Welcome to Le Pont Cretin - Ploubalay, 22
Two minutes from the town of Ploubalay and five minutes from the coast the newly renovated stone cottage has been equipped to a high standard and has a private south facing terrace and large garden.
Situated in the Brittany countryside, just a few minutes away from the picturesque port of St. Malo and the medieval town of Dinan, we are ideally placed for the perfect family holiday or short break to France.
Many of the original features, such as oak beams and traditional tiled floors, have been retained to make it a 'home from home'.
Central heating and a fully equipped fitted kitchen with everything you'd expect to find.
The cottage has a spacious open plan downstairs kitchen/living room with three large bedrooms sleeping six people upstairs.
The cottage is equipped with modern appliances (washing machine, tumble dryer, dishwasher etc.), comfortable furnishings, free WiFi and English TV/DVD.
The master bedroom has an en-suite shower and toilet and there is a family bathroom upstairs with a bath and toilet and downstairs a cloakroom with toilet.
Many local beaches, zoos and parks, resturants and shopping for every taste and plenty for the sightseer.
The markets in Brittany are a delight and for the more energetic a variety of golf courses.
During your stay we can help organise horse riding trips, watersports or just provide a local insight into the character and facilities that Brittany has to offer.
The cross-channel ferry port of St Malo, served by Brittany Ferries, is less than 20 minutes drive.
The port provides easy access to Southhampton and the Channel Islands.
The airport of Dinard, which handles Ryanair flights, is also only around 15 minutes away, with car hire available at the airport terminal.
The cottage is priced per week with everything included. There are no extras for electricity, water or heating. Linen is provided for all the bedrooms. Cots and high chairs are available, free of charge, on request.
Please contact us for shorter or long term rental prices.
Bookings should be confirmed with a non-refundable deposit of 150 € per week booked, with the balance payable eight weeks before the start of the holiday.
We would suggest that guests take out a holiday insurance to cover loss of any payments due to unforeseen circumstances.
Normally the cottages are rented from Saturday to Saturday, although this is flexible during Low Season.
Gites are available from 4pm on the first day and should be vacated by 10am on the morning of departure.
If you are arriving early or later, please let us know. We always endeavour to be as flexible as possible to accommodate our guests needs.
Guests should leave the gites clean and in the same state as they found them at the end of their stay. Pets are not allowed in the gites.
To cover any damage or breakages, we ask for a refundable security deposit of £100 or €150.
Pricing and availability...
For current prices and availability, please check our website... http://www.brittanyholidaycottage.com
Images
Below is a small gallery of photographs of the Gite. For more details, please visit my website at... www.brittanyholidaycottage.com
To view any of the photos at higher resolution, just click on the image and it will be re-displayed.
To return to the Gallery, just click on the X in the top right-hand corner of the higher resolution image.
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Details
The following are my contact details, please feel free to get in contact with me, whether you are ready to book or, just considering it. If I'm not in, please leave a message and I'll get back to you as soon as I can.
Address - Le Pont Cretin, 22650 Ploubalay, France
Phone - (0033) 6 61 07 19 26
Email - info@brittanyholidaycottage.com
Website - www.brittanyholidaycottage.com
Our Bookshop Selection
The French Kitchen
A delightful book in which Joanne shares with us 'her family recipes, passed down through the generations. The French
Kitchen is a tantalising collection of casseroles, soups, roasts, salads, tarts and sweets.
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Cholcolat
Joanna Harris creates a rich and vibrant description of a rural French village with all its petty rivalries and traditional, narrow-minded boundaries on thought and behavior.
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Five Quarters of the Orange
Five quarters of the orange' is a story of a childhood tragedy in wartime France, and the shadows it casts across the later life of the heroine Framboise Dartigen.
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Blackberry Wine
Everyday magic, he called it, the transformation of base matter into the stuff of dreams - Layman's alchemy.
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The French Market
Following the success of The French Kitchen, Joanne Harris and Fran Warde have collaborated once more to write a French cookbook with a difference. This time they have taken their inspiration from the rural markets of Gascony.
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Coastliners
Passionate, stubborn Mado, whose "head is full of rocks" tries to save the livelihoods of the villagers of Les Salants by urging them to work together to save the beach from erosion, both natural and man-made.
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Five Quarters of the Orange
Three sublime audiobooks from the bestselling author, now available together in a specially priced pack. Includes BLACKBERRY WINE, FIVE QUARTERS OF THE ORANGE and the huge bestseller CHOCOLAT. With a gentle touch and an eye for human frailty and strength, these mouth-watering audiobooks will draw you into her enchanting worlds.
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French Lessons
Failed rock legend, pickled onion manufacturer, air hostess and euro-entrepreneur George East takes us through another eventful year of his doomed attempts to make a living out of living in rural France.
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French Flea Bites
The character of France and the French people has been captured in words beautifully and the hilarious exploits of George his wife Donella, their neighbours and Cato the cat.
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French Letters
This is not so much a book as a continuation of the serial story of George and Donella as they carry on with their almost idyllic life in Normandy. It's at least as funny as the others, but the hanky had to come out again several times.
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French Cricket
Once upon a time, former night club bouncer, seamstress and professional bedtester George East and his wife Donella fled to Normandy to escape their creditors and try to live off their wits in a foreign land.
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Home and Dry in France
Buying property in France is fraught with mishaps and misunderstandings. George East's book brings humour and fun to what happens when people venture forth to a foreign land with more hope than money and humour than language skills.
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French Kisses
Those poor people who don’t like George East’s books often dismiss them as fiction. Not so, everything is at least based on real people and real happenings. George admits to a degree of embellishment and often combines several mishaps to produce a spectacular disaster. Such is the nature of his works.
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Rene and Me
Told in the inimitable style which has alrea dy won the author an army of followers, Rene & Me is a somet imes hilarious, sometimes moving and always captivating cele bration of human nature, people and, above all, life and living. '
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A Year in the Merde
This very funny book sounds a lot more like the France that I know. Read it and you'll still want to come here, you'll just be a lot better prepared for the surprises that France has to offer.
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Merde Happens
Paul West is in deep financial merde. His only way out of debt is to accept a decidedly dodgy job that involves him touring America in a Mini, while pretending to be typically British. Also in the car is Paul's French girlfriend, Alexa, and his American poet friend, Jake, whose main aim in life is to sleep with a woman from every country in the world.
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Merde Actually
A year after arriving in France, Englishman Paul West is still struggling with some fundamental questions: What is the best way to scare a gendarme? Why are there no health warnings on French nudist beaches? And is it really polite to sleep with your boss' mistress?
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Dial M for Merde
In this book, you'll get Paul, Elodie, her dad and some new French girls. All of them are of course hot and all of them adore Paul. Didn't see that one coming...
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Talk to the Snail
The only book you'll need to understand what the French really think, how to get on with them and, and most importantly, how to get the best out of them. With useful sections on: Making sure you get served in a café, Harassing French estate agents, Living with bacteria, Pronouncing French swear-words and much more!
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1000 years of Annoying the French
Was the Battle of Hastings a French victory? No! William the Conqueror was Norman and hated the French. Were the Brits really responsible for the death of Joan of Arc? No! The French sentenced her to death for wearing trousers.
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The Olive Farm
This is television actress Carol Drinkwater's lyrical account of a new life in France; about her house, Appassionata, and the trials and tribulations of acquiring an olive farm, restoring it, farming the olives, overcoming the heartaches of taking on a "new" French family and understanding slowly the workings and lifestyle of a vivacious Provencal community.
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The Olive Season
This is an extraordinary and fascinating follow-up to The Olive Farm. The reader is drawn deeply and inexorably in to the world of the author, confronted with her personal struggles and entranced by her pastiche of growth and decay in the world of nature, a metaphor for her life.
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The Olive Harvest
Carol and Michel have again returned to Appasionata, the Olive Farm that they have restored, and Carol is eager to continue production of the olives and attain their cerificate for producing Organic Oil.
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The Olive Tree
THE OLIVE TREE charts Carol Drinkwater's colourful and often dangerous journey in search of the routes that olive cultivation has taken over the centuries. Set during a springtime Mediterranean that is evocative and perennial, it is above all a tale of our time.
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The Olive Route
A tour de force from Carol Drinkwater in this, the fourth in her Olive series. The joy of this book is in the pen pictures that she creates of the unusual characters that she encounters on her journey.
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The Illustrated Olive Farm
The photgraphy is wonderful and the book is a great insight in to life with the olives and all that that involves. There are wonderful pictures of the dogs, family, friends, even the dreaded wild boar. Recipes as well.
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Petite Anglaise
Petite Anglaise is a memoir by Catherine Sanderson based on her blog of the same name. In 2004 Catherine decided to start up a blog based on her life in Paris.
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French Kissing
Name: Sally Marshall Status: single mother Age: 32 Nationality: ten years in France, yet still English through and through I like: Living in Paris, playing with my daughter Lila (four years old), the company of good friends, the smell of baking bread.
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Tout Suite
You cannot help but fall in love with the author's character. She seems like a Bridget Jones let loose in the French countryside, getting into a lot of funny situations with both ex-pat English and French locals like, as she adjusts to a totally different way of life.
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Serge Bastarde Ate My Baguette
John Dummer's sharply focused descriptions of the landscape, towns and villages, and the weather of the South West of France form a animated background for a series of adventures with an array of characters from some intimidating and belligerent peasants to a sad little old man whose only companionship is a collection of antique dolls.
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Merde!
This book is an excellent source of words and expressions, of varying degrees of vulgarity, that are used all the time by french speakers. I used it often during the first of my two years in France.
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Almost French
"Almost French" is the story of a woman who goes to France to visit a French lawyer she has only met a couple times before and barely knows. Of course, she gets caught up in the romance of the city and stays on to live there.
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