



This is a charming 500-year old stone village house that was upgraded with electricity, water and sewer several years ago. 13 klms NE of Carcassonne in the heart of the Languedoc wine country. The decor remains very rustic although I have added double pane windows and wall mounted electric heat to assist the wood stove for heating. The three floor house is located on a tiny rue and consists of 3 rooms in the basement that are now being renovated for the second bedroom, toilet and shower, and the wine cave. The second floor is the kitchen, eating room, and bath with claw foot tub and sink. There is a tiny terrace ample for eating and socializing. Upstairs is a bedroom, sitting room and toilet and soon a second terrace. The village of 1100 residents (which includes MY brother, sister-in-law and niece) contains an Abbey, hotel, bar, bakery and other services, and hosts a number of concerts and other activities each year.
This quaint little house is perfect for artists or writers, or those wanting to live a simple and authentic French lifestyle.
That last sentence says it all as far as I'm concerned. I will now make YOU want it too, all of you who long to live in France (thanks Peter Mayle - your books made it sound such fun), and all who bought and love Kari Meng's The French Inspired Home, Vicki Archer's My French Life, and numerous other decorating books and magazines depicting the glories of the French home from Versailles to.............well, to a little tiny rustic village house like this.....
The front entrance and foyer perhaps? Could make it welcoming - and of course we'd all paint that mirror frame white if the owner leaves it behind, wouldn't we?
If this is the sitting room - well there are chairs - I'm a bit concerned about the staircase to get there. This appears to be just like the opening to my top attic which means a ladder and then hoisting oneself up and over - let me tell you, this expends a week's worth of energy for we members of the AARP crowd!
The basement workshop don't you think? To become, owner's words, "second bedroom, toilet, shower and wine cave". Hey man, forget the bedroom, toilet and shower, after looking at all the DIY involved here let's just make it a really big wine cave - we're going to need to store a lot of bottles with which to drown our sorrows if we buy this house before YOU finish the renovation!
I'm thinking this must be the second floor comprising of, quote, "kitchen, eating room and bath with claw foot tub and sink".
And here it is - recall he didn't say 'bathroom' so perhaps it's really vintage - like in ancient -where the tub was in front of the hearth and one bathed monthy after heating cauldrons of water over the coals!
I'm away to the terrace (to ponder all this) where the owner says eating and socializing is possible - just keep the party small I say. Perhaps my brother would let me invite you all to a real party at his large house with the pool and the garden, the huge rooms and many bathrooms - then you could pop over here for a cuppa with me, one or two at a time. We could ooh and aah over the exposed beams, the stone and real plaster walls, the tile and brick floors.......and hoist each other up into the sitting room or, better still, just trot down to the 'cave' and clink several glasses of local wines - there are some good ones produced in the Languedoc I assure you.
Hope this kind owner, who obviously has done much to start bringing this little house back to life, will leave these chairs. I'm sitting here wondering about him. Is he alone eating that little meal for one - did he have a dream - is the work too much - has he given up? There is potential here for the right person. This could be a home in France. This could be the place to live the simple and authentic French lifestyle.

Above ~ One of Dorothy's photos taken in Louisiana before Katrina ~ The Marston House, Clinton
Dorothy, Bobby and their children relocated to North Carolina following Katrina and are renovating an historic home, built in 1890, in the heart of Louisburg. On passing it as we left the college, we immediately fell in love with such a stately Southern house complete with huge hanging gas lamp at the front entrance. I hope so much Dorothy will invite me back to Louisburg some day when she's less busy and allow me to tour her beautiful home.
By the way, Dorothy was not wearing ruby slippers, but she had on the most spectacular pair of high heeled boots!

My dh returns this afternoon ~ the carpet cleaner arrives in the morning ~ and I'm dusting myself off, picking myself up, and getting ready to roll, and brush, that ugly furniture.
Tonight I'll be pouring over the decorating books and magazines again, gleaning ideas and making decisions.



Looking for more old books to add to this pile in my bedroom.
Thinking about and coveting these rather expensive vintage glass knobs snuggled up at SuzAnna's Antiques last week - would be perfect to hang my burnout velvet bedroom curtains but I'd need so many for the bay window.