Oliva's statue in Saillagouse, Roussillon region of France
French vintage postcard
seen from Romania

seen from Australia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Belgium
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Thailand
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Belgium

seen from Netherlands
Oliva's statue in Saillagouse, Roussillon region of France
French vintage postcard
[SAILLAGOUSE] Altitude Facilities, l’intérim à la montagne… – #TVCAT Alty - Altitude Facilities, l'intérim à la montagne... - #TVCAT
Burger tome catalane !! 😱 !! Bœuf bonzom, Tome catalane, pomme de terre du capcir, lard de Saillagouse #burger #handmade #housemade #capcir #pyrenees #pyreneesorientales #saillagouse #bonzom #enjoylittlethings #livethemoment #epicurious #epicurien #epicure (à Barcelona, Spain)
Soirée Africaine à Saillagouse le 19 novembre
Soirée Africaine à Saillagouse le 19 novembre
Le Pôle Ressources Cerdagne Capcir haut-Conflent et le comité Cerdagne de l’association « École Sans Frontières 66 » organisent un spectacle de contes, légendes, musiques africaines de François Moïse Bamba et sa compagnie « Les murmures de la Forge » ce samedi 19 novembre 2016 à la médiathèque de Saillagouse (ancien cinéma) à 18h30 (horaire et spectacle familiaux).
Ce spectacle tout public est le…
View On WordPress
France. It's so wonderful here.
I'm not somewhere touristic, like Paris. Rather, I'm in a tiny mountain village in the Pyrenees called Saillagouse, where my grandpa lives. The old man is adorable. He's gradually reaching senility, the poor guy, so he sings to himself during every waking moment of the day, the same undefinable tune over and over. Also, there are cows that are right outside my window. They're glamorous.
Saillagouse is one of the little towns in this enormous valley that's surrounded by really high mountains. There are no towns beyond the valley because the mountains really can't sustain any. They would crumble and the people would freeze. (although there are probably a couple villages out there regardless, the French are pretty hardcore people if I do say so myself)
Anway, it's absolutely beautiful.
Also, none of those bitchy myths about the French that give them such a bad reputation are true except for the food stereotypes: we do drink lots of wine and eat a shit ton of cheese, and we do indeed walk around everywhere with bread.
Okay, that's all.