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Bugs
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 10744
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thos
Joined: 08 Mar 2005 Posts: 1139 Location: Jauche, Duchy of Brabant (Bourgogne-ci) and Charolles, Duchy of Burgundy (Bourgogne-�a)
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Posted: Thu May 19, 05 3:26 pm Post subject: |
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I moved to Belgium in '97 for a job (not a transfer, but a related organisation with less chance of redundancy). I sold the house in Mile End and rented south of Brussels. Four years later we moved to another rented house and 18-months later, in December '02, we bought.
Houses are still affordable here, so we got quite a lot for our money, although we had to move quite a way from Brussels, so I have a 54km commute. Although Belgium is densely populated, we are living in an area of villages. Unfortunately, the villages around here are not that pretty, and Jauche itself was a 19th century industrial town, but the sugar mill and toilet factories closed down years ago.
Most communes have been centralising their schools, but ours has a policy of maintaining the primary schools in the villages. Even very small villages have schools - Folx-les-Caves just up the road has two classrooms, and some of the villages also have Church Schools. Jauche has a large Commune School and also the Church School where my children go - this has two years per class.
Schools start at 2.5, so Harry will start at Easter. There is Reception and two years of Maternelle before the serious work starts in Primaire the calendar year they turn six.
Perhaps half the houses have some sort of vegetable plot and about one in ten keep hens. Sheep and goats are also quite plentiful.
Shopping is mainly in small supermarkets. Unfortunately, the produce is variable. You have to be careful to avoid rotting fruit and stock is left on the shelf beyond the sell-by date. Very few shops stock fresh milk.
There are no farmers markets. There are plenty of markets, but all sell the same stuff of uncertain origin.
Against that, I buy superb apples (in season) from the orchard up the road at 75c per kg and pears at �1 per kg, and potatoes from another farm at �2 per 10kg, so it is not worth growing those.
We have not found a good butcher, but there must be one. I have found some farms with shops, but we have not tried them yet.
When we first came over here, we were unimpressed by the quality in the shops. However, on our last trip back to the UK, it seemed that everything we bought (except the fish and chips!) was tasteless and we realised we had turned into Belgians.
Other good things: diesel is �1 per litre, beer is fantastic and cheap, as is wine (we rarely pay over �4 for a nice bottle). I believe tobacco is still cheap too.
The Belgians make nice coffee (I find the French cannot make a decent cup), but like all foreigners, they can't make tea.
It gets cold in the winter, -20 is not unusual, and to the high 30s in summer. It also rains a lot. Further east, in the Ardennes, they have six months of bad weather and then winter comes.
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We will probably stay here after I retire.
Belgium is actually a fantastic place. I would not have considered living here if it wasn't for my work, but I am really glad I came, and it is wonderful for the children.
If anyone is interested in coming to Belgium, here is a link for what seems to be a very nice manor house in 12 acres for GBP470K.
[url]www.immovillages.be/a_vendre/desc156.htm [/url]
or 6 acres for GBP150K
www.immoregion.be/pages/detailvente.php?OxySeleCode=00001597705 |
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tahir
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 45674 Location: Essex
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thos
Joined: 08 Mar 2005 Posts: 1139 Location: Jauche, Duchy of Brabant (Bourgogne-ci) and Charolles, Duchy of Burgundy (Bourgogne-�a)
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tahir
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 45674 Location: Essex
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lorrayne
Joined: 17 Dec 2004 Posts: 239 Location: Hampshire
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Haddock
Joined: 24 Apr 2005 Posts: 81 Location: Marburg, Germany
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Posted: Thu May 19, 05 6:54 pm Post subject: |
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I just popped over to Germany for a beer......and stayed But seriously I came here in 1994 for a new job. I had worked overseas before for 5 years, returned to UK because I thought I was missing out on what was happening back in Blighty, and then realised that England wasn't quite what I remembered it to be, so after a few years I wanted out again, so I came to Germany.
On my 3rd job here now, I have married a German woman and we have a bilingual child. We have built a house here,and whilst not ruling out moving at some stage, I wouldn't return to UK to live. I only really miss Cricket, Fish & Chips and the sea.
I think generally Germany (and probably most European countries) are more enviromentally aware then the UK. For instance all houses on the estate where I live have to have a rain water harvesting system. The drains in the street go to a seperate sewer, which terminates in a man made reed bed, the over flow of which feeds down to the local river. A lot have houses have Solar as well.
Health system in Germany is very good, as are the kindergartens & schools. A lot of eco labelled produce is sold in supermarkets, but how eco it really is I dont know.
One of the things I like about Germany is that there are a lot of trees. Some really big forests and it all seems to be managed really well.
In a nut shell it seems less Rat Race here, an echo of former times in the UK. Lots of people have veg in their gardens and most have fruit trees as well.
Anyway at this rate I will have to send an application form off to the German Tourist Authority
Nearly forgot the beer here is bloody good and cheap, as is the wine. |
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Nanny
Joined: 17 Feb 2005 Posts: 4520 Location: carms in wales
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ButteryHOLsomeness
Joined: 03 Apr 2005 Posts: 770
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Posted: Thu May 19, 05 10:36 pm Post subject: |
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i came to scotland in may of 1999 to meet my now husband. we'd been 'dating' online for several months. originally i was just looking for another pagan to be a friend and a penpal with. i had intended to go to scotland on holiday in 2001 (had to save up!). Dave was one of two pagan people who answered my emails (found his email address on pagan profiles, BEFORE it became a meat market). it went from emails to phone calls to can you come in 2000 instead to can you come NOW! he'd already asked me to marry him before i came and i tentatively agreed but i wanted to see him first before i decided.
he got the necessary paperwork together including a visa for me and all the paperwork for the wedding if i decided to go ahead with it so i wouldn't have to go back if i didn't want to. dave sold a large part of his precious library to fund my trip, bless him. things were even better in real life so i decided to stay and marry him so we did on june 8th of 1999. we;ve been married nearly 6 years now and it's been pretty darn good even during the worst times. we now have a 3.5 year old daughter as well
i've been all over scotland in that time frame. we stayed at his flat for the last two weeks of his final term at st andrews university and i was there for his graduation. we then moved to skye and lived there for 2.5 years and when i became pregnant we moved to glasgow because it had better opportunites for work and futher education. we lived there for 2.5 years and now we're living in edinburgh where dave is doing his Masters (a 2nd one!) and where he'll do his Ph.d.
i love scotland, the people are amazing and they simply DON'T let you keep up the facade the americans are so damned worried about keeping up, suits me to a T
skye took some getting used to as i had been living in san antonion the 10th largest city in the states before i moved there, what a culture shock! everyone seemed to know everything about me and i didn't know a thing about them. it took me months to be able to leave the house unlocked. but after that it didnt take long for me to appreciate the solitude and peacefulness of skye and how relatively safe it is.
glasgow was exciting after skye and i have some great memories there but i was ready to move to edinburgh. the people on the bus aren't as friendly in edinburgh as they are in glasgow but overall i prefer edinburgh as it's just so green and gorgeous!
a lot has to be said for going shopping on THE main street to shop and having an enormous park and CASTLE (the american kid in me is doing the oooh oooh ooh jumping up and down for joy thing!) everywhere i go i see at least a few trees though i live a stones throw from the base of Arthurs seat so this is a particularly green area.
everything is so multicultural, it's really amazing. though i kinda wish there weren't so many americans around, they are spoiling the scottish accent i was picking up so well when we lived in glasgow
things i miss: a few foods, definately good root beer, kankakee state park, my dad and a few of my friends... that's it
things i love here: people expect to take you as you are, the only facade i've seen here is a thin veneer at work but that comes away once you're out the door. also love black pudding and haggis, hillwalking and the scottish highlands which take my breath away EVERY time and they nearly make me cry because they are so achingly beautiful... i always tell dave that i think that the goddess must have a special place in her heart for the highlands or she wouldn't have made it so beautiful
i'm not going to live in the states again... i never felt right in my own skin in the states but when i came to scotland i remember getting down on my hands and knees on west sands in st andrews and kissing the earth as i had finally found home
we toy around with the idea of possibly moving to new zealand some time to have a small holding but if we ever did that i'm certain we'd come back, scotland has far to strong a pull for us both... as a child as young as 10 i always imagined a dashing scotsman whisking me off to a highland cottage... and though i had to wait another 18 years for it i got my wish...why mess with perfection? |
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joanne
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 7100 Location: Morecambe, Lancashire
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tahir
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 45674 Location: Essex
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Bugs
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 10744
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Nanny
Joined: 17 Feb 2005 Posts: 4520 Location: carms in wales
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Daydreaming
Joined: 12 Apr 2005 Posts: 291
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tahir
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 45674 Location: Essex
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