As writer Samuel Johnson famously said: “If you’re tired of London, you’re tired of life.”
Well in 2005 I wasn’t really tired of life, or London, but I was tired of the process of getting to London and home again. Of packed trains, tubes, buses. Of trying to park, of hearing sirens wailing again and that terrible hush settling over a whole city and wondering am I even going to get home today?
Add in the fact we wanted more room for our young family to grow and that’s why we decided to move to Brittany. We’d been coming for several years for holidays and breaks and it just seemed like a calmer, quieter and friendlier way of life. We could go to beaches, markets, medieval towns, cities at any time and park the car, for free. It was a world away from the almost pre-dawn sorties we were doing in the UK.
We also found out that we could sell our three-bedroom terrace and buy something much, much bigger in the Côtes-d’Armor, giving our two children, then aged seven and 18 months, the extra space we all craved.
So, we did it! Sold in the UK, bought in Brittany, did some renovating, opened a B&B and settled the children in a great village school. Easy. Well, not quite – a journey like that is always going to have its ups and downs.
CHEF TO CHEF
Like most others, the B&B suffered after the financial crash and as there was no sign of a lottery win, we were in need of more income.
My wonderful supportive wife set up her own enterprise and I turned to the only thing I really knew: cooking. At that time I had been cooking for around 25 years, a good few of them spent running high-end London kitchens. As they will do in small friendly communities, a neighbor told me a restaurant in the village of Plessala was looking for a chef. So I took a deep breath and called at Restaurant l’Olivier.
Denne historien er fra April 2020-utgaven av French Property News.
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Denne historien er fra April 2020-utgaven av French Property News.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Bond With France
With a licence to thrill James Bond fans, Chloe Govan goes househunting in the film locations immortalised by the spy who loved France
Sarlat stardust
Just 20 minutes from Sarlat-la-Caneda, this tastefully restored home reflects the glory of the Périgord Noir capital, says Ruth Wood
The money column
The ‘B’ word is back! Laura Parsons explains how to protect your money as we near the end of Brexit transition
Nature's harmony
A renovated farmhouse in Lot-et-Garonne could be perfect for those hearing the call of the wild, discovers Brigitte Nicolas
Main event
Buying a holiday home near a popular annual event could guarantee you a beautiful setting and some extra cash, finds Hannah Evans
Hauss style
Joanna Leggett learns all about Georges-Eugène Haussmann – the man who designed the Paris that we know and love
Architect's diary
It’s all in a week’s work for France-based Neil Vesma
Write on the edge
When it comes to life in west Brittany, author Wendy Mewes has been there, done that, written the guidebook
A year like no other
So much for spring cleaning — property manager Mary Hall explains how 2020 has thrown a spanner in the works for second home owners
A law unto themselves
Why is French law so different to the law in England and Wales? It all goes back to William, Henry and Napoleon, explains Alan Field