos by the

Eymet Photo Group11th to 16th August

10h to 18h (non-stop)Rooms above the

Tourist Officein Eymet Bastide

A day out with CSFSunday 9th August 11am to 4pm

La Charrue (Restaurant, Bar, Campsite), Les Chambarrières,24340 Vieux Mareuil, on the D939 between Brantôme and Mareuil.

Craft stalls, plant stall, cake stall, bric-a-brac and more.Side shows and amusements. Activities for the children.

All proceeds in aid of Cancer Support France.Food and drinks all day.

Not to be missed this month is the Nontron Knife Festival, which is one of the largest cutlery showcases in France and Europe, with over 100 exhibitors from all over the world. It concludes a week dedicated to the rich heritage of iron and

forges in the region and follows the Festival Forges et Metallurgie at Etouars.

Entry to the Fete du Couteau (8th-9th August): €5/ day; €7 for both days (free for under 16s).

For more information visit: feteducouteau.typepad.fr

DID YOU KNOW...?Nontron Knives are traditional forged folding knives with decorated wooden handles made in Nontron, in the

heart of the Périgord Vert. The methods and techniques used in making these have remained virtually unchanged since the fifteenth century when they were first in manufacture; in fact the workshop where they are hand made by local craftsman is the oldest continually running cutlery forge in France. Each pocket knife is an original work

by one of only six artisan knife makers. The boxwood used for the handles of Nontron knives is cut only in the immediate region and allowed to air dry for at least five years before being cut, shaped and finished as a handle. Each knife is hand decorated with a

circle of pyrograved figures of ancient and unknown significance.

15th edition of this roaming medieval festival which takes placebetween 8th and 23rd August across Dordogne, Lot-et-Garonne and Gironde.

Saturday 8th August EYMET (24)Sunday 9th August ISSIGEAC (24)Friday 14th August CADOUIN (24)

Saturday 15th August SAUVETERRE-DE-GUYENNE (33)Sunday 16th August DURAS (47)

Tuesday 18th August MONTETON (47)Sunday 23rd August SAINT-FÉLIX-DE-FONCAUDE (33)

This festival allows the visitor to discover the most attractive sites of the Dropt valley over two weeks and to enter the heart of the Middle Ages by way of numerous spectacles, games

and banquets - all in a convivial ambiance.

For the full programme visit www.medieval.dropt.org

Twilight’s 7th Birthday Fete JamboreeSunday 2nd August - 11am to 6pm - Vaunac 24800

All day hot & cold food, drinks, snacks, cakes and ice-creamMusic with *Broken Biscuits* and others

Artisans, Vide/Brocante, Pre-loved clothes & books, Tombola, Tarot readingsMeet some old Twilighters for a cuddle - Games and general silliness

For more information visit www.twilightchiens.com orhttps://www.facebook.com/Twilightdogshome

Page 23: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

23 AUGUST 2015 ○ THE BUGLE ○ www.thebugle.eu WHAT’S ON ♦

[email protected] 55 41 17 76

FestiVillars

World Music Concert Boschaud Abbey 15th August

Concert of Tangos from Argentina featuring the music of Argentina’sgreatest composer of tangos, Astor Piazzola, with the Azanca Quintet:

piano, double bass, violin, guitar and accordion.

Concert starts at 15h30Tickets: €15, free for Under 16s

For more information visit www.festivillarsenperigordvert.com

Château de Panisseau Night MarketsOn the last Wednesday of the month, what is there

better to do than come and listen to some live Jazz, eat some wonderful local produce cooked up by the farmers

themselves right in front of you, while sitting in the sumptuous decor of the courtyard at the Château de Panisseau? The answer is simple: nothing, there’s no

better place to spend your Wednesday evening!

Children will love running around the lawn in front of the 12th century ‘fairy-tale’ castle while brandishing the shield they just made, while parents might take part in a tour of the wine shed, or a

historical tour of the castle, or perhaps they’ll just enjoy the wine tasting before the band starts.

If you are a lover of fine wines, excellent food, good music and beautiful places, we might just have the ideal recipe for success. Either way, once the fairy lights are on, the music is flowing and the

corks are popping, Panisseau is the place to be this summer!

Château de Panisseau, 24240 THENACGPS: 44.760517, 0.364727

Entry €3 for adults (free for under 12s)

For enquiries, please call Helen on 05 53 58 40 03 or email the property: [email protected] Night Markets: 26/08 and 30/09 from 6.30 pm to 11.30 pm.

Join us for concerts in the air conditioned new hall in Le Buisson, mostly of classical music, with top class French, English,Russian and other international performers. Concert tickets cost €15 including wine in the interval.

All events are organised by volunteers and serve also as a meeting ground for the French and international communities of the Dordogne.

Music in the Dordogne sponsored by ARCADES

Venue - Le Buisson de Cadouin,Nouvelle Salle des Fetes, Avenue Aquitaine

UPCOMING CONCERT

For more info, tel 06 87 88 15 33 or 05 53 23 86 22or visit http://www.arcadesinfo.com/

3rd Fête de la Chanson Française29th August from 19h-23hPlace du Général de Gaulle

(in front of the cinéma)...or Pôle d’Animation Culturelle

in case of rain

19h Stanley HANKS

20h15 Marie OCTOBRE & Jean-Michel DELPECH(accordion)

21h30 Alex FOHL et Thierry SERRA (accordion)

Over the last twenty-five years Sinfonia has established itself

as an unmissable event forlovers of Baroque music, with

an ever-changing line-updesigned to offer audiences

a week of unforgettableexperiences.

Concerts take place from 24th to 29th August against the backdrop

of Périgord’s most beautifullocations. Abbeys, churches,

theatres and châteaux all become places of discovery and exchange

between audiences and artists.

For more information visit:www.sinfonia-en-perigord.com

Tickets sales online: www.weezevent.com/gary-brooker-judy-blair-and-friendsOr bank transfer: ROTARY Souillac,

IBAN FR76 1120 6000 8236 8959 2807 592, SWIFT AGRIFRPP812 Ref. Gary Brooker.Please confirm your booking by mail to [email protected]

or/and [email protected]

Marché des Potiers30 potters will line

the streets of the villageof Beauronne,

between Mussidan and Ribérac,on 15th and 16th August

from 10h-19h.

There will be demonstrations,children’s workshops

and an exhibitionof the work of

Laurent Merchantat the

Maison de la poterie.

Page 24: The Bugle Dordogne - Aug 2015

www.thebugle.eu ○ THE BUGLE ○ AUGUST 201524 ♦ WHAT’S ON