-
How many Britons have second homes in Nouvelle-Aquitaine - and why do they choose it?
UK nationals are the largest foreign community of second-home owners in the region
-
Travellers risk extra costs under new Eurotunnel ticket rule
Some fare options are less flexible and less forgiving of lateness
-
May will be difficult month for train travel in France, warns minister
Two major train unions are threatening to strike and are ‘not willing to negotiate’, he says
Hedgehogs may be gone in a decade
Hedgehogs are under threat and could vanish in France in a decade – and a protection group says current laws are making the situation worse.

Sauvons les Hérissons (Save the hedgehogs) charity says numbers have fallen from about 30million in the 1950s to fewer than a million and their life expectancy cut from 10 to just two years. In the next 10 years they will all but disappear from the countryside.
The charity says hedgehogs are in danger from habitat loss, traffic, agricultural machinery, pesticides, pollution and bonfires, but a law intended to help them makes it almost impossible to do so – even if injured.
Laws from 2000 require people to have two years’ supervision from a qualified hedgehog carer, or a vet, and have done a 20-hour training course to be officially allowed to care for ill, injured or orphaned hedgehogs. Hence there are only 19 hedgehog rescue centres in France compared to hundreds in the UK.
The charity is calling on new Environment Minister Nicolas Hulot, a well-known TV ecologist, for help through a petition at tinyurl.com/mt9czar