SFTF:  Another short sojourn in the Carolinas

This year has seen a distinct change in our travelling habits as we haven’t once stepped off continental North America. I nearly said continental USA but that would have been to ignore the wonderful week back in April when we set foot in my old stamping ground of Ontario, Canada.

North America is a vast continent, shared by two of the largest countries in the world by area, offering such an endlessly diverse mix of plains, mountains, forests, prairies, coastlines, weather, nature, ethnic groups, cultures, cities, towns and villages, that it must surely be an easy task to find the ideal place to lay down new roots that will satisfy the aspirations, needs, desires and longings of two not too dissimilar people who are held together by a strong bond of love and a determination to live out the autumn of their lives in peaceful harmony. Well life is never quite that simple, for as well as the aspirations and needs and so forth that we bring into the search for the perfect piece of ground to start the planting process, tagging along behind us are our preconceived notions of what is ideal, acceptable, bearable or untenable, based on the quite varied lessons that life has presented to each of us in the past.

Those who have followed earlier episodes of this blog will know Celine and I have travelled far and wide over the last few years and more than once have been sorely tempted to buy our “ideal” home in the sun, by the sea or in some beautiful corner of a foreign land. Much closer to home, and just a few short weeks after taking up residence in the “promised land” – a.k.a. Southern California, I was filled with excitement at the idea of moving up-country and buying a house in Big Bear Lake, a small town nestling in the woods high up in the San Bernardino Mountains, enthusiasm that only waned nearly a year later when we visited again on Labour Day weekend and, being a rags and sticks fan, I was appalled by the mass of noisy jet skis and power boats churning up the placid waters of the eponymous lake . . .!!

Back in April we made a fleeting visit to Asheville, NC, and being quite taken with that small city, our most recent travels took us there once again for a closer look. It being another community whose charms arise from its location among mountains and midst a vast sea of deciduous forests, it seemed appropriate that we should re-visit when those woodland charms were approaching the end of their multi-coloured autumnal glory and the renowned fresh mountain weather might be starting to show its less desirable side, that of cool winds, grey cloudy skies and that phenomena we miss so much in Southern California, a good dollop of rain every few days. And we were right on the mark, except for the several days of glorious warm sunshine, and the autumn colours, for which the Appalachian Mountains are renowned, had kindly delayed their magnificence, the result of an unusually dry summer, a phenomena with which we Californians are all too familiar.

We had found accommodation for our two-week stay through HomeExchange.com, though were unsuccessful in finding a simultaneous reciprocal exchange with someone who fancied leaving the relative peace of Asheville for the hustle and bustle of the West Coast, “No surprise!” according to our hostess. The house was in the Haw Creek subdivision, a ten-minute drive west of the city centre. Our first morning we breakfasted watching jays and cardinals flitting among the branches of the beautiful trees outside the kitchen window, and the squirrels doing what would prove to be their daily balancing act as, nut in hand, they pranced from picket to picket along the garden fence. Through a gap in the trees we had a view of the nearby mountains, and with the warm sunshine radiating out of clear blue skies, it seemed like we had arrived in paradise, certainly as far as this country loving boy was concerned.

Typical view from within Asheville city boundaries – this one taken a hundred yards from our HomeExchange abode.

Not completely forgetting why we were there, we eventually managed to drag ourselves away from nature’s spectacle and drove into the city to delve deeper into its offerings than we had six months previously. But getting a real feel for a place in just two weeks is a challenge at the best of times, and when seriously contemplating the idea of moving one’s life there, lock, stock and barrel, the task feels impossible. We did our homework before we arrived and having sought out the services of a knowledgeable local realtor, to whom we had given some ideas of what we thought we were looking for, we had spent many happy hours perusing a long list of wonderful looking properties which we had boiled down to a baker’s dozen to view during our stay. This in itself was a fairly hugger-mugger process, as we had only a sketchy idea of the neighbourhoods around the city and very little feel for their relative desirability.

However, we had a free day before our viewing schedule started and so we began our visit by doing the tourist thing, exploring the River Arts District where one can wonder in and out of galleries, chat to the working artists and of course expand one’s own collection of art as the mood takes one. It also turned out to be a great way to meet locals and to quiz them about their experiences of living in and around the city; no point in asking them why they chose Asheville, as it really is an artist’s mecca. In the late afternoon we happened upon a delightful small farmer’s market located next to the All Souls Pizza Parlour car park, and enjoyed chatting to various artisans, again many of whom had moved to Asheville in the last ten years or so and were totally captivated by the place.

The next afternoon we met up with our friendly realtor, Laurie Reese, viewed six houses of which at least four were totally damp squibs, another was “OK” and only one actually grabbed us. Actually the last house we were due to visit was so awful from the outside, and so obviously different from the MLS description, that we didn’t even get out of the car; it did however, leave us close to the village of Biltmore and we took the opportunity to partake of afternoon tea at the seemingly historic Grand Bohemian Hotel, the interior of which looks like a late Victorian hunting lodge, only to discover it is very much a twenty-first century construction.

The city of Asheville nestles in a valley, surrounded by thickly wooded hills with views of distant mountains in every direction. The city centre is quite compact and very walkable, but we had difficulty finding any suitable homes for sale in the few residential districts within the perimeter created by Highway 240 and the French Broad River. From the list of “possibles” that Laurie had provided us, I had upgraded to “favourite” status one gracious older home in the “desirable” Kenilworth district, which was a real disappointment, and another lesson learned about interpreting MLS descriptions. The house would have been very elegant when it was built in the 1920’s and the trees surrounding it would have been much smaller allowing far more light into what had become a very dark home. The “garage” might indeed have been accessible, or even usable, once upon a time, and the “delightful architectural details of the interior” were probably very up-market in its era. But, sadly, the sinking south corner and its associated structural cracks, and the cramped old-fashioned kitchen, convinced us that a top-priced fixer-upper was not what we were looking for. In our previous short visit to the city we had discovered the very attractive, but we presumed rather expensive, Montford Historic District, just north of the highway but still nominally walkable to the city centre, and so we were quite excited when, on our second day of viewing, Laurie found a very reasonably priced three storey home literally a couple of blocks away from our two favourite stores, Trader Joe’s and that other one whose name has now become tarnished by having become part the burgeoning Amazon empire. And what a disappointment that was, demonstrating once more the dangers of judging a book by its cover.

We soon realised we needed to look slightly farther afield and that’s where things started to become complicated. How far away from the centre were we prepared to consider living? Our hopes of being able to walk into the city centre had been somewhat dashed and we both started to accept the idea that a five or ten minute drive, such as we were by then doing regularly from our temporary residence in Haw Creek district, had to be one of the conditions of living in Asheville. Laurie showed us some amazing houses that were positively ideal but, alas, never quite perfect. The beautifully maintained house on Skyview Court, built precariously on the side of an extremely steep wooded mountainside and having the most fantastically gorgeous views from its three balconies, from sunrise to sunset, would have been ideal for the two of us thirty years ago when we could still bound around like a couple of gazelles, and my Canadian chain-saw wielding skills were at their prime. But the threat of our advancing years, mine in particular, and the hair-raising descent just to get into the basement workshop, or to fetch a load of wood for the lounge stove, made it a complete non-starter. Such a shame as I could really imagine us sitting on the balcony, each with a glass of wine to hand, watching the red-tailed hawks circling below us, as we swapped stories of our beautiful life together while the sun slowly disappears down behind the tall pines to our right.

Anyway, dreams aside, the practicalities of life in Asheville are what we came to consider, part of which could include domiciling ourselves in one of the outlying small towns we had begun to hear so much about. Weaverville is one such town about ten miles due north along highway 26, a pleasant fifteen to twenty-minute drive from the city centre, through rolling green countryside. With a population of around four thousand, this compact little town is really more of a homely village and has all the characteristics of same with the usual mix of realtors, banks, cafes, a pizza parlour and an Italian restaurant. It is very walkable, most of the streets have sidewalks, a small lake with a fountain greets you as you enter the town along Merrimon Avenue, the famous Well-Bred Bakery and Café is there to satisfy the inner man and the ‘everything-for-the-apiarist’ store, Honey and the Hive, is waiting to sweeten everyone’s lives. It has all the essentials, even a small shopping centre on the outskirts with one of the chain supermarkets – sadly not one of the two I mentioned earlier – and from our few short experiences there, is replete with friendly residents. And we even found an absolutely perfect house, well within our budget, five minutes’ walk from the town centre, a delightful garden, views across the valley, a sunny south-facing aspect, and in a very presentable neighbourhood; for some reason the owner, who was also the realtor, wanted to sell so that he and his wife could move into one of the posher districts of North Asheville to be closer to town, which of course seemed nonsense to me, though I know Celine was slightly sympathetic to the idea!  All in all, to me the little town looked like an ideal place to plant one’s roots . . . or was it?

Perhaps a comparison with another apparently popular little town was called for. And thus, one rather damp, rainy day, we drove to Black Mountain 16 miles north-east of Asheville along Highway 40. Very different from Weaverville, Black Mountain with twice the population appeared to be decidedly more touristically inclined with its many eclectic shops, seemingly busier in spite of the wet weather, and with less of a “village” feel about it. It had a fair selection of eateries, many of which were closed by mid-afternoon, so we ended up eating simple wholesome fare at Trailhead Restaurant, a hangout for the locals judging from our noisy fellow diners. We did a bit of gift shopping and then took a short drive around the residential areas, but overall the town left us less than impressed and I believe all three of us – we had Celine’s brother Darius staying with us for a few days – decided  Weaverville was probably the nicer of the two.

Although house-hunting was a major reason for our visit, there was far more that we needed to learn about life in and around Asheville. We checked the countryside by taking a few trips out of the city and a short test drive along the famed Blue Ridge Parkway. For our first sortie we headed in the direction of Knoxville, Tennessee, to meet old friends for lunch. The drive was initially viewless for it does indeed rain at least a couple of days a week, bringing mist down low over the hills, and the choice of eatery was somewhat unusual, being a Russian-American roadside café called Grill 73 just off the highway of the same number, somewhere outside the town of Newport. However, the food turned out to be delicious, the company was good, and we had our first experience of driving through the Great Smoky Mountains.

Our next excursion was more focused on the surrounding countryside as we set out to drive the I-441, the one highway that goes right through the middle of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park from Cherokee to Gatlinburg. We stopped for a coffee and pee break at the Oconaluftee River Visitor Centre and then heading northwest we soon saw our first caribou resting in the woods across the river. This was when I learnt that Park Rangers are much more than good-looking gals and guys in Smoky-the-Bear hats, as I got severely reprimanded for foolishly trying to get closer for the perfect photo; perhaps the signs saying “Keep off the field when caribou are present” should have given me a clue! From there onwards the road went steadily uphill, winding more and more, and offering us some wonderful lookouts with glorious views across miles of autumnal colours as the 130+ different species of trees, for which the region gets its reputation as the most bio-diverse part of the country, fluttered their red, yellow and scarlet leaves for all to admire. Our objective was Clingman’s Dome, at an elevation of 6,643 feet, the highest mountain in the Smokies and the highest point along the Appalachian Trail (read Bill Bryson’s  “A Walk in the Woods” to learn more). Luckily it is very auto-accessible, although the parking is so limited it must be chaotic in the height of the tourist season, and once parked near the Information Centre we had an easy half-mile paved trail to take us up the final 300ft to the summit and its 45ft high observation tower from where one has a magnificent 3600 panoramic view of the surrounding mountains. It was while we were atop that tower that I began to have fears that living in Asheville or that general area, one could possibly become punch drunk with the sight of not much else than trees. A slightly scary thought to one who professes to love the idea of living in the countryside and has just started to become acquainted with the natural beauty of western North Carolina.

House-hunting is a lot easier than hunting for good pictures of the prolific local wildlife; this caribou was relatively obliging but the Park Rangers weren’t so happy!

To complete the day’s experience, we finished the drive through the Smokies finally passing through, but with no wish to stop, the singularly unattractive city of Gatlinburg, an awful concoction of the worst, most grossly touristic parts of Niagara Falls in Canada, Las Vegas, Blackpool in England and Disneyland, plus every other tourist mecca the sane savvy educated tourist tries to avoid, before eventually finding ourselves all alone on the most untravelled road imaginable. Highway 32, the link between Highway 321 and the I-40, is hardly even a two lane road for most of its length as it twists and turns its way through a myriad of lonely forested hills and valleys, the undisturbed fallen leaves carpeting the tarmac, and making me for once begin to doubt the veracity of Google’s direction finding capabilities, especially as dusk was fast approaching and memories of the 1972 film “Deliverance” started to flash through my brain accompanied by the sound of duelling banjos! But what a wonderful drive it was, ending at the Walters Hydro-Electric Plant on the pigeon River as we crossed the border back into North Carolina, joined the I-40 and drove home on normal roads once more.

On our penultimate day, we drove south-east along highway 26 to the Tryon Equestrian Centre, to satisfy brother Darius’ abiding passion for horses. We were lucky enough to visit on a day when trials for an upcoming major event were taking place, so we did see some impressive horsemanship, but otherwise the venue was fairly dead, so we soon headed back up the road to Hendersonville, another town that some people compare favourably with Asheville. Their implication is that it is perhaps a little more refined, but the town-wide power-cut that greeted us did nothing to confirm that view, the dead traffic signals causing us one rather alarming near-incident. Powerless, practically all the shops, cafés and restaurants had closed for the day, all the more unfortunate as the town was preparing itself for its annual Halloween Parade that evening. One brave lady working the afternoon shift in the Black Bear Café bucked the trend and was kept extremely busy as we and everyone else in town sought out her coffees and croissants.

A chance conversation at Tryon had elicited the advice that we really should visit Dupont State Forest whilst we were in the area of Hendersonville, and as the weather was so obliging, sunny and cool, we went back into the countryside to see Hooker Falls and Triple Falls. The 10-15 ft drop of the former is not that impressive to the casual observer but is evidently a favourite testing ground for the bravado of local kayakers and we watched a half dozen brave souls as they projected their little polyethylene craft over the edge  of the cascade, bobbing up from the maelstrom of foaming water a few seconds later. The Triple Falls however were a wholly different visual spectacle. A brisk ten minute walk up from the car-park took us to a lookout where we had a dramatic view through a break in the trees across the valley to a series of three successive cascades thundering down the rocky hillside towards us and being forced to take a sharp right turn as it reached the river below; there’s certainly no lack of water in these hills!

Triple Falls in Dupont State Forest

Another town said to be popular with retirees moving into this region, and conveniently located on our road home, is Brevard where we did our usual quick drive around and walk through as the sun started to disappear behind the surrounding hills. Less than an hour’s drive from Asheville the countryside around Brevard was less densely wooded and the airy feeling of rolling horse-country was in some ways a welcome change from the never-ending pageant of autumn colours with which we had, by then, become familiar. Unfortunately, the town itself appeared a little too much on the tranquil side, bringing on fears of early, rocking-chair induced senility, something that Asheville could never be accused of doing.

Back in our cosy Home-Exchange dwelling once more, we contemplated all the other things we had done to make our two weeks stay so entertaining: an evening of culture when we watched the Russian Ballet performing Swan Lake, delicious eats at just a sampling of the city’s eclectic mix of fine restaurants including Spanish style tapas at “Curate”, “Rhubarb” where we ate outside while enjoying the antics of a trio of hill-billy musicians playing tin-can double bass, spoons and banjo on the sidewalk, and slightly more refined dining at “Chestnut”, plenty of enjoyable walks along city streets window-shopping and admiring the many Art Deco buildings, seeing black bears, red foxes and grey wolves up close in the West NC Nature Centre, taking afternoon tea at the Grand Bohemian Hotel in Biltmore village, and seeing a wild black bear wandering peacefully through someone’s garden on the slopes of Mt Patton. And we didn’t sample any of the breweries, visited only a fraction of the many art galleries, and completely failed to find time for any of the museums or one of the many concerts on offer.

Even so late in the season, it was easy to imagine that with so much to offer, Asheville becomes very busy during peak holiday periods and so it is also understandable why so many locals complained about the traffic, parking difficulties and so forth, “compared to how it used to be”. But to someone coming from the frenetic lifestyle of Southern California the traffic was hardly noticeable, apart from the evening rush hour when there would be a few more than the usual half dozen cars waiting with you at red traffic lights and road rage was totally absent. It is a city in which the slower pace of life and the laid-back atmosphere contribute to quickly making one feel comfortable and at home. But do we still want to live there? That is a moot question, for much as we enjoyed Asheville’s many qualities, we are still unsure whether we will also enjoy its cool winters and, even more fundamental, we still need to convince ourselves that a major deracination is what our lives really need.

After a couple of weeks, I was sorry when the time came to leave Asheville behind us, but we had planned to extend our trip down into South Carolina, to visit my son Tom and his family who relocated there six months previously, and sample the delights that Charleston had to offer. This time we used the services of HomeAway.com to find ourselves a cosy little single storey duplex in Mt.Pleasant as our base for the week. About mid-way between Tom’s new home and the centre of Charleston we were well placed to both enjoy the family and get a brief taste of life in that land of reputedly hot humid summers, mosquitoes and hurricanes. November was of course the wrong time of year to experience any of those hazards, so we were able to enjoy ourselves unthreatened. Charleston is a compact city full of elegant old homes from its Colonial days and we enjoyed our peregrinations through its narrow streets, mostly on foot, but once ably supplemented by a ride in a horse-drawn carriage with a very erudite driver who delighted us with his intimate tales of the lives of the homes and owners alike. We took a few trips out of the city, to a couple of plantations, to Seabrook Island, and one day we drove down to Savannah GA, another fascinating old Colonial city. With reminders at every turn of either the ignominious defeat my British countrymen took in the War of Independence or the part the locals played in the American Civil War, history abounds everywhere. These attractions together with Charleston’s large protected harbour, and the sailing opportunities that offers, the miles of beautiful clean beaches and a cost of living considerably lower than they had left behind in SoCal, it was easy to see why Tom and his family decided to make their move. But the surrounding countryside is flat and low-lying, wetlands abound as many rivers wind their way through the swampland, making a complete contrast with where we had spent the previous fortnight. Add the three aforementioned negative threats to a peaceful life into the account and I still know which of the two I personally prefer.

A swampy lake in the grounds of Magnolia Plantation beside the Ashley River; we were surprised to learn that rice rice was this plantation’s main crop in the eighteenth century.

Undeterred by our continued indecision, Celine and I always enjoy our travels and are off again in a few months, this time for a prolonged journey to Poland, to meet family and friends and for me to experience more of Celine’s homeland. Perhaps upon our return we will ruminate further about the uprooting idea. Who knows, we might probe into the possibility of buying a second home in Poland, or even consider moving there! After all the world is our oyster and we are both still young enough to wield a sword to open it! (Thanks to Mr Shakespeare  and his “Merry Wives of Windsor”.)

Discovering the Basque Country – part three – French or Spanish Basque?

During the planning stages of our trip we had made firm accommodation bookings for little more than half of our stay and decided we would wing the rest as we travelled, hoping that something suitable would turn up either through Home Exchange.com or Trusted Housesitters.com. With our trip’s emphasis on all things French, our first plan for the Basque Country, our last main locale to be investigated, had been to stay north of the border for six weeks or more in or near Hendaye, Saint-Jean-de-Luz or even Biarritz, and then take the occasional trip across to the Spanish side to sample the tapas scene in San Sebastian, and perhaps explore a bit beyond. Fortune had other plans for us however, and luckily, we only succeeded in finding accommodation along the Spanish Basque Coast, where we discovered all those beautiful places that I have already written about, and would have otherwise probably missed. Thus, eventually, as the end of our journey got ominously closer, we took the plunge and did exactly the reverse of our original plan and made one or two forays across the border in a northerly direction, and again we were delighted by much of what we found there. But sadly, with time running out, we really didn’t give ourselves enough time to explore as thoroughly as we might have wanted.

So, one fine February day with sun and clouds but no rain and 14oC forecast, we took the now familiar N-634, snaking through the countryside towards the hinterland of San Sebastian and thence to the frontier at Irun, and across the Franco-Spanish border running down the middle of the river Bidasoa. Immediately we were in Hendaye, initially driving past the vast complex of sidings of Gare de Hendaye railway station; it is there that long ago in the days before the freedom of movement across borders that came with membership of the EU, all train traffic between the two countries would stop for border controls, and to get the carriage wheels adjusted for the different gauge tracks on either side of the border. And now that so many tourists arrive by plane rather than train, the station’s more modern opposite number the Aeropuerto de San Sebastian opposite the station across the estuary in Spain, takes most of the tourist load.

Looking west from Hendaye towards Hondarribia in Spanish Basque Country.

Once past this industrial zone, we found ourselves driving north alongside the estuary and looking west across the large Baie de Chingoudy at the mouth of the river, the beautiful setting that makes Hendaye so special for many people. Eager not to waste too much time on being tourists yet again, we soon found a place to park near the Moorish architecture of the original Casino building on the sea-front and wandered back a couple of blocks to make casual enquiries at an ‘Immobilier’, Agence Doribane, where the staff greeted us like old friends, and very quickly had arranged to show us four properties a few days later. So that was good; we immediately had a reason to make us come back and not simply spend our last week staring at the beautiful sea-view from our lofty apartment in Getaria! We then went back into the old town, which we found to be simple, quiet and friendly; but sadly, it was without a single, really old, historic building on which to feast our touristy eyes, the sad result of the military bombardment that effectively leveled the whole community during the War of the Pyrenees at the end of the eighteenth century.

The town hall, or Mairie, in Hendaye

After a nice bowl of soup at a little café across from the Mairie on the Place de la Republique, we continued our drive up the coast towards Saint-Jean-de-Luz, stopping first in the outskirts of Hendaye to take a quick stroll around the gardens of Chateau Observatoire Abbadia. Situated high up on a hill overlooking the lush green woods and farmland that lead down to Pointe Sainte Anne, the elegant chateau, built between 1864 and 1879, was designed in the neo-Gothic style, and incorporates many mysterious features, characteristic of the enigmatic nature of the owner, the explorer Antoine Thomson d’Abbadie.

Celine sits surrounded by strange stone animals outside Chateau Observatoire Abbadia

Rejoining the Route de la Corniche, we followed the rocky coastline to Socoa, a small seaside town nestling in the southwest corner of the bay that is the estuary of the La Nivelle river separating Ciboure and Saint-Jean-de-Luz. Once a fishing port, Socoa’s small harbour built in 1624 is now mostly occupied by pleasure craft and is guarded by Fort de Socoa that was built on the point and then rebuilt many times over the ensuing years, generally, as a result of being sacked, burnt or destroyed in some way during the many conflicts that it witnessed right up to the end of the German occupation in WWll. A long breakwater stretching out from the fort and partway across the bay has an interesting design being concave on its sea face. This feature which very effectively catches and dissipates the power of the waves without receiving a damaging direct impact, creating a wonderful wall of spray as the larger waves arrive and are thrown upwards like the ball out of a pelote basket (‘xistera’).

Together with two more sections of the breakwater, one in the middle of the bay and a second reaching out from Pointe de Sainte-Barbe on the far side of the bar, all three sections contribute to protecting the fine beach in Saint-Jean-de-Luz and the houses beyond, which in past years have been subject to some severe floods when the Bay of Biscay has been at its most savage.

Basque corsaire with his admiring ‘groupie”!

The now famous resort of Saint-Jean-de-Luz started its journey towards prosperity in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, partly from its association with the fishing industry, but also from the activities of its own Basque corsaires or pirates who attacked and captured passing vessels, resulting in the town being nicknamed the “Viper’s Nest” by English sailors of the time. The wealth that was brought about by these activities led to the erection by local shipowners of two handsome palaces overlooking Port de Saint-Jean-de-Luz. In 1640, Joannot de Hareneder constructed maison Joanoenia, which some years later was to become Maison de l’Infante, and in 1643 Johannis de Lohobiargue built the house now known as Maison de Louis XlV. The event that led to these donations to royalty took place in 1660, when the Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste was chosen as the venue for the marriage of King Louis XlV to Maria Theresa, the Infanta of Spain, fulfilling a consolidating clause in the Treaty of the Pyrenees. This solid-looking fifteenth century church, on rue Leon Gambetta, hides an unusual but truly beautiful interior with five galleries across the west wall, fronted by the organ, three handsome wooden galleries along each side of the nave, and a choir and transept wonderfully decorated on a blue background with many carved statues and architectural details picked out in gold leaf.

The beautiful interior of Église Saint-Jean-Baptiste

And hanging from the rafters over the centre of the nave is a model of a sail and steam-driven paddle boat reminding the worshippers, and others, of the town’s rich maritime heritage.

Nowadays, the corsaires are but a memory, though the locals still know how to extract a few euros from the pockets of passing tourists, and not just the English these days, for it is a very cosmopolitan resort.

Chic shopping in Saint-Jean-de-Luz

Taking a stroll along rue Leon Gambetta, people-watching on the way, we saw many very chic, well-presented, elderly couples among the crowds window-shopping the large selection of smart boutiques, as well as other shops with windows full of delicious looking local gourmet specialities, wines and chocolate truffles. There were plenty of cafés and tea-shops, and we stopped for some afternoon sustenance at Pâtisserie Etchebaster, which has been in the same place since 1909; they served us patisseries and coffee as good as any we’d found in France, but that was not enough reason for them to be almost twice as expensive! So Saint-Jean-de-Luz is not a cheap town, but it is a delightful, elegant town to walk around.

Sea front apartments well protected by the substantial sea wall.

We took a stroll along the seafront looking into the first floor windows of old, three or four-storey apartment buildings strung along the water-front, many sporting a delicate wrought-iron balcony, with their ground floors slightly hidden behind the high seawall. It was easy to hark back to the life of a well-heeled visitor there in the Edwardian hey-days when travel was a more luxurious pastime of the few, rather than the mass tourism of today.

But dreaming of the past wasn’t what we were there for, and as we drove away from Saint-Jean-de-Luz back towards the sun setting behind the Spanish hills in the distance, we carried with us a supply of  much-needed organic staples from an excellent Bio store we found on the outskirts of town. We also had a second date arranged with yet another agent immobilier, this time to view properties in the villages in the hills inland from this lovely piece of French-Basque coast. So we would be back at least twice more in our eight remaining days which was a lovely prospect!

And thus it was that on St Valentine’s Day, guided by the very helpful though slightly disorganized and rather rushed Jara, we fell in love with an almost perfect house on top of the hill behind Hendaye, with views towards the Pyrenees in one direction and the Bay of Biscay in the other. Beautifully appointed and ticking pretty well every box on our must-have list, the only reason it became only ‘almost perfect’ in our critical eyes was the oversize chimney of the house just below the property which neatly split the wonderful view in two.

Unfortunately, Jara had not followed the realtor’s mantra “Save the best to last”, and the next two homes we viewed that day were not in the same league.

This slightly quirky house wasn’t very practical, but . . .

Mind you, one of them, a wonderfully quirky, though rather dark and impractical house in the shadow of some very tall overgrown leylandii cypress trees, owned by a very elderly couple who sat quietly in the kitchen during our visit, was packed to the gills with antiques, had a better garden than the ‘almost perfect’ house, and had wonderful views in a north-westerly direction over the harbour towards Hondarribia on the Spanish side.

. . . . it had lovely views of the bay and beyond.

And the third house can only be described as ‘a dog’, with apologies to all our canine friends!

Thus armed with some ideas of what could be found in the area, we explored further inland and visited the villages of Urrugne and neighbouring Ascain. Urrugne was a tidy little town more than a village, with a large church that was a smaller edition of the Eglise Saint-Jean-Baptiste in Saint-Jean-de-Luz that we visited earlier in the week. Continuing our house-hunting, we visited a branch of Carmen Immobilier where we picked out a couple more homes to view in another two days time.

Children singing and dancing in the village square in Urrugne

On the way back to the car across the square, we stopped to watch a display of singing and dancing by a group of thirty or more local primary school children, all dressed up in home-made peasant outfits. It made us think how lovely it would be to watch our own grandchildren perform so charmingly in a pretty little town square in the midst of such attractive lush green countryside!

We arrived in Ascain as the sun was starting to go down and saw the village only briefly. Then we had a very congenial drive back towards the Spanish border through more verdant countryside, rolling hills and small valleys, green fields and woods, dotted here and there with typical Basque houses, their exposed wooden frameworks picked out in red, black or green.

With only four days to go before we started our drive back towards Paris and our flight home across the Pond to sunny southern California, and with two of those days already earmarked for further house-hunting on French side and a last visit for more pintxos in San Sebastian, we decided to investigate the local ‘homes-for-sale’ scene back in Getaria. Single-family, detached homes are a rarity in that part of Spain, for, as we had already discovered, the planning regulations are geared towards concentrated developments of high density high-rise apartments, with severe restrictions on the development of agricultural land.

A good looking single-home on the hill above Getaria; good views out to sea but very expensive apart from anything else

However, we found one home on the hills behind the village with fine views out to sea,  surrounded by vineyards, though with the undesirable possibility of lots of chemical spraying, plus an unfortunate view of the roof of the rather ugly factory building owned by the landlord of our apartment block by the sea. These negatives added to make the prospect of the much-needed refurbishment work a less than attractive proposition in view of the rather high list price, the latter, no doubt, a consequence of the scarcity of such homes in the area. So then we thought, well why not have a look at one or two of the magnificent apartments for sale in our building; after all, the views over the Bay of Biscay are indeed spectacular! And that was when we very nearly took another snap decision to purchase a wonderful, three-bedroom, penthouse duplex, with a verandah facing the sea and a large terrace with views over the hills above the village and the fishing port and the main street five storeys below. But, lovely as it was, it left far too many of our boxes un-ticked, and we, probably very sensibly, decided to calm down, think rationally and wait a bit longer. After all, we still had two more countries to visit before such decisions should be made, and we had vowed to follow that sage advice to ‘rent-before-we-buy’!

Thus we spent our last day relaxing ‘at-home’, enjoying our view of the bay one last time, and taking a last walk up to the top of Roche San Anton, so quiet and peaceful at that time of year even on such a fine day. It was enjoyable just watching far below and out on the sea the movements of the fishing boats coming and going from the port, and, as we descended, watching the activities of the fishermen safely back in the port, cleaning, mending and folding the enormous nets, piled on the jetty beside their proud vessels. Then one more delicious home-cooked meal, using up all the leftovers in the fridge before our departure the next morning, and we were ready for the next and final stage of our six month’s exploration.

On finding somewhere to build a new nest . . .

My wife, Celine, and I, a couple of retired European expats, live a life in California that we both feel leaves a lot to be desired. So a few years ago we made the decision to start looking for another country to build our nest anew. As regular readers of International Living, we started our search in a couple of the Central and South American countries that so many writers had been enthusing about, namely Costa Rica and Ecuador. Both had their attributes, but we quickly realised that what we really wanted was to become Europeans in Europe once again, and be back amongst the culture, the history, and people with whom we would have more in common than we do with our Californian neighbours. So, with good memories from earlier visits to the country, and French being our strongest of the romance languages, last September we set off on a six-month intensive study of southern France from Provence in the east across to Aquitaine in the west, with an excursion into Spanish Basque country and short, unscheduled, side trips to the Italian Riviera and Spain’s Costa Brava.

This was, however, no extended holiday, for we planned to spend four to six weeks in three or four destinations where, as far as it is possible to do so in short-term rented accommodation, we would live like locals, buying our supplies in the local shops and markets, and also scout around the local areas to get the bigger picture.

We arrived without clearly defining what we wanted from a nesting site, preferring to discover what would attract us both. And so we spent six months exposing ourselves to a variety of locales, getting excited by some more than others. Occasionally, we would get perilously close to making rushed decisions about buying properties, whilst totally ignoring our promises to ourselves to do nothing rash, to rent for a year before deciding to buy, to always seek English speaking advice and guidance, and to be absolutely certain how much we could afford before making an offer!

We started our journey with a month in Lyon where we had found a good school of languages to bone up on our French; it wasn’t, however, a potential nesting site due to its rather cold winter weather. Our nest-hunting really began with six weeks in Provence, but they passed by without temptation; we simply never found anywhere that made us want to settle. It was in Ospedaletti, just outside San Remo, the self styled capital of la Riviera de las Flores, at the western end of the Italian Riviera, where Delilah first tried her tricks. We had a week to fill between our pre-booked stay in Lorgues, a Provence village popular with expats, and a three week house-sit in Montpellier, and had decided to spend it exploring the nearest bit of Italy.

Beautiful moody sunset in Ospedaletti

We had found an apartment in Ospedaletti, just 30m from the shore with a spacious balcony and a spectacular view over the Mediterranean. We were entranced, and not just with the view. The town itself had a certain faded elegance and charm, and was wonderfully unspoilt after the developmental excesses we had seen all along the French Riviera to the west. We drove into San Remo a couple of times, a city that seemed to tick many of our boxes, culture, architecture, and good shopping, and had the air of an honest working town without the overt touristic ostentatiousness of its French neighbours. The hook had been set and it only took a few words with our Italian landlord, who just happened to be in the real-estate business, before he was driving us around showing us what could be bought for the €350,000 we thought we could afford. And after three ‘duds’, too much renovation required, lousy view, no parking space, and one very nice apartment that, unfortunately, was way outside our budget, we explained to Simone that perhaps we should just ‘keep in touch’. We liked the location but none of his offerings really suited our needs. But Simone was not to be put off quite so easily.

The end of another Italian Riviera day

Now that he understood better what we were looking for – somewhat surprising as we still weren’t really sure ourselves – Simone had one more place that he would like to show us which he was absolutely certain would be just perfect. And so the following day, on the morning of our departure, he took us for a short walk along the rocky shoreline, around a slight promontory and there before us was a three storey building set in amongst a few pine trees. The apartment in question was on the first floor, had two large bedrooms, two bathrooms, a decent living room, an adequate kitchen opening onto a small garden, and a long enclosed verandah looking straight at the sea with more or less the same lovely views we had been enjoying for the last week. And the price was pretty well exactly what we had in mind. Of course we thought it was wonderful. Sure we would need to spend some money refurbishing the kitchen, but that was work I could easily handle myself. We would have our own parking space directly beneath the verandah, it was well off the main road, there was no public access to the property, and there were only two other occupants in the building so no housing association complications. There seemed to be some question as to whether or not the windows around the verandah had been the subject of planning permission, but the other two apartments had been similarly modified and no questions had been asked. A friend of Simone’s owned one of the other apartments, and, surprise, Simone also knew the seller very well. It all sounded very good and was our ideal nest in so many ways. To say we were tempted is to put it mildly, until the bombshell landed. The owner had already received one offer at the asking price, but would accept a cash offer if we wanted to seal the deal. Our minds raced furiously as we mentally worked out that we could indeed raise the cash, but at the same time little niggling doubts began to foment.

It was really just as well that we were leaving later that morning. So as we walked back to Simone’s apartment and he helped us carry our suitcases to the car, we explained our dilemma and agreed we would get back to him that evening, once we had arrived in Montpellier. But in our hearts we knew we had to calm down and not be blinded by such a little gem of a home. We talked about little else during our drive back along the A8 autoroute, and by the time we were arriving in the outskirts of Montpellier as dusk fell, we knew that we had been very close to making a huge mistake. We had not spoken to an English speaking solicitor, we had only a vague knowledge of the Italian system of buying and selling property, we weren’t even one hundred percent sure of the exchange value of our savings in UK and USA. But it had been a real shock for us to learn how impetuous we could be.

Fishing boats on the beach at Calella de Palafrugell

You’d think after that we would have been far more principled in our house-hunting escapades, but you’d be wrong to think that we would control our instincts better. Our next short, unplanned stay was a week in the pretty, old fishing village of Calella de Palafrugell on the Spanish Costa Brava. Your scribe had stayed there with his parents some fifty years previously and was surprised as well as delighted to find that it had not suffered the ravages of over-development that is such an epidemic along much of the Spanish Mediterranean coast. The small beaches in the middle of the village and the many isolated rocky coves where I remembered swimming in the clear azure sea with my father, were all just as delightful as ever. Walking the narrow footpath twisting its way among the rocky outcrops between the coves along the shoreline around the bay and on into the neighboring village of Llafranc, was a blissful way of getting our daily exercise. Even Palafrugell, the town four kilometres inland, where we would have to go for all our shopping and medical needs, was pleasant enough. Open countryside was all around, the handsome city of Girona was only an hour’s drive inland, and the port of Palamos just a few kilometres down the coast. And Calella itself was so wonderfully clean and quiet, actually rather too quiet we realised as the days went by, and the view of the sea from our balcony was again beautiful even though this time the sea was further away. But wouldn’t it be a wonderful place to live, we kept saying to each other. No tourists for nine or ten months of the year, fine countryside all around, we simply had to make contact with the local real estate office, and just see what might be available. And so the process began once more, though we didn’t get quite so carried away this time. Again we chatted with our landlord, from whom we learned that nearly 75% of the properties in the village, were owned by Spaniards from big cities like Barcelona and Madrid, who came to Calella for holidays and weekends. So there was not much chance of having year-round friendly neighbours. But still we ‘oohed’ and ‘aahed’, while ‘umming’ at the same time, as we weighed up the pros and cons of life in a small, but very beautiful, holiday community, still without the benefit of local legal knowledge and advice, and once again getting ourselves very excited about a place we had been in for less than a week.

Who wouldn’t want to live near a beach like this – Calella again, seemingly unchanged from sixty years ago!

They say about love that when it arrives you will know about it without question, that your instincts have a very real sense of having found the right life-partner. But, just like loving a person, loving a place still has to be given time to grow and develop gradually. All the same, it is just as easy to fall blindly in love with a beautiful environment, as it is to believe the person with whom you danced the previous night away is quite without fault.

So we determined to spend the rest of our six months being far more pragmatic when looking at properties. But, like “the best laid schemes o’mice an’ men” our good intentions did go a ‘wee bit awry’. Nothing really grabbed us during the next five weeks, on a home-exchange in a very small village in the foothills of the Pyrenees, where the December winds blew overly cool and big city culture was just too far away. But, as February and early spring arrived we found ourselves in Spanish Basque country staying in the little fishing port of Getaria, living in a very smart modern apartment high above a small sandy cove, enthralled by our view of the waves from the Bay of Biscay crashing on the rocks to right and left. There was an awful lot that was right about this environment. The village was tucked below a hillside atop of which began miles of green rolling countryside. The town of Zarautz, five minutes drive along the coast road, had all the amenities we could want, the beautiful small seaside city of San Sebastian was half an hour’s drive to the east and the much revitalized, port city of Bilbao, with all its culture, an hour to the west. The countryside was beautiful in all directions, and French Basque country just an hour away. And, the final Delilah touch, two or three of the apartments in our building were for sale. So we just had to go and see. We actually ended up looking at four apartments in the end. The first two weren’t quite right, and the next two were superb, but, sadly, way above our ‘budget’. And anyway, none of them had a garden, something which your scribe feels very strongly about.

The harbour at Getaria

Still, it was early days, and as we had several more days in the area we decided to investigate the property market in more depth; and that was when we discovered that single-family homes with small gardens are somewhat of a rarity in that part of Spain. It’s something to do with planning regulations, which severely restrict the sale of agricultural land for development, a virtue for one who loves the countryside more than bricks and mortar, but it does explain the Spanish obsession with high-rise apartment buildings that tend to spoil so many of the small fishing villages along the coast. You understand, by this stage we were starting to think a lot more carefully. But then again, if we were to sell our condo in California, then we could actually afford the loveliest of the penthouse duplex apartments in our building, and it did have a terrace large enough to grow quite a lot of plants and vegetables, and the views were beautiful, and it was such a friendly village and . . . and . . . so on.

The Getaria apartment building that really tempted us – the big blue glass fronted box at the right of the bay. Magnificent views out over the Bay of Biscay, and the sound of the Atlantic surf!

Yes, the tentacles of temptation were slowly drawing us in once again, and dangerous thoughts were becoming ever stronger. Something inside of me was beginning to feel a slight sense of failure, that our six months was drawing a blank; even after visiting and seeing so many beautiful places, we seemed to be unable to find that ideal nesting place. Would we ever do so?

There was still French Basque country to explore, which we were able to do from our base in Getaria. Hendaye and St.Jean de Luz were two small towns very close to the frontier, each of which in their own way, proved very attractive, and so we wasted no time in visiting two or three local ‘immobilieres’ (real estate agents). Their response was very positive, especially now that our ‘budget had risen to €500,000! We found the French Basque housing market to be very different from the Spanish. The concept of single-family homes is very much the norm and we were immediately able to visit four or five homes, all of which could have possibilities, but just two of which really made us stop and think very hard. The first, up one of the hills on the outskirts of Hendaye, was in many ways the most suitable property we had seen. Three spacious bedrooms, two bathrooms, a large open-plan kitchen/living room, beautiful Spanish mosaic floors everywhere, except for the oak floors in the bedrooms, a large southwest facing balcony with views towards both the mountains and the sea (unfortunately split by the outsize chimney of the house below!), a fair sized garden, an enormous undeveloped basement, large enough to subdivide into a dance floor, a workshop and a garage, a conversion-ready loft, and the price was within budget. By this stage though, we were being ultra-cautious, we needed to know more about living in Hendaye, in fact we needed to stick to our guns and rent for at least six months before we made a decision to purchase. So, rather dejectedly, we walked away from it.

We also visited St Jean de Luz and decided that it too was every bit as charming as we had read, but property prices in the town itself put it out of the range of even our ‘new’ budget. All the same, we continued looking, met a very helpful estate agent in Urrugne, a commune a few kilometres inland, who showed us a couple more houses, one of which was a beautifully built home in the countryside with a well kept garden and views of the mountains, being sold by an elderly couple who had built the home themselves some thirty years earlier. Again we had to turn away, and console ourselves with the knowledge that we had at least found an area we would happily return to one day and try the nest-renting process.

But then again, perhaps we should look at Italy more closely, and what about this little country of Portugal, which everyone says is such a fine place for retirement? And that, dear readers, will be another story.

Footnote:  Looking for illustrations for this post has made me realise how difficult it is to take photographs that effectively convey the true sense of a place.  We took a few thousand photographs during our travels but hardly a single one adequately shows you why we were so tempted. So when this article was published by Live and Invest Overseas I was quite relieved to see that they used stock photos. They also edited it in places, quite effectively if I’m honest!