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bulgaria bound

01.08.06, 18:32
DRYANOVO, Bulgaria (AFP) - British families are buying houses and settling
down in the picturesque region of Dryanovo in central Bulgaria as local
inhabitants escape abroad in search of work.

At the foot of the Balkan mountains that give their name to this part of
southeastern Europe, former army pilot Keith Davis and his wife Angela have
made a traditional house in the village of Gostilitsa near Dryanovo their
home.

Under Bulgarian law, only foreign enterprises, as opposed to individuals,
can buy land so the Davises founded a company called Outdoor Adventure and
they hope to set up an adventure sports school and have horses for hire.

"It is a beautiful country. We sought to live in a place that is more
natural, more unspoiled, where people are not corrupted by Western values,"
Angela said as, surrounded by her three dogs, she went about restoring faded
pictures on an old chest.

The couple will have to wait to use the diving pool they had built however,
as the old infrastructure more often than not fails to bring running water to
their place.

"When we have running water, we do not have electricity and vice versa,"
Scottish gallery owner Joice McGlone added with a smile rather than a frown.
She and her husband Peter believe they have found a home away from home in
their house with a vast courtyard and a panoramic view high up in Gostilitsa.

But the spot reserved for the McGlones' pool is also waiting for better days
and Peter has had to buy plastic containers to fetch water from a nearby
spring for daily household use.

Their Bulgarian neighbour, Desislava Dianova, is happy to be able to practice
her English and make her young son learn the language. They are helping the
McGlones renovate their house and keep an eye on the property while the
Scottish couple is away.

"Foreigners bought more than 70 houses here, mostly the British, but also
Italians and one Belgian who runs a biodiesel farm," according to village
administration official Diana Stefanova.

A government report released Thursday showed that 1,152 British nationals
applied for long-term stay permits in 2005, half as many as the year before.

"Interest in buying property in Bulgaria dates back to two or three years ago
as a result of more competitive prices than in Spain, Portugal and Croatia,"
said Julian Georgiev, a co-owner of the Bulgarian-British company
SimpliBulgaria, which is now building a complex of holiday houses outside the
village of Gesha.

The houses are built in a traditional Bulgarian Renaissance style but British
owners can still feel at home with separate hot and cold water taps on sinks
rather than the usual single tap.

"We are responding to a worldwide trend of growing interest in eco tourism.
Investment project analyses in Europe show that prices for this type of
tourism are two times higher than for traditional seaside vacations,"
according to Georgiev.

Some 200 workers are helping to build the complex and between 60 and 70
people will then work in it, which does not count for nothing in a region
with 12 to 13 percent unemployment.

In the regional centre of Dryanovo, employment is suffering from lowered
production capacity at the waggon manufacturing plant, formerly the town's
main employer.

"Many people have sought work abroad... but we are counting on tourism to
reverse the trend," Mayor Daniel Dankov said.

"One out of ten inhabitants is in Greece, Spain, Italy or the United States,"
according to Iliana, who also used to work in Greece as a caretaker for
elderly people, but who has come back to care of her grandchildren.

And for Vassil, a plumber who spends half the year working in Italy,
especially in the vineyards, going abroad has made a great difference.

"What I earn here is not enough to live on so I go with my wife and son, who
has to skip school. In two years, the work abroad earned us enough to
renovate our house and buy a car," he said
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    • ejmarkow Re: bulgaria bound 01.08.06, 19:22
      Sounds very nice! It is suprising that considering the small size of Bulgaria,
      the locals aren't the least bit paranoid about foreigners buying up the
      motherland. Are they less patriotic, or more practical? Bulgarian real estate
      laws appear to be more lax than in Poland.

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