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Nick
Joined: 02 Nov 2004 Posts: 34535 Location: Hereford
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marigold
Joined: 02 Sep 2005 Posts: 12458 Location: West Sussex
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chez
Joined: 13 Aug 2006 Posts: 35935 Location: The Hive of the Uberbee, Quantock Hills, Somerset
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Katieowl
Joined: 01 Jun 2006 Posts: 4317 Location: West Wales
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Mary-Jane
Joined: 13 Jan 2005 Posts: 18397 Location: The Fishing Strumpet is from Ceredigion in West Wales
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Andrea
Joined: 02 May 2005 Posts: 2260 Location: Portugal
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Posted: Fri Aug 12, 11 11:03 am Post subject: |
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Cath123 wrote: |
I have a 10 year old and wonder if I would be able to find a really good school for her abroad, or even an international school? That's what put me off France as their mainstream system is so traditional and stressful for young children. |
A 'really good school', can be find to hard in the UK too!
Portuguese schools are very different to UK ones, in both good and bad ways. In a rural area, you will have a very limited choice. In our area, the closest school for your daughter's age group would involve a school day including travel starting at 7.20am and returning at 7pm. This would be until the end of secondary level. After that, choice becomes even more limited. Our nearest school offers post 16 courses in only three vocational subjects. Most foreigners I know send their teens back to the UK age 16.
Attainment wise, I think the local school has lower expectations than I would like.
There is also the difficulties of communication with the school to consider when you're doing so in a second language. And of course working your way around the school system (registering, subsidies etc).
I guess there must be international schools, but I'm not aware of any anywhere near us. It's worth bearing in mind that an International school won't integrate kids into the local community (language, culture, networking) in the same way that a local one will. |
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Cath123
Joined: 06 Aug 2011 Posts: 10
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Posted: Fri Aug 12, 11 12:59 pm Post subject: |
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Great thanks to all of you for your input and advice on this!
Alice, I hear you now; I must admit I was only looking at Mainland Orkney - I wwoofed a few years ago there and was advised to stick to mainland, but as you say the prices are way higher there, and there is so little availability. Sanday does seem to be a happy island, but only does school up to 16. I guess having a family poses problems. Where abouts may I ask are you?!
Marigold - gosh that IS cheap, thank you so much for taking the trouble to post that. I was hoping however for a few if not more acres - originally I figured out 12 would be ideal (but it doesn't have to be good land, infact better if not) now I'm not so fussy, but would want at least 2.
Hello Bayandgrey and thanks for your comment and pointing me to the aberdeenshire website. I did look at Aberdeenshire very closely about a year ago as I have friends down the road near Aberlour, but again couldn't find anything in budget! Sounds like a good place to live if a bargain comes up - do you do school locally?
Boisdevie1 - thanks for your comments and no kidding - I have seen and heard of lots of people coming back for those reasons. I do speak French and my Spanish is ok, but not a word of Portugese; but even speaking the language doesn't automatically integrate you as lifestyles can be so different.
As you and others wisely say making an income is an issue. I wasn't expecting to really make a penny out of running a smallholding/croft but did think if it was in a nice area the house might be rent outable for holiday lets for a while while we lived discreetly in a caravan or similar (bang go the planning people!) on the land, or converted an outbuilding for holiday lets, just to get money in. I've been out of the workforce a bit for the last 10 years while home schooling my daughter, so will need to be making some new steps. |
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Cath123
Joined: 06 Aug 2011 Posts: 10
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marigold
Joined: 02 Sep 2005 Posts: 12458 Location: West Sussex
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Posted: Fri Aug 12, 11 1:24 pm Post subject: |
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Hmm, well, I don't know all your circumstances, what your personal qualities are, where your income comes from and how big it is, or what your future expectations are (potential inheritances etc), but �120k doesn't sound like a huge amount of capital from which to start a one-woman smallholding enterprise from scratch (ETA - in the UK).
Maybe you already have a business plan, but if not you need to ask yourself a lot of questions. What will you do with your 2-12 acres? How would you finance converting buildings into holiday homes? How will you fund your ongoing expenses such as council tax, water, fuel, transport, clothing, insurance, essential tools and household equipment, repairs, education-related expenses, animal costs?
The rural idyll is a nice dream, but a small cottage with a large garden where you can keep chickens and grow veg, on the edge of a thriving village or small town might be more realistic and less stressful at least while your daughter is dependent on you.
Last edited by marigold on Fri Aug 12, 11 1:56 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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Bulgarianlily
Joined: 01 Jun 2008 Posts: 1667 Location: South West Mountains of Bulgaria
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Cath123
Joined: 06 Aug 2011 Posts: 10
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bayandgrey
Joined: 23 Aug 2005 Posts: 42 Location: Aberdeenshire
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alice
Joined: 18 Feb 2006 Posts: 2820
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Andrea
Joined: 02 May 2005 Posts: 2260 Location: Portugal
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Posted: Sat Aug 13, 11 8:06 am Post subject: |
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Cath123 wrote: |
Andrea I am fascinated to hear your story! It is also very inspiring. I am familiar with the local school = integration perspective and do appreciate its truth! How have your children got on? How do you find the Portugese system? That is quite a commute - longer than the option we had in the highlands Lochinver to Ullapool. I don't think I could put my daughter into that, but I guess they get used to it? And it seems to be a truism in so many places I've looked at, any where nice to live i.e. rural, you face a long commute to school - which seems to be in some ways counterproductive of the kind of life we are looking for - what a world! |
My kids are in local school here. The elder gets very tired with his commute, particularly in the winter. When he first started it it used to scare the pants off me as it's a public bus he catches for the main part of the journey, and if he misses it there isn't another. The one time he missed it my phone wasn't working and neither was our car ....! Thankfully someone picked him up, phoned someone else, who phoned someone else, and eventually someone very kindly drove him all the way home (whilst I was frantically trying to track him down / borrow a car / panic, panic!)
I have a decision to make next year about whether the younger also starts there, or goes to a slightly more local school but then has to change schools again in a few years.
When we first came to Portugal I intended to homeschool. I changed my mind very rapidly when I realised how isolated we would become. It's been the right decision as the kids are now looked upon as locals whilst I will always be a foreigner. |
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clydesdaleclopper
Joined: 22 Jun 2009 Posts: 100 Location: N E Scotland
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