password
username
Sponsored by CakeMail, an email marketing software.
Newsletter preview

IL Postcards

If you loved French food and culture and could have a village house in the heart of it all for the price of a new car...would you?

Leigh Fergus and the amazing prices she’s found make it awfully tempting to live the good life in French wine paradise. See how tempting below.

Dan Prescher
Publisher, International Living

Advertisement

REVEALED! Travel Secrets Designed to Fund Your Vacations and Make You $100,000 or More a Year as You Explore the World Like a VIP!

After another rewarding (and lucrative) year on the road, four savvy travelers have found time in their busy schedules to meet TODAY—Tuesday, October 28, 2008 --to discuss the four tools they use to consistently fund and profit from their vacations.

You could pay a thousand dollars for this privileged information...and you’d still be money ahead on your next trip.

But today, I'll show you how to get your hands on these secret strategies for less than $20

Join us tonight at 8pm EST for the call.

Your Home in a Wine Paradise for $36,000

Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2008

Imagine waking up in your own cozy 18th-century house, looking out over a green patchwork of vineyards. You stroll down to the medieval square for an espresso and gaze down from the ramparts at the Loire river and its ever-changing banks. You buy lunch from the local market, choosing earthy cêpe mushrooms, tender lettuce, free range duck, and fresh creamy cheeses just right for your crusty baguette--and, of course, a bottle of your favorite wine, cost price from the producer.

You don’t need to be a millionaire to live this life. You can rent a home in this corner of France from 330 euro ($415) per month, utilities rarely come to more than 100 euro ($125), and your groceries could be as low as 35 euro ($44) a week--without being frugal. You can enjoy a charolais steak or coq au vin out, with a glass of wine, for 10 euro ($12.50) or less and still be able to stock that stone vaulted cellar with good bottles.

Where is this little piece of heaven? It’s the town of Sancerre, just 118 miles south of Paris, a place where you can experience a better quality of life, a low cost of living--and get more property (and wine) for your dollar.

Sancerre has been inhabited since Roman times, and it’s easy to see why people through the ages have chosen to live here. From the top of the hill you can enjoy panoramic views of the surrounding farmland, woods, and vineyards, as well as the meandering Loire, and the climate is mild most of the year. The town itself offers cobbled streets, narrow ***s of houses decked with flowers, as well as a range of cafés, restaurants, art galleries and the usual small stores, plus the Maison des Sancerre, a showcase for the wines of the region, housed in a 15th-century stone tower.

You can find your own historic home here--just needing a lick of paint--for less than $80,000. One that caught my eye is at the bottom of the Sancerre slopes, close to the canal that runs parallel to the Loire for a few miles. This 1,000-square-foot, three-bedroom townhouse, built in 1850, comes with central heating, exposed beams, a bathrooms, garage, and garden, for just 54,000 euro ($68,000), through the local Transaxia agency (www.transaxia sancerre.com).

And it’s not a one-off--there are plenty of other houses at similar prices. I found a smaller two-bedroom village house with half an acre for 53,000 euro ($66,000) through Mahaut-Mathey agency. Monsieur Mahaut himself also showed me a charming four-bedroom house with an attic needing little modernizing for 50,000 euro ($63,000). And local property taxes are low, about 200 euro ($250) a year for such a house. Venture outside the town and property is even cheaper--how does 29,000 euro ($36,000) sound for a three-bedroom village house to fix up with outbuildings, cellar, and a garden?

Leigh Fergus
Europe Editor, International Living

P.S. I have spent the last few months traveling the length and breadth of France seeking the best deals in the some of the most popular and less traveled corners of the country. No stone has been left unturned in this updated France: The Owner’s Manual. As well as telling you how to make the move to France, I will show you where to find homes under $100,000. Find out more here.

Advertisement

Calling all artists...

Do you like to sketch in your spare time? Have you got a passion for painting? If so, we’d like to hear from you. Here at International Living, we are looking for water colorists to work with us on drawing existing photographs to convert them into water colors. If art is one of your hobbies, please get in touch. Simply scan and e-mail two existing samples of your water colors to: editor@internationalliving.com. I look forward to hearing from all you budding artists out there.


Dear International Living Reader: If you have not already done so, please click here to confirm your IL Postcards subscription. This will help us ensure you get every IL Postcard without interruption. Or help us out by "white-listing" our service...before its delivery is interrupted.


Share this Article

Click here to start receiving your own copy of IL Postcards...or forward this e-mail to a friend so they can sign-up to receive their own copy of IL Postcards.

RSS Feed 


Join in!
Ask or answer a question at IL's online community. Check out the NEW interactive International Living Blog
.


International Living--There's more...


*** or Change of Address

Want to cancel IL Postcards? Click here

Email Address Change? Click here.


IL Print Subscribers:
To cancel or for any other subscription issues, write us at:
    International Living
    Order Processing Center
    Attn: Customer Service
    P.O. Box 968
    Frederick, MD 21705


(c) 2008 International Living Publishing Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties.
This Newsletter may only be used pursuant to the subscription agreement and
any reproduction, copying, or redistribution (electronic or otherwise,
including on the world wide web) , in whole or in part, is strictly
prohibited without the express written permission of
International Living, Elysium House, Ballytruckle, Waterford,Ireland.

Registered in Ireland No.2852141

E-mail: webeditor@internationalliving.com | Website: www.InternationalLiving.com

Nothing in this e-mail should be considered personalized advice about your investments.
Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions,
they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular
investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be
deemed as personalized investment advice.