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	<title>Downshifting Abroad</title>
	<link>http://bassdrumbooks.com/blog1</link>
	<description>A family chose a different lifestyle...</description>
	<pubDate>Wed, 12 Nov 2008 00:37:53 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>Diary of a Downshifter - Part 6</title>
		<link>http://bassdrumbooks.com/blog1/2008/10/17/diary-of-a-downshifter-part-6/</link>
		<comments>http://bassdrumbooks.com/blog1/2008/10/17/diary-of-a-downshifter-part-6/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 17 Oct 2008 23:45:20 +0000</pubDate>
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	<category>Journey Through Spain</category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Everything started out as it should have done. Antonio and Carlos picked me up an hour late and we went immediately to a bar for some fortification. Had I known how the rest of the night was going to pan out, I&#8217;d have had ten more and stayed there.
To cut a long and painful story [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Everything started out as it should have done. Antonio and Carlos picked me up an hour late and we went immediately to a bar for some fortification. Had I known how the rest of the night was going to pan out, I&#8217;d have had ten more and stayed there.</p>
<p>To cut a long and painful story short, it soon became obvious that my colleagues were both theoretical beekeepers and knew nothing about any of the practical issues. They loaded the hives up without strapping them so that bees leaked in all directions; they didn&#8217;t do their protective clothing up and so were stung constantly; they used their smokers so frantically that blasts of flame were coming out of them which set fire to one of the hives and finally, the site which Antonio had chosen was on a near vertical slope down which we slipped, beehives and all. Finally Antonio decided on a new site which he reckoned would be perfect. It involved a stiff climb up rocks carrying the by now really angry bees in their leaky hives and finally, as dawn broke, we placed the hives on a rocky ledge sticking out from the side of a cliff. We sat down exhausted and looked at the sun rising over the sea in the distance. I said to Antonio that this was probably the worst site ever known for bees and his reply was, &#8220;yes David but just think of how much they will enjoy the view&#8221;! He had a point.</p>
<p>Life settled down after that into more of a routine and we began our dip into the world of DIY which lasted non stop for the next 13 years - and in fact still hasn&#8217;t stopped. The small house we lived in was very old and was once a typical Andalucian peasant&#8217;s cottage with all of the features that made them so pretty such as beams and alcoves. Ours however had been turned into a Costa del Sol villa with false arches and all of the nice beams and features covered with plaster board. The existing fireplace had been stripped out so there was no heating and the part of the roof that was flat had battlements put on it making it resemble  miniature castle. The drains from the bath required water to flow uphill and the septic arrangements were very septic. All had to change but firstly we had to find out how. The answer came in the form of &#8216;The Readers Digest Book of DIY&#8217; which had been given to me by my father. It saved us and putting all our doubts aside, we started off wrecking the house. Annabel started it off. I was away beekeeping for the day and when I returned, it was to see the bath tub lying outside on the ground with a hole in the wall of the house where it had come out! No bath tonight I thought and I knew from then on that things would only become more painful. Our main requirement actually wasn&#8217;t the bath, but was to have the house dug out of the bank that it was set into so that water didn&#8217;t flow through the house when it rained. For this we needed the help of a digger and this in itself in that part of Spain where there were so many JCB diggers rumbling around is a story in itself.
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		<title>Diary of a Downshifter - Part 5</title>
		<link>http://bassdrumbooks.com/blog1/2007/07/25/diary-of-a-downshifter-part-5/</link>
		<comments>http://bassdrumbooks.com/blog1/2007/07/25/diary-of-a-downshifter-part-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Jul 2007 03:07:23 +0000</pubDate>
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	<category>Journey Through Spain</category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bassdrumbooks.com/blog1/2007/07/25/diary-of-a-downshifter-part-5/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It was now time to acquire some bees. After all, that was why we were there. We heard from a friend that an old boy was downsizing his bee stocks and contacted him in Velez Malaga. He turned up about an hour and a half late for our appointment and immediately took us off to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span lang="EN-NZ"><font size="3"><font face="Times New Roman">It was now time to acquire some bees. After all, that was why we were there. We heard from a friend that an old boy was downsizing his bee stocks and contacted him in Velez Malaga. He turned up about an hour and a half late for our appointment and immediately took us off to one of his favourite bars for a pre-work brandy and a gossip about bees and how there was so much future in it and wasn’t I lucky to be able to buy at very reasonable cost his bee hives full of specially trained, hard working, completely tranquil bees. As usual, reality was different. We approached his apiary along a horrendous series of narrow tracks with million foot drops on <a id="more-30"></a>either side and</font></font></span><span lang="EN-NZ"><font size="3"><font face="Times New Roman"> on arrival were nearly pasted into oblivion by the bees which attacked on sight. I’d heard about the Iberica bee and so wasn’t unduly surprised at their ferocity, but it was explained to me that it was all due to a series of low pressure systems crossing this part of Spain that had upset them. The television had said so. Usually you could stroke them as though they were flies! What ever that meant! I was never able to stroke an Iberica without having to run for it!<br />
</font></font></span><span lang="EN-NZ"><font size="3"><font face="Times New Roman">I purchased 40 stock to start off with and we were then rushed to the old boy’s house in town to celebrate with several or more glasses of the local filth drawn up from a deep amphora set into the ground. I took more than I should have (I needed it) and was eventually forced back home, mumbling and scratching my many stings, by my wife.<br />
</font></font></span><span lang="EN-NZ"><font size="3"><font face="Times New Roman">Now all we had to do was move the hives to some new sites. Three of the locals offered to help me and from the way they spoke I thought they were experts on the subject (another thing I found common in Spain). Bees are moved at night and so one late evening off we set and very soon reality again hit me in the face when I found out that none of them had ever had anything to do with bees before and so another adventure of the Keystone Cops look-alikes began. Only this time the horror lasted all night!<br />
</font></font></span><script language="JavaScript" src="http://hostingprod.com/js_source/geov2.js"></script><script language="javascript">geovisit();</script><noscript />
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		<item>
		<title>Diary of a Downshifter - Part 4</title>
		<link>http://bassdrumbooks.com/blog1/2007/06/04/diary-of-a-downshifter-part-4/</link>
		<comments>http://bassdrumbooks.com/blog1/2007/06/04/diary-of-a-downshifter-part-4/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Jun 2007 21:19:23 +0000</pubDate>
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	<category>Journey Through Spain</category>
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		<description><![CDATA[After stalling this potential thief who was the owner of the supermarket in the nearby village of Los Romanes, we contacted our lawyer. Once you have a set of deeds in Spain, you can keep them, even after you have sold the property. New deeds are made up for the new owner and in the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span lang="EN-NZ"><font size="3"><font face="Times New Roman">After stalling this potential thief who was the owner of the supermarket in the nearby village of Los Romanes, we contacted our lawyer. Once you have a set of deeds in Spain, you can keep them, even after you have sold the property. New deeds are made up for the new owner and in the deeds register, it is only these latest dated deeds that count. The grocer had simply tried it on with a set of old deeds and a letter from the lawyer threatening a court case shut him up immediately. He assumed that we were rich and ignorant and found that we were neither. We had passed the first of many tests that would try us in Spain. Sometime after this event, we mentioned the incident to some Spanish friends who far from being surprised actually said, “Well he had to try didn’t he. He owns a supermarket. He is an important man!” It was our first realisation that, however well you thought you knew these people, their 1000 years of different history to ours just made them think so very differently. It was a continuing theme throughout our time in Spain.<br />
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		<title>Diary of a Downshifter - Part 3</title>
		<link>http://bassdrumbooks.com/blog1/2007/05/11/diary-of-a-downshifter-part-3/</link>
		<comments>http://bassdrumbooks.com/blog1/2007/05/11/diary-of-a-downshifter-part-3/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 11 May 2007 06:01:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Administrator</dc:creator>
		
	<category>Journey Through Spain</category>
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		<description><![CDATA[So we had arrived. It was unnerving to think that this was it. The cottage was fairly sound but still lacked electricity and in fact compared to what was to come over the next few years, it was pure luxury. Many days later the electricians came and in the meantime we begged jerry cans of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span lang="EN-NZ"><font size="3"><font face="Times New Roman">So we had arrived. It was unnerving to think that this was it. The cottage was fairly sound but still lacked electricity and in fact compared to what was to come over the next few years, it was pure luxury. Many days later the electricians came and in the meantime we begged jerry cans of water from neighbours. Our water was pumped from our water tank by electricity. Had we thought about it properly we’d have made sure that the line from the tank to the house was down hill. Instead it was uphill. Then 5 days into it all the heavens broke and we went from a deficit of water in the house to a huge surplus. Water came in through the back wall in rivers, flowed through the house and out of the front door. We battled it by night and day and in the meantime all our boxes in the sitting room became sodden. There was no relief though. <a id="more-23"></a>Any fixit job had to be major and we couldn’t do that until the rain stopped. Essentially the house had to be dug out of the hill at the back (where we should have had our water tank). The stone walls of the house were no protection against ground water at all. I went from bar to bar chasing JCB digger drivers but of course after a rain storm of that intensity they were all engaged in digging out roads and farms. Eventually however we got one and it was a cause for celebration when a big yellow JCB came and parked on the land. The driver looked at the problem, grunted and promised to return the next day – but he left his machine on our land which re-assured us. Sure enough he arrived promptly at 8 the next morning, powered up and disappeared. A spilled load of tomatoes was blocking a road. But he returned after a day and two days later the ground behind the house was now level with the house. The first problem was solved. Another miracle occurred when the electricity boys arrived the next day and connected us up. We had light and we had water where it was meant to be, and we had a neighbour who claimed that half our land was his and he had papers to prove it. Not only that, he was going to drive a track through to it on an ancient track way through our land and build a house almost next to ours – unless we bought the land off him at an extortionate price.<br />
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		<title>Diary of a Downshifter - Part 2</title>
		<link>http://bassdrumbooks.com/blog1/2007/04/24/diary-of-a-downshifter-part-2/</link>
		<comments>http://bassdrumbooks.com/blog1/2007/04/24/diary-of-a-downshifter-part-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Apr 2007 23:04:57 +0000</pubDate>
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	<category>Journey Through Spain</category>
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		<description><![CDATA[The Journey
On October 3 1993 we set off for Plymouth and the ferry to Santander in a Luton Van driven by our friend Graham and us in the lightweight Landrover and trailer. It was strange to think that ‘that was it’. No more salary. No job. No England and all the English things, and even [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong><font face="Times New Roman">The Journey</font><br />
</strong><span lang="EN-GB" style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: 'Times New Roman'; mso-fareast-font-family: 'Times New Roman'; mso-ansi-language: EN-GB; mso-fareast-language: ES; mso-bidi-language: AR-SA">On October 3 1993 we set off for Plymouth and the ferry to Santander in a Luton Van driven by our friend Graham and us in the lightweight Landrover and trailer. It was strange to think that ‘that was it’. No more salary. No job. No England and all the English things, and even harder to imagine that this wasn’t a holiday. It was for real. Remarkably very little happened of note and we boarded the ferry without incident and went on to enjoy the 24 hour journey to Spain. It’s really well worth while travelling this way even if a bit pricey, but you avoid the exorbitant cost of motoring through France (toll roads/campsites/fuel/refreshments/drinks). We’ve been through France many times but delightful as it is, it’s just so expensive. That hasn’t changed over the years. Two years ago I crossed the Pyrenees into France by car. En route, I stopped to have lunch in Spain where for eight euros I had a meal of roast Pyrenean rabbit with all the trimmings, half a bottle of white and a coffee. Eight euros! On my first stop in France at the end of that same day, three small beers in tulip glasses cost me nine euros! (I had to have three because the glasses were so small!)<a id="more-20"></a><br />
Anyway, back to getting to Spain. The Picos Mountains were our first site of the country and we arrived in that delightful port on a perfect autumn day and set off up that hill along which all travellers have to go.  After shuffling drivers around we lost Annabel near Burgos. Graham and I stopped for a drink at a road side inn and even though she nearly ran us over, Annabel passed by without seeing us. We set off after her and it took three hours to catch up. She thought we were ahead and was going at speed to catch us.<br />
Our first night was to be in the campsite at Aranjuez, but it was closed so we made our way back towards Madrid and stayed at Getafe in a not so salubrious place, but it had a bar and for the moment that was enough. During the second day we lost Graham who thinking he had passed us went back to Bailen to find us, then realised he didn’t actually know the route or where we were going. He ended up in the police station where we found him many hours later. We spent the second night on the outskirts of Granada.<br />
On day three we finally ground our way down to our small cottage behind the big rock known as La Peña near Los Romanes in the province of Malaga.<br />
By the time we had burnt out most of the gears on the Luton van after it got stuck in the valley, we were desperate to unload before dark, and we finally moved everything into the now grossly overcrowded cottage. We were to spend the next 13 years wondering why we had brought so many belongings with us. In fact we still have most of it in the original boxes. We had been warned to take nothing and we had ignored it. At the end of the day we went straight to a small bar in the nearby hamlet and tucked into an excellent meal and copious amounts of wine. This was the right thing to do. It relaxed our frayed nerves and set us up for the days ahead. As we wandered back to the cottage, Annabel looked at the dark, isolated non electric cottage and said, “I’ll give it a year”.</span><span lang="EN-GB" style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: Verdana; mso-fareast-font-family: 'Times New Roman'; mso-ansi-language: EN-GB; mso-fareast-language: ES; mso-bidi-language: AR-SA; mso-bidi-font-family: 'Times New Roman'"> </span><font face="Times New Roman" size="3"><br />
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		<item>
		<title>Diary of a Downshifter - Part 1</title>
		<link>http://bassdrumbooks.com/blog1/2007/04/19/diary/</link>
		<comments>http://bassdrumbooks.com/blog1/2007/04/19/diary/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Apr 2007 01:26:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Administrator</dc:creator>
		
	<category>Journey Through Spain</category>
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		<description><![CDATA[How it all started
This diary tells the ups and downs, triumphs and tragedies and daily routines of a typical overseas downshifting couple which grew into a downshifting family. All of it is true and it all began in November 1993 when my wife Anna and I left the UK for a small cottage in the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span lang="EN-GB"><strong>How it all started<br />
</strong></span><span lang="EN-GB">This diary tells the ups and downs, triumphs and tragedies and daily routines of a typical overseas downshifting couple which grew into a downshifting family. All of it is true and it all began in November 1993 when my wife Anna and I left the UK for a small cottage in the Spanish hills. We had decided to get out of the rat race in the UK and become honey farmers.  The main reasons for leaving the UK were not that we were anti British, but just anti living in Britain. We believed firmly that we  were simply not being rewarded for effort in our jobs; the jobs themselves were boring (although decently paid); we dreaded Mondays; we dreaded Fridays because it was the weekend and time increased in speed dramatically and it would go in a flash and Monday would on us again; We dreaded Thursdays because that was the day before Friday and so it went on. Out on the streets, nobody seemed to respect anybody or anything and the decent people (and they were and still are the majority in the UK) had to shut up in case they offended someone. A glass of wine in a pub and a couple of beers required a mortgage and the cost of petrol to get to the pub required another. We were frazzled, overtaxed, totally fed up, powerless to do anything about it and knew that something had to change. In fact everything had to change.<a id="more-15"></a>  We had always liked Spain – real Spain that is, not so much the Costas, although they too provide a very happy place to live for many Brits and other Northern Europeans. So we decided to go there and because we had two beehives in our garden and were therefore ‘experts’!, we decided to go abroad be commercial honey farmers. We were very naïve. Looking back now, I think that it would have been easier to build a space rocket and colonise the moon. But, something had to be done and so we did it. No plans – or rather nothing substantial in the way of planning, but we did go to evening classes in Spanish. That was our only practical preparation for what was to come, and thank God we did that. But we also did a few daft things in the way of preparation including going on a buying spree! We bought a stone sink, a dining room table, antique chairs and an antique sofa and a host of other equally useless junk that we then had to spend thousands getting to Spain, where none of it fitted. On a prior visit to Spain when we decide to buy the cottage there an expat said, ‘bring only what you can get in a suitcase plus your record collection’. We laughed, took no notice and have regretted it ever since.<br />
</span><span lang="EN-GB">On the 3<sup>rd</sup> of November 1993, we set off from Lincoln in an ex military  Landrover and trailer, with a friend behind us driving a Luton van, both full of stuff most of which we would never need, and headed for Spain. Next week I describe ‘The Journey.’<br />
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