Tuesday, March 30, 2010

VINART 2010

Ceret Property is delighted to support
Sunday 4th and Monday 5th April 2010
from 2pm to 6pmVINARTAre you or your guests looking for something to do over the Easter weekend?

Join us in celebrating our 3rd year of VINart on Easter Sunday and Monday. 
 
Bring your children, friends and neighbours and enjoy an afternoon of live wood sculpturing, children's pottery, view the Art on display - all for sale, meet the artists and taste our newly released wines which include the 'Rose of Treloar' and an unoaked Red - 'Ciel Vide'. Further details
 
 
Sunday 4th and Monday 5th April 2010
from 2pm to 6pm
  
We are also proud to support Cancer Support France 66 
www.cancersupportfrance.info with profits from the wine tastings going to support this charity. 
 
See our website for directions:http://www.domainetreloar.com/directions.htm

That's more like it

I am delighted to announce that normal service seems to have been resumed.


The sun has come out and last Saturday, the streets of Ceret hummed to the beat of a spring market. In the afternoon, USAP took on the power of Paris in the rugby and a band of brothers forced a few thirst quenching beers past their dry cracked lips. USAP smashed Paris and came out victorious. After a couple of hours watching the rugby outside, I turned a beautiful radiant pinky/red colour. Crack open the sun cream.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Roussillon in Pictures

Fancy a day at the beach?

How about watching USAP train during the week


Anyone fancy a swim?


Put another sausage on the barbie


Pass the sun cream


Worse than brass monkeys

Just a great photo


Collioure in spring






Monday, March 08, 2010

South of France in March!

I could not resist this one. On Friday is was very lucky to be invited to a friends yacht in Spain for the day. There was a fair breeze and a hot sun and fun was had by all. On Saturday, it was Carnival day in Ceret. The weather again was lovely, the youth of Ceret came out in droves and all had a merry old time. The thing that really struck me was the fact that us old people are happy to give over the town to the youth of Ceret to go mad and have some fun and  that the afore said youth spend all their free time leading up to the carnival building the most amazing floats, which are then pulled by tractor through town, with music blaring, kids shouting, silly string and foam flying everywhere and beer being consumed. 


The weather was great and everyone had a really good time.


The reason for bringing these points up is not just to reiterate what a great place the Roussillon is but also to point out the fabulous weather.......So imagine my surprise, when I awoke this morning to find 10cm of snow on the ground. Spring has sprung, the grass has riz....yeh yeh yeh put another log on the fire.





Friday, February 26, 2010

Is Collioure the king of LR wines?

A really big thank you to Rachel and Jon from Domaine Treloar, who hosted a wine club evening last night. The subjects for this occasion were 13 wines from Collioure. I won't go through all the wines that we sampled last night as you had to be there to enjoy them. 
Enjoy them, did we? The overall concensus was that Collioure wines are generally overpriced, with starting prices for very basic wine being around the €7 mark, it was felt that this was a lot to pay for a great view. I wonder if the wines would hold the same prices if they came from the outskirts of Perpignan??. Having said that, a couple of the wines that were priced at around €13 were very nice. Quite an expensive mistake to make if you get it wrong.


Favourite for the evening was a 2007 Collioure Barral, Domaine Berta Maillol, AC Collioure 13.5% €13.50


One of the guest from the evening (M. anonyme) who spent 68 days at the governments pleasure in Perpignan gaol, after a Union Manifestation, was given 68 bottles 0f 1998 Domaine La Tour vielle, Collioure Puig Ambeille, upon his release. He kindly shared his last bottle with the assembled group last night. Merci.


Although Languedoc Roussillon wines are not the most celebrated french wines, I was interested to hear that Domaine du Mas Blanc, Cuvee Docteur Parce, Is available in more Michelin star restaurants around the world than any other wine. Even than the big boys from Bordeaux.


Rachel and Jon are available for visits all year round at Domaine Treloar so why not pay them a visit.

Monday, February 22, 2010

Where to go this spring?

Beach Holiday
OK so it might be a bit nippy in the water but even in spring time there are a few people sunning themselves on the beach. If that doesn't excite you too much, then you could choose a destination like Collioure, which is rich with cafes, restaurants, Chateau de Collioure, unique church and much much more. You can fly easily to Perpignan or Girona and train or drive to this hitoric port.


Cultural Holiday
Ceret, is located in little further inland and is a perfect base for the wine tour, visiting ancient Pyrenees Orientales or art museums. Maybe you want to be closer to the city of Perpignan with its multitude of shops, restaurants, cafes cinemas etc.... You can even pop over the Spanish Border to sample the delights of another culture.


Ski Holiday
This is looking to be a great year for the Pyrenean ski slopes. you may have noticed that there has been quite a lot of snow over the past few months and the slopes of the Pyrenees have been no strange to the white stuff. The great this about skiing in the Pyrenees is that you can choose to ski from three countries. Andorra, France and Spain. You can even book a holiday within an hour of the slopes and just go for a day...or two.


Get away from it all.
There is nowhere better to visit if you just want to embrace the beauty and surroundings of the Pyrenees Orientales. Book a Mas (Catalan Farmhouse) and just while away the days. Take a property in the foothills of the Pyrenees and enjoy long walks and trecks, miles from anywhere. At this time of the year, as the Mimosa arrives with its splash of green and yellow and the plant world awakes, there truly is no place more lovely.




Clever Bit
So your not really sure which type of Spring Holiday you want. Should you visit the 25+ Kilometres of beaches and their chateaux. Do you do the wine tour or visit the ski slopes. Just want a quiet couple of weeks in the sun or want to experience the delights of northern spain.


If you visit the Roussillon, you can do them all, so what are you waiting for, come and visit us now. 

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Roll up Roll up Roll up


Saw this article and thought it was worth passing on.

The French are missing us. Of course, they're not going to say so, any more than they'd admit to impotence. But it's true. In 2009, we took a look, saw that a plunging pound wouldn't buy a potato chip and stayed away. The number of British visitors to French hotels dipped by more than 20 per cent.




Restaurants suffered similarly. "Our English clientele is down by a third," a restaurateur in Montreuil told me recently. "Survival is at stake." So, you bet they want us back. And they are making efforts. Recently, in the centre of Bordeaux, I had decent restaurants falling over themselves to feed me three courses for around £13 (£11.80). A mid-range hotel fit for my wife (it's not easy) came at £72 (£65.50) for a double room.
Over the past 12 months, I've bumped into equivalent prices across France. I have also, incidentally, hiked mountains, swum in lakes, sailed rivers and canals, and lounged on beaches both Mediterranean and Atlantic. I have driven through grand landscapes convinced that I was the only person on Earth. I've visited more chateaux than Richard the Lionheart, and more village festivals than I can count.
I've eaten brilliantly, whether from the village butcher and baker or a Michelin-starred chef. And afterwards I've wandered into midnight city centres for coffee and cognac. Nowhere have I been inconvenienced by excited young people showing their buttocks.
I mention all this to underline that, if the French have missed the British, it's possible that the British have also missed France. If so, it's time to return. You won't need me to tell you about Paris, the Riviera and the Dordogne. So, here is my pick of some lesser-known destinations where you will be more welcomed than ever in 2010.

FOR BEACHES: LANGUEDOC

Curving around the Med from the Rhône delta to Spain, Languedoc is scarcely unknown. But it's less well known than the Côte d'Azur or the Spanish coast – which is a pity, especially for families.
When our children were of an age, we took them regularly to the beaches to the east of the region. These are sandy, flat, safe and endless enough to accommodate most of Europe's towels. They loved it, and we learnt the three golden rules for successful family Med-beach times: (a) take enough bislangucuits (b) insist that Mr and Mrs Crab will be more content where they are than being brought home in a bucket and (c) don't tackle the Germans at volleyball.
The resorts are a mixed bunch. Some (Carnon, Palavas) expanded quickly in the mid-20th century, inspired by a speculator's eye for aesthetics. In others (Le Grau-du-Roi, Sète), port activity retains the upper hand over sea-sidery. Meanwhile, La Grande-Motte's extraordinary collection of pyramids and curvy apartment blocks makes for the weirdest-looking spot on the Med.
But all have a vast range of appropriate accommodation. (The region may be the world's camping HQ; Argelès alone has 56 sites.) And all are as lively and happy as can be, with restaurants up and down the scale, music bars, bull-running, funfairs and that buoyant sense of impermanence that tells you you're on holiday.
Beyond Sète, going west, the Cap d'Agde is summer fun central, not least for nudists. Agde itself, and particularly its black-stone cathedral, is a venerable reminder that the seaside wasn't always for thongs and tanning. And, between the built-up bits, the Languedoc coast can still grow unkempt and stirring. The writ of contemporary France apparently runs out around the untamed tangle of land and lagoons south of Gruissan. A short detour inland, and an excellent day trip from the coast, is the medieval city of Carcassonne.
And so to Roussillon, or French Catalonia. Here, the coast suddenly sprouts hills, cliffs and coves as it bangs into the final descent of the Pyrenees. This, the Côte Vermeille, is the region's prettiest stretch – and older resorts like Collioure and Banyuls know it. There's a self-conscious superiority about their charms. I prefer the more raucous Argelès, which crams everything into summer. The range of activities – either seaborne or in the mountains behind – is huge, the sun strong and the place full of families who like to be beside the seaside.
Thanks to the Telegraph.