Newsletter August 2007
July 28th, 2007 at 1:00 pmFrom www.americansinfrance.net
Tour de France
This photo was taken during the Tour de France's visit to La
Roche sur Foron. The tour came through on July 14th. Riders
pedaled furiously but
here are more photos.
What I discovered about the Tour de France is that the real show
is not so much the riders but the publicity caravan that precedes
them. My son and I spent about an hour before the riders arrived
trying to get any freebee we could. The publicity caravan
according to the Tour de France web site is a 12 mile long
procession of about 200 brightly decorated vehicles. I can attest
to the brightly decorated part!
Most vehicles were throwing goodies to the crowd. We were able to
get a few - mostly hats, nothing really worth much but fun to try
and get. A person commented that one foldable Frisbee like
object, only value was, to advertise a product.
The Tour de France caravan dates back to the great depression and
the need for race organizers to raise money. At the time the
event had a national team formula and the caravan was a good
means to finance this.
New Web Site
I've created another airport web site, this time for the Limoges Airport. This is an
"unofficial guide" to inform the prospective traveler. Limoges
airport is served by 'no frills' airlines: Ryan Air and
Flybe.
After I visited the Limoges Airport I was also able to visit
Oradour-sur-Glane. Oradour-sur-Glane was destroyed by a Waffen-SS
company on June 11th 1944 and 642 villagers were killed. The
village was left as a memorial and looks much as it did just
after that fateful day in 1944. If you are ever in the area the
village is worth a visit. I wrote something about
Oradour-sur-Glane
here.
On-Line Forum
A few months ago I redesigned the forum I have on Americans in France and moved it to my personal web site - www.jeffsteiner.com/forum/. The forum now has much more functionality and is divided into sections for a better user experience.
Manifone Telephony
I've recently discovered a way to make international phone calls
on my cell phone for .03 euros per minute. The company is called
Manifone
and offers a number of calling plans that can save you money. I
gave the
Mani Minutes plan a try. What Mani Minutes lets me do is call
a local number in France and then redirects to any number I want.
As long as I stay within my cell phone's monthly calling plan .03
euros per minute is what I pay. Manifone has a number of other
plans, including one that lets you have a local phone number in
10 countries (soon to be 30) that is redirected to your home
number. Meaning you could have a local number in the US that
could be redirected to France.
For more information see the Manifone
web site. It costs nothing to create an account and you will
even start out with .60 euro of credits. That's 20 minutes of
calling time!
Resources for living or traveling in France:
If you would like to improve your French, I suggest
Fluent French or Champs-Elysées.
Looking to rent a car in France? Try car rental partner AutoEurope.
Need a hotel for your travels? Venere.com.
Looking to stay in a B&B or Château? Then please take a look
at B
& B's/Rental page.
How about sightseeing tours? Try -
Sightseeing Tours France
Need a property finder in France? You might try
Enterimmo in Paris and Provence.
Thinking of having a wedding or other event in France? Have a
look at my Wedding
in France page.
Looking to make new Friends? Then what about Americans in France
Friends?
Would you like to find classified ads for France but in English?
Then a good place to start is Franglo.
Do you need to find health insurance for France? Then I suggest
either Global
Insurance or Medibroker.
Searching for a book about living in France? One you might read
is The
Insider Paris Guide for Living in France.
If there is something I've missed or you would like more
resources, please contact
me.
Thanks for reading my newsletter. Help spread the word - forward this email to a friend!
Jeff SteinerCopyright
Americans in France
Resource for people that would like to live or travel in France.