Budget living in France
The photo is unrelated to this post’s subject, but I wanted to share how Grey encourages being petted, and how large his paws are. At five foot eleven (1m80) I’m not a small woman, but next to Grey’s mitts, my hands certainly look it!
I’ve found it interesting to read various “life on a budget” discussions elsewhere, so thought I might share my own penny-saving tips. The biggest one is that I don’t have a car. A bus serves a stop two blocks from my place, and one block from our offices. That costs just €30 a month, and I spend another €10/month for the tram, for a grand total of €40/month. Beyond those set costs, I can go by bus, train or plane to pretty much anywhere from Nice. I also don’t have a television. Now, before anyone scoffs “another anti-TV person argh”, please realize that it costs about 120 euros a year just to watch regular French public television, due to the redevance audiovisuelle, and that’s for only six channels. Cable and satellite are extra, of course. I would much rather save that money, not to mention the cost of a TV, and use it to buy the series and movies I really like on DVD. Then I can watch them on my PC when I want, as many times as I want, and without advertisements.
As internet and phone go, I haven’t had a true land line since 1997, when I was a student in Lyon. In Helsinki in 1998, mobile phone subscriptions were dirt cheap, and with friends who worked at Nokia, I had free loan phones. Once in France, I started out with prepaid phone cards, but a few years ago the validity of cheaper cards was cut from 3 months to just 15 days, or one month at most. I shopped around and found a cheap subscription for 7 euros a month that gave me 10 minutes for free; I upgraded last month and now pay €10/month for 20 free minutes and unlimited free SMS, although no free data. That’s all right though, since I have uncapped ADSL for €30 a month, with unlimited free VoIP calls to pretty much anywhere in the world.
As for utilities, in France there still isn’t much choice. I go through EDF (privatized in 2007) since it’s less bad than its competitors. I use CFL bulbs, an A++ class washer (1 kWh per load) and refrigerator-freezer (less than 1 kWh per day), and dry my clothes outside. My telephone is Eco DECT (60% less power consumption than regular phones), I built my computer with just the basics so it only needs a 250-watt power supply, and I have an electric cooktop and 1.8 kW water heater. All told I only pay €30 a month for electricity. Water and heating are centralized through my apartment building and average out to €50 a month.
I pick up free, abandoned furniture: two nice chairs and a set of wood trestles to date. Other furniture is either secondhand or Ikea, with a few pieces from sales at Habitat.
Sales in France are on dates that are set by decree: Google dates soldes france. Winter sales are usually in early January through mid-February, with summer sales at the end of June through July. Stores have other, smaller sales too, so it’s good to keep an eye out for when they come.
Groceries are more complicated since I have a gluten and casein intolerance — I can’t eat wheat/barley/oats (think pasta and bread) nor any animal milk products. Generally I get 5-kilo (11-pound) bags of jasmine rice from the local Asian supermarket (Promo Asie in Nice), which last me about a month. I spend a grand total of €5 a week at market for potatoes, fruits, aubergine (eggplant), onions, and one or two other vegetables. I don’t think I’ve ever reached €10 at a marché. And the produce is delicious! I dice the veggies and freeze them to use all week with rice, and for breakfast I eat gluten-free muesli with soy milk, since I use a lot of energy while mountain biking in the forests during mornings.
Which brings up a good point: although my GT mountain bike was expensive at 1800 euros (I got it on sale — the original price was 2500!), I’ve had it for three years now, riding at least 30 kilometers a week, and have only had to pay €50 total for repairs since buying it. Other people who spent half as much on their mountain bikes and ride less than me have spent much, much more in repairs, and most have had to buy new bikes in that same amount of time. Meanwhile mine is still running beautifully.
The kitties get high-quality “carnivore” food such as Orijen. It costs a bit more, but they eat less of it than foods with grains (which cats are not meant to eat in large quantities, since they’re obligate carnivores), and they’re so much healthier that I feel badly for not having done the same for Malo. I’ll get 7-kilo bags and have them delivered, which is actually cheaper than going to the store to buy the smaller, more widespread 2.5-kilo bags. I also try to avoid fish-based foods, mainly because there are so few fish left in the seas nowadays.




ShareThis
June 13th, 2009 at 19:17
Hello there
great post and fantastic blog!
Thinking a lot about moving to Nice lately… Your posts are manna from heaven…
keep ‘em coming.
Thank you
Nick
June 13th, 2009 at 21:10
P.S. I am reading all rour posts now…
you are my new Life Guru!
June 14th, 2009 at 15:38
Hi Fraise, It’s always interesting to read about someone else’s life. We’re going to France the end of August, will be in Provence and then meeting up with French girlfriend and family in Brittany. I look forward to it, though we are real homebodies here.
Do you have any idea how I can block one IP from my blog? I’d write more but there is one person I just don’t want to entertain. I looked at the Blogger info but didn’t see a way. Any ideas?
I have a fantastic Cannon road bike made for women, it was expensive, about 1700 dollars but is the most comfortable bike I ever had. I have a seat made by Terry called the Butterfly and that helps when we are out doing 20 to 40 miles. I also have a mountain bike but the last dew years have been on the road. We have lots of great mountain biking here in the mountains so I should get back to that too. But I might want a new mountain bike then!
Grey is a handsome fellow who looks grateful to have landed on his paws with you in a loving home. And good food is crucial. I remember when I got smart enough to buy premium food and watched Brendan’s fur beautify.
Ramona is on my knees.
June 14th, 2009 at 17:05
That sounds like a beautiful trip, Brittany is gorgeous!
If you’re using Blogger I wouldn’t know how, sorry — I own this domain and pay for hosting so that I’m able to edit files that are put on the server directly. For blocking an IP address, that would be an .htaccess file. With a service like Blogger I’m pretty sure you don’t have access to that sort of thing. Sorry I can’t be of more help!
Aren’t cats wonderful? Their joy for life is infectious.
June 14th, 2009 at 18:59
hmm, but I do own the domain caturday.com and it is possible for me to open the blog (which is caturdayblog.blogspot.com in a caturday.com window.
I fooled around with doing it just to see if I could but haven’t put it up that way. But that probably wouldn’t make it possible for me to block someone because the blogspot url would still work. I could mess around with it though. You can access some of the blogger code in the template so I wonder if I can put something in there.
Blogger makes it possible for you to have a permission only blog but not the other way around as far as I could see. I used to have the blog on my server but the newer Blogger services were only available if you were on blogspot.
Yes my cats are one of the biggest joys of my life. Every evening at 6PM I walk home with them from the studio (it is all fenced in so they can be outside all day). I love coming down our garden path with 8 paws following. Then they are very hungry so I give them their favorite dinner , they lick the bowls clean and run off to their sleeping spots because they are as tired as little kids. They are loving companions.
July 12th, 2009 at 13:16
What a beautifull cats do you have. my cats are also the biggest joy of my life.
Hope to see more of them on your blog.
Greetings Rota
July 21st, 2009 at 07:44
I thought cost of living in France is about the same in US. Now, I know I was wrong.
PS. What a lovely cat you have?
August 4th, 2009 at 14:17
Wow I found this post very interesting. What amazes me the most reading about people in other countries is the fact how many ties people take things forgranted in their own countries. Great Post
October 16th, 2009 at 23:54
Thanks for the interesting post and cute picture of your cat. I look forward to reading more from you in the future.
October 27th, 2009 at 15:58
thurman,
Thanks for the interesting comment. I look forward to reading more from you in the future.
June 22nd, 2011 at 14:08
Hello,
I’ve just moved to Nice, just north of Liberation, and would be very interested to know where I can go “..mountain biking in the forests during mornings”. Where is this?
Thank you – your blog is a goldmine of useful information, particularly for a newcomer like myself.
June 22nd, 2011 at 22:17
Sophia Antipolis! :) Technically you could ride there from Nice, but it’s just over 20 kilometers and city riding is quite dangerous here (I avoid it as much as possible). Or, there’s the bus 230 from Nice to Sophia and back, which only runs on weekdays (not on weekends). It costs 1 euro for a ticket plus, possibly, 5 euros to put your bike in the hold. The 5 euro fee is new and not all drivers ask for it.