French Country Travel Life Rustic Getaway
There is a French Country Travel Life Rustic Getaway that is, shall we say, “rustic” with a capital “R.” An “eco-friendly” with a capital “E.” No, it is not the tiny perfect village where DA BG lives. (I have electricity AND an indoor toilet.!)
It is a (obviously) picturesque spot in the French countryside that was born of both love and necessity. And, as is so often the case, not by the French. But by those of the race that has been intertwined with la belle France for centuries. The exotic strangers from the (not so)far away fish n’ chip lands.
Two of them, Bob and Diane Kirkwood, are responsible for creating the ultimate “get away from it all” paradise deep in the French countryside.
Our pals at the kahaleejtimes have the rustic details:
“Music comes courtesy of an old Decca 66 record player and a selection of 78s. Oil lamps and candles supply the lighting and if you want the Internet you’ll have to make the trek into the nearest town.
Tourists have long flocked to France in search of the rural dream.
But the Kirkwoods have taken things one step further, offering holidaymakers the chance to live without mains electricity, flush toilets, mobile phone or Internet access.
Tapping into the modern day nostalgia for a simpler, less hectic existence, the Kirkwoods’ holiday cabins in the Perigord-Limousin Natural Regional Park in south-western France are an antidote to the “24/7” lifestyle of many visitors.
“It all happened by accident really… there’s no work around here so you have to find something to do,” Bob Kirkwood told AFP by telephone from his home near the small town of Piegut.
The couple fell in love with the natural beauty of the area and its slower pace of life during a short visit there in 2000.
“It’s all just forests really and very backward farming. I mean, it’s not unusual to see people ploughing with horses,” he said.
Astonished by the then rock-bottom cost of property in the area, which Bob calls a “real backwater”, the Kirkwoods bought a house as a holiday home and after spending the summer there, decided to stay permanently.
When a nearby piece of land with a lake came on the market, they bought it and converted an old shack into a bolt-hole for themselves.
But because of the isolated nature of the spot, Bob found he had to turn himself into an expert on off-grid living.
“We didn’t go into this because of green issues,” says Bob, 50, a carpenter by trade.
“It was just that you can’t run electricity or other services to this class of building because they’re so remote.
“So we had no alternative really other than to find ways of generating a bit of power and it all led from there.”
Bob began by buying a car battery and “seeing what could be done with it”.
Now, the Kirkwoods’ cabins — two of their own and a third that they converted and manage for British television celebrity Kate Humble — boast compost toilets, wood-burning stoves for heating and hot water and solar powered lamps for lighting, although Bob and Diane prefer candles or oil lamps.
The popularity of the cabins took the couple by surprise.
After they finished the first one, they set up a website with a view to occasionally letting it. Every year more and more people come, said Bob.”
Read more HERE.
THROW ME A BONE HERE,PEOPLE!
What are ya thinkin’?
this is REALLY “getting away from it all!”
love the photo….makes me want to pack immediatly!
i can appreciate what he says with “each year more and more people come”
right on sally….with more and more people struggling with “civilization.”