18 comment(s) for "Blogging in 2014":

  1. David Leigh Shearer

    I most enjoy your photos of Paris and environs and the Friday French lesson. Merci.

  2. Carol

    Rosemary please keep up the blogging. I’m in Australia and living my French life through blogs and yours is one of my favourites. I especially love to hear of everyday things from your life in Paris and Blois – living, renovating, cooking, family, travelling.

    I found your blog by Googling “living in France blogs”. I’ve been following you for a while but have never commented before – does feel a bit voyeuristic but reading “my” blogs is a happy daily activity. Keep it up please. Merci.

  3. Pamela

    Rosemary
    I read several blogs about France but particularly enjoy yours because you cover a wider range of subjects and pictures than others, including your Friday’s French. As well as enjoying the varied subjects, travels, tips and great pictures I really feel as though I’m learning more about France and French. Have been using your expression “je parle francais comme une vache espagnol” and getting a good laugh each time, plus amused polite protests from French people that no I don’t speak like a Spanish cow. At the book club I attend (where I’ve never used this expression) another member did recently and I’m guessing she must be one of your readers too (will check next time book club resumes after the holidays). Also enjoy your Blogger Roundup as it has introduced me to others I’d never have come across otherwise. Really appreciate your imagination, skills, experience, depth of knowledge and generosity. It’s also so refreshing that you’re not trying to sell products to your readers. So many blogs about France are now doing this. When it’s done occasionally and well I don’t mind but unfortunately some bloggers are getting rather boring, giving fashion tips or whatever and then constantly bombarding readers with encouragements to buy things through links they provide. Surprisingly perhaps, I don’t mind so much if they actually carry advertisements for relevant products/travel experiences on the sidebars, or if they frankly write up a review of a wonderful shop, restaurant or whatever. It’s when they try to induce purchases through “tips” and links in the content that I find it so annoying.
    You never disappoint and you also have a good sense of humour which I enjoy in a blog too. Look forward to seeing this new feature! Happy New Year and best wishes, Pamela

  4. Emerald

    Rosemary

    The generosity of your ‘authentic’ life, lived & loved in France, is greatly appreciated for its French/Australian flavours. A delicious, forthright combo!
    You might be a Sagittarian ?, as an obvious well travelled linguist & educated explorer broadening our horizons with humour & word skills is always on the page!

    Personally, love interesting content stretching my boundaries to enquire further from comments you make which are never boring or banal. Be different Rosemary, as you are, let’s know what stirs your curiosity about your ‘2’ different living environs, the history in Paris & Blois with photos. Looking back in your experience on being dual as an AU/FR sandwich & how that matters/informs your life today is fascinating for a reader with similar experiences or other such. Honesty over glamour wins everytime.

    Human interest is what people crave, bringing readers back time & again. The people you meet where you live & travel all have stories to tell, so tell us illustrating with a landscape unique to France/Europe. Not an avalanche of recipes, I beg you, enough already for drowning. Enhance our mind’s eye with the beauty of your perceptions.

    I agree with Pamela, certain French blogs have sold out, revenue raising with an unedifying, shallow glamour which insults womens’ capacity for encompassing headier creative exploration & pursuit. Rosemary you are appreciated by the male / female readership, expand what you already offer, as you wish. We want to know what fulfills you wherever you live & travel. Thank you for presenting as an Australian woman abroad, with warmth & the intelligence of an insightful mind.

  5. For me Friday’s French and the Blogger Round-up is the most use. I think a post every couple of days is fine. I think you have to write about what interests you. The more you write a blog the easier it becomes, although you do have to be careful not to do things just because they are blog worthy. Your topics and focus change over time. Mostly blogs are for the person writing them, but it is worth remembering who your readers are so you can write to their level and tastes. Mind you, I’m always surprised what the popular posts are — often not posts I thought would engage people, whilst something I’ve put hours of effort into gets nary a comment.

  6. brigitte monfort

    bonjour et bonne année. Je prends plaisir à lire vos posts car j’apprends l’anglais. Je lis assidument la vie en France, la cuisine, la diététique et le vocabulaire qui j’espère me feront faire des progrès ( pas encore assez, pour écrire en anglais ! )
    Cela m’amuse de voir la France commentée par un regard un peu extérieur.
    Bonne continuation…

  7. I am new to your blog but can tell right away that I will enjoy coming here.

  8. Pat in Toulouse

    I like your posts about life in Paris and Blois (and your Australian take on those), those about restaurants and exhibitions, I like Friday’s French – and I love your travel posts. I try not to click on too many of the blogger round-up posts, because I don’t want to get drawn into reading even more blogs… 🙂 How I found you? I think our colleague (and also ancienne de l’ESIT) Anja M.-B. linked to one of your posts in a reply to one of my Facebook posts, maybe a year ago. I was curious and when I realised who you were and that I had read your name several times in an ESIT context, I got even more interested. BTW I’m in Paris next week, if you want to meet for coffee…?

  9. BUTCHERBIRD

    I LOVE it ALL!

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