Keep Your Head If You Move To France

A sometimes humorous, but always factual look at the problems you're likely to encounter if you move to France. Many books make it sound a breeze: it isn't always – AS WE FOUND…...
Schools and clinics are great, although one dentist gave me arsenic for a root canal. Emergency health treatment is free with your EHIC card, but for your GP you'll need to be employed or a pensioner. And food is yummy, though not cheap.
Perhaps you want to renovate an old house – you'll get one cheap. Again there's paperwork, especially if you have neighbours. Out in the sticks, no one will care much what you do.
You may think that finding and buying a property is similar to the UK – it isn't. You'll need to ask around for a good lawyer, who will probably not speak English.
If you're not a pensioner, you may need to find a job. Good luck! Many people think "Oh, I'll teach English." If you haven't had professional training, you won't. Qualifications are essential in France.
Perhaps you're thinking of running a B and B or a smallholding. Don't think you can just get started – there's a mound of paperwork to get through first – the French love bureaucracy.

1117908173
Keep Your Head If You Move To France

A sometimes humorous, but always factual look at the problems you're likely to encounter if you move to France. Many books make it sound a breeze: it isn't always – AS WE FOUND…...
Schools and clinics are great, although one dentist gave me arsenic for a root canal. Emergency health treatment is free with your EHIC card, but for your GP you'll need to be employed or a pensioner. And food is yummy, though not cheap.
Perhaps you want to renovate an old house – you'll get one cheap. Again there's paperwork, especially if you have neighbours. Out in the sticks, no one will care much what you do.
You may think that finding and buying a property is similar to the UK – it isn't. You'll need to ask around for a good lawyer, who will probably not speak English.
If you're not a pensioner, you may need to find a job. Good luck! Many people think "Oh, I'll teach English." If you haven't had professional training, you won't. Qualifications are essential in France.
Perhaps you're thinking of running a B and B or a smallholding. Don't think you can just get started – there's a mound of paperwork to get through first – the French love bureaucracy.

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Keep Your Head If You Move To France

Keep Your Head If You Move To France

by John Bottrill
Keep Your Head If You Move To France

Keep Your Head If You Move To France

by John Bottrill

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Overview

A sometimes humorous, but always factual look at the problems you're likely to encounter if you move to France. Many books make it sound a breeze: it isn't always – AS WE FOUND…...
Schools and clinics are great, although one dentist gave me arsenic for a root canal. Emergency health treatment is free with your EHIC card, but for your GP you'll need to be employed or a pensioner. And food is yummy, though not cheap.
Perhaps you want to renovate an old house – you'll get one cheap. Again there's paperwork, especially if you have neighbours. Out in the sticks, no one will care much what you do.
You may think that finding and buying a property is similar to the UK – it isn't. You'll need to ask around for a good lawyer, who will probably not speak English.
If you're not a pensioner, you may need to find a job. Good luck! Many people think "Oh, I'll teach English." If you haven't had professional training, you won't. Qualifications are essential in France.
Perhaps you're thinking of running a B and B or a smallholding. Don't think you can just get started – there's a mound of paperwork to get through first – the French love bureaucracy.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940045522731
Publisher: John Bottrill
Publication date: 11/03/2013
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

John Bottrill , Galicia, Spain
A retired academic psychologist, I've been living in comfort in Northern Spain - a region like the Lake District, but with good weather for 17 years. This place has magic - it's the nicest place I've ever lived. Personally, I'd happily live and eventually die here. But family reasons necessitate a return to UK.
The house is stone-built 1691 with some land and lots of space for guests who come to find out more about the area, or just to think about a new life in Northern Spain. You can see the house at smallholdinginparadise.blogspot.com.es - it's paradise!
You can read a book about the early Boterel family, which came to UK with William the Conquerer and were the ancestors of President George Washington, at www.bottrillfamilyhistory.com or http://bottrillfamilyhistory.blogspot.com.es. For an unusual children's book or Embarrassing Palmistry you might try http;//www.contactenglish.eu. That site also has a Scottish romance, unusual in that it deals with the machinations of the Priory of Sion, pros and cons of moving to France, a story about Heaven and unusual information about the Knights Templar.
You can equally well access them at www.Smashwords.com.

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