French Alps MTB gui...
 

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[Closed] French Alps MTB guiding row in the Telegraph

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From what I've read, it can take up to 5 years to get an IML qualification.


 
Posted : 06/08/2014 12:21 pm
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http://www.mountain-training.org/walking/skills-and-awards/international-mountain-leader
5 years? From whats here anyone who is currently guiding bikes in the alps should have the experience, loggable days, skills for most of the course and the right aptitude. Get it done in 12 months easy.


 
Posted : 06/08/2014 12:26 pm
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As are Bike Village

You sure? Last I heard Sam was getting his tickets.


 
Posted : 06/08/2014 12:27 pm
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Quite a lot about Sam here; http://singletrackmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/guiding-in-france-war-in-the-mountains/

How recent it is, I don't know.
Mike, I was just going from here;
http://www.ridethealps.com/about/become-a-mountain-bike-guide/

You first need to have a Summer ML award then, proceed to the IML which has both winter and summer training and assessment elements to it. It can take a minimum of 5 years to pass all these different criteria, that’s if you have the time to do it as well as the money and experience and skills it requires and needs.

Dunno if it's bollocks or not. He could just be bigging it up because he's got it. According to that site, it's only Jamie and Chez who are allowed to guide from that company.


 
Posted : 06/08/2014 12:36 pm
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It can take a minimum of 5 years to pass all these different criteria,
A statement full off opinion rather than facts.
So what qualification do you need and how can you get them?
If you want to cross a high mountain pass in the UK, not normally covered in snow in summer, with a group of walkers you need a Summer Mountain Walking Leadership (ML) award. To guide the same walkers over a pass in the Alps (and world wide) in summer, so long as you are not crossing ice, steep rock or a glacier etc, you need an International Mountain Leaders (IML) Award. If you happen to have mountain bikes with you then you need another piece of paper which qualifies you as a mountain bike leader as well as your ML (UK) or IML (rest of world). It’s a belt and braces approach, but it satisfies the law and makes insurance possible for the activity that you are being paid to lead.

Though from the same article this is a nice summary.


 
Posted : 06/08/2014 12:42 pm
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Wrecker, that's an article from issue 82, it's 2 years old.


 
Posted : 06/08/2014 12:46 pm
 Dave
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Fair enough but slightly besides the point; the MBLA is a higher qualification than the french equivalent (as was found by a neutral board), why should the Brit guides require the IML award but the French don't? make tham both do it, or none at all. It's an international qual after all.

Wrecker, that's an article from issue 82, it's 2 years old.

In my defence, it's still on the front page now!


 
Posted : 06/08/2014 12:50 pm
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@Dave, looks good hopefully it means people will take on the new BC course when offered and solve all the problems (or carry on with the my bit of paper is as good as your bit of paper thing)
Nice to see BC involved in something that isn't an Olympic sport too.


 
Posted : 06/08/2014 12:51 pm
 Leku
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Sam at Bike Village is doing the training (I was there last month). He has also employed some French guides so that all groups have a fully qualified guide.


 
Posted : 06/08/2014 12:56 pm
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Worth reading this...

Looks like someone has seen sense.


 
Posted : 06/08/2014 1:02 pm
 iolo
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So what if TA wins? Will all guides who followed the law get their cash back for this so called "unnecessary" piece of paper? What about the time spent getting it? Will they be paid 350€ a week time they had to study (plus food and lodge of course) or will they get nothing.
Remind everyone TA how much you've spent on accrediting your guides. This enables you to be extremely competitive in a cut throat market.
You've spent a whole lot of cash on legal eagles and your world could come crashing down. I hope it doesn't for your sake but maybe, just maybe you should take a reality check

Edit : by accrediting I mean the french qualifications needed


 
Posted : 06/08/2014 1:37 pm
 juan
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Whats not particularly clear to me is whether being a VTT guide is officially a regulated profession

Well there is no such thing as 'vtt guide qualification' in France.
You either hold a coaching qualification that allows you to take a group up to 12 people on trails to coach them. Or you hold a 'guide de moyenne montagne' with a specific qualification in MTBing.


 
Posted : 08/08/2014 6:44 pm
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Continually well pointed out Juan,

and to be honest, judging by most UK people's expectations they want to be shown the trails, not necessarily coached, and maybe not even necessarily 'guided' in terms of hand holding and someone being responsible.

Which brings us into a minefield of definitions etc and meaning that the UK clients want 1 thing and the French another, meaning different people get trained and qualified to do different things and yet there is no clear distinction or understanding.

I continue to sit on the fence a bit on this subject. I completley undertand the french point of view, and disaggree that it is protectionism, but at the same time feel the UK guys are in a bit of an awkward unfair position.


 
Posted : 08/08/2014 7:54 pm
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I apologise for my spelling. I do not hold relevant qualifications....


 
Posted : 08/08/2014 7:55 pm
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Remind everyone TA how much you've spent on accrediting your guides. This enables you to be extremely competitive in a cut throat market.
You've spent a whole lot of cash on legal eagles and your world could come crashing down. I hope it doesn't for your sake but maybe, just maybe you should take a reality check

Well done Lolo, commendable posting there, at least from the point of view that you got me to bite!

First of all, we are already operating fully within the law as I keep trying to explain! Don't you think that I'd be locked up by now, if we weren't? Its hardly as if we are going under the radar.....

You may not realise that French law IS EU law, and vice versa, e.g. a direct copy paste. This is the whole point, when a corrupt and blatantly racist country wants to throw its weight around, its quite easy for it to ignore its own laws, Yes, even its own Judges will do this. I have no doubt we will be found guilty in French court if it gets that far- but when we win in European appeal, my point will be made.

Why don't I just do the French quals? Because its a waste of time and money, frankly. I have much more useful and constructive things to do with my time, such as create the first ever lift-accessed multi-day Enduro on the planet (the Trans-Savoie). Incidentally, don't think for one second that it was easier to get full legal authorisation to take over 300Km of prime French walkers paths for a mountain bike event, than it would be to sit a French guiding qualification!

Why wouldn't I send all of my guides to retrain in France? Because I believe they will learn much more (that is directly relevant to what we do, at least) when I can train them each in-house for a full season (about 16 weeks which happens to be the same length as the French qual).

To further the point, I'd simply be adding to the corrupt French system of "being on the inside" and keeping everyone else out. I would much prefer to compete for customers based on things that are important, like quality of service, in an open market. We don't feel the need to hide behind rubber stamps and bits of paper in order to protect our market share. We simply offer the best holiday service we can, invest in developing new trails and new ideas, and then let our customers and reputation do the rest.

For those who would argue that this infers some kind of shortcut / cheapskate stance on things, I would suggest you actually try coming on a trailAddiction holiday before you jump to conclusions.

Every single customer fills in a written 10-point feedback questionnaire at the end of the holiday. (A rating of 5 is Excellent, a rating of 1 is Sub-standard.)

Over 13 years we have now collected feedback from nearly 3000 customers. Our average rating for the specific question about "Standard of Guiding" is currently running at an overall average of 4.9 / 5. And incidentally we have an extremely high returning customer rate too.

Not bad for a bunch of unqualified, cheapskate charlatans, wouldn't you say?

A key point that for some reason was omitted from the original Telegraph article is that the EU regulations very clearly stipulate that in the event France has reason to believe our UK quals are not up to scratch, they MUST provide a competency test in order for us to be able to prove ourselves. (In the case of skiing this is the famed Eurotest). I really wish that the French would offer an MTB equivalent and then we could get this settled once and for all. Unfortunately for us, no such test exists and therefore we literally have no way to prove our "competence" other than this long and drawn out legal battle.


 
Posted : 08/08/2014 11:33 pm
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^^^^^
You posted that late at night during what is no doubt a stressful time, but I don't think language like "when a corrupt and blatantly racist country wants to throw its weight around" is going to win you many more friends. There are quite a few folk on here that live and work in France as foreigners, yes there is racism in France but there is racism everywhere unfortunately and describing it as being endemic throughout France is neither true or helpful.
And whilst I'm being pedantic, the Tribe 10,000 is a lift accessed multi-day enduro event that predates the Trans-Savoie by over a decade, though I get your point that it really isn't anything like on the same level of organisation. What happened to the last stage from the Nid d'Aigle last year? Managing to successfully negotiate access to the top for a bike race should make sorting out the european guiding qualification equivalences seem easy!


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 8:50 am
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@ grum - 'Rainbow Warrior'.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 9:04 am
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Rainbow warrior wasn't racist or corrupt, it was just plain wrong. Though how do you feel about the British military helping Pol Pot, or Thatchers friendship with Pinochet, or....

Back on point, if the French system for assessing guides was "corrupt" then there would be no standardised test that everyone who wished to guide in France needed to sit, instead guiding permits would be issued based entirely on who you know and who you paid a random bribe, not what you know assessed by a single course at a single set cost.
Even in the UK there is a myriad of schemes you can sit to get a bit of paper to guide in the hills.
I'm not saying the system is perfect, far from it, but it is not corrupt.
High mountain guides have already been through this process and come out the other side with a system that creates very competent guides able to work across most of the world, I'm sure VTT will manage the same. (or at least, I hope it does)


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 9:09 am
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And afterwards, the pressure on New Zealand and the return of the agents.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 9:16 am
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@slowoldgit
I'm not in any way trying to defend the French government for what they did in Auckland, but I don't see a) what relevance it has to the debate about equivalence in mountain bike guiding qualifications or b) how it proves that an entire country of 66 million people is both racist and corrupt.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 9:43 am
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@slowoldgit
GB sinks the Belgrano
USA downs Iran air flight
Russia Downs Korea Air flight
and countless other examples of things a government has done that does not represent the will/intention/traits of it's entire population


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 9:47 am
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Calling France racist and corrupt is completely unacceptable and Trail Addiction have now in my eyes passed the boundary of decency. It will do you no good. This is a public forum and not just for Brits. I suggest if you feel like that then you and your business should leave the country. I suggest the mods take a view on whether this thread should be closed to avoid it getting further out of hand.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 9:58 am
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Grum, have you ever visited France let alone lived or worked there ?

By the way, Bernie Ecclestone wants to borrow your Rose tinted specs, after that it might be a good idea to get them back "Sharpish" because he's likely to hand them over to FIFA, who knows how long they will have them.

This bloke is living through something we are merely commenting on and in good old STW fashion everyone's right and he's wrong. It makes me laugh !

I don't know this bloke from Adam but admire his balls and the way he's stood up for what he thinks is right. On foreign soil standing on the edge of the unknown !
I wouldn't think twice about booking a week away with TA and riding with his guides.

And as for dragging his business acumin through the dirt on a Forum, who's daftest him for paying it or them for doing it?

If I was in my early 20's I'd be over there myself guiding, the last thing on my mind would be scrimping together a deposit for a mortgage, I'd be getting pissed every night and trying to snake into as many chalet girls as was humanly possible. It's hardly something that is going to support a wife and kids back home so I dare say a majority of the folk out there are doing it because they want to not because they have to ?


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 10:04 am
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So it's just me and the bloke from TA who think that the French are corrupt and Racist then ?


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 10:08 am
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discoduck - Member
So it's just me and the bloke from TA who think that the French are corrupt and Racist then ?

So it's OK to make sweeping generalisations about an entire nation?


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 10:12 am
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Yep, pretty much !

Sweeping statements are exactly that, it's a bit like saying ALL murderers are Guilty ! Then realising some of them haven't been caught ?

Who gets to judge them or make sweeping statements ?

My sweeping statements are based purely on my own experience, others no doubt have theirs. I like to base my thought process on life itself and not what it says in the good book,

If your going to get hung for a sheep might as well get hung for lamb as well.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 10:18 am
 iolo
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Trail addiction, a quick google by the french lawyers against you will bring up this thread.
Following your last few comments I bid you good luck in court.
Ps maybe you should talk to your legal team about damage limitation.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 10:26 am
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Hi Disco duck

I've lived in Chamonix (not France socially I'll accept, but geographically) for over 4 years, and have dotted about France for longer. I work with French people in a French business on the French system. I would like to become a MTB guide, but have been put off by the VTT qualifications and, like TA, consider the UK system to be more relevant for actual guiding (if not for running a guiding business) so am following this with considerable interest.
My wife is a solicitor who specialised in European competition law, so I feel all in all I have a fairly good insight into whether or not France as an entity is corrupt and/ or racist.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 10:28 am
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Grum, I wished I'd have known last week that your wife was a solicitor, that way I wouldn't have had to give my last €65 to the Corrupt copper who stopped me for speeding on my way back to Calais.

Of course, him being part of the French Legal System is NOT corrupt he is merely doing his Job, conducting his daily routine and earning a crust ! Who am I to cast aspertians. After all it was my fault I was breaking the speed limit.

As for becoming a trail guide, I wish you luck. I already have the relevant UK quals, I have no desire to live or work in France I did them through work. I do hope that TA's bravado stance comes off that way you will not have to do the VTT and you and many others will benefit from somene who has the minerals to stand up for what they believe in.

My wife is a surgeon, I tend to stay away from slicing open peoples stomachs though because unlike you I have no insight what so ever into my wife's chosen specialist proffesion.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 10:45 am
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As a French guy living in the UK I find the above comments very nasty and uncalled for. Yes I agree with TA that the french guides are trying to protect their interests but that is the same everywhere. Live with it or do something else.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 10:45 am
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I worked alongside French folk offshore and liked them. I have doubts about their level of self-interest, both corporate and national.

As to the Belgrano: I have some experience. Before the Falklands kicked off, that ship threatened to open fire on the drillship that I was working on. Which was under contract to YPF, the argie national oil co. First and only time I've seen four gun turrets pointed in my direction. I have a photo, somewhere. I smile when the name is mentioned.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 10:45 am
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So based on that slowoldgit do you reckon the whole of Argentina has it in for you?

Grum, I wished I'd have known last week that your wife was a solicitor, that way I wouldn't have had to give my last €65 to the Corrupt copper who stopped me for speeding on my way back to Calais.

So were you fined for speeding or did you bribe an official?

The level of racism that has appeared down here is both uncalled for and poor form.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 10:51 am
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Cchris, did you actually think about wht you were tapping away at there ?

If it was the same everywhere how did you manage to slip under the net and end up living and working in the UK ?

Or was it a sweeping statement ?


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 10:57 am
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Yes mike it was entirely my fault that the official asked me for €100 !
But ended up settling for the last of my notes, he refused my shackles though which assisted me in buying a crap cup of coffee at Mcd's


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 11:01 am
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Or maybe I made the effort to learn the language and took several qualifications.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 11:10 am
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discoduck it might help if you started your posts with
"I'm not racist but..."


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 11:13 am
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So it is the same everywhere then ? You don't have to learn the language ? Where does it say that, and I take it the Qualifications that you had from studying in France were not transferable in the Economic Union ?


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 11:16 am
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I'm not Racist BUT I don't like it when I am exploited in a foreign Country !

There, is that better ? Can I leave the rose tinted goggles on or can I now take them off ?


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 11:18 am
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I am not Racist BUT I feel like I should be able to travel freely inside the Economic Union and set up my stall to conduct a business with qualifications that should be recognised inside the EU without prejudice.

Which is basically what we are discussing here, we also have a freedom of speech and now I've become racist ?


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 11:24 am
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discoduck - Member
I'm not Racist BUT I don't like it when I am exploited in a foreign Country !

By exploited do you mean caught speeding? I paid up when I was caught in France & Spain. It's a fine, I got a receipt (I even had to go to the cash machine for the French one) I could have jumped up and down like the spoilt 2 year old who was pulled over just after me but I knew I was in the wrong. For the record I've met more racist, bigoted, protectionist Brits than I have French so I guess all brits are like that.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 11:25 am
 Dave
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Either we start playing nicely and keep on topic or the thread will be closed.

Ta.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 12:02 pm
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OK, can we talk about economic migration inside the EU ?


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 1:15 pm
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when a corrupt and blatantly racist country wants to throw its weight around

What a great advert for your company. "Come holidaying in France, a nation of corrupt and blatant racists." 🙄


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 1:30 pm
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@discoduck - email deleted, say it in public.

Sorry Dave for getting OT but racist generalisations are not cool and need pointing out. Basic point still stands EU vs French law, not resolved, not as clear cut as either side wants, needs a trip to the EU courts as STW has no jurisdiction on the matter.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 1:37 pm
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I don't know why the majority of guides just guise themselves up as photographers, water carriers and riding buddies. So long as I'm not going anywhere REALLY mountainous and whoever is showing me around knows where to get help/signal/coffee then isn't it up to me to decide if he or she is trustworthy enough to show me the quickest way around a resort.
I'd be very unlikely to hire a French guide so it's not like they're losing out.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 2:00 pm
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Oh that's the Problem ? Racist generalisations are not COOL, and we can only discuss cool things ?
It's you that's touting Racial hatred, care to divulge the thought processes that eluded you think generally "what" in your opinion makes me a racist and why cchris can generalise that it's not just the French who are like it but infact EVERYONE is ?
How come he hasn't been adorned with your Racial ideology ?

Mike, I'm presuming you know the difference between a fine and corruption, by corrupt I mean I didn't get a receipt from the motorcycle cop, how un COOL was that ! Or am I being a Racist bigoted protectionist Brit ? As you suggest I am ?
Not Cool !

Maybe I had the wrong coloured lense in again and should bend over and take it like

Dave, yeah I'm sorry too, if I pucker up and Kiss it like mike does that make it OK ?


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 2:36 pm
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I'm going to suggest, in this instance that the French aren't being racist - they just don't like you guiding people whatever colour you happen to be. I think the correct term is nationalistic.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 3:11 pm
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Hang on a minute, at NO point did I mention any ones skin colour !

I've been Kangeroo Courted by Mike, who thinks its OK to slander others whilst making off the cuff remarks about Racist Brits ? My good name is being tarnished here purely because I spoke out about the way I feel corruption is being executed at the other other side of a Tunnell.

Admittedly I was doing well over the limit at the time and whilst I was trying to explain to the officer I'd rather be tried by a jury than hung by 1, I could go on but that's it in a nutshell !

A Racist ! I wonder if they put it in my obituary ? At what point should I tell the wife and kid ?

Will it effect my position at work, what will the neighbours say ?

It's pretty tragic, how an elite cyclist and Forum "Hard Man" can crumble some ones world ?

Any way, Mike
Please divulge your process of thought which prompted you to believe that I am a racist ?


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 3:32 pm
 Mark
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Discoduck, you need to step away for a few hours. Dave has already said that this thread will be allowed to continue if it remains on topic. The topic in question is NOT whether or not individual posters are racist or not. The topic is guiding in the French Alps and the issues surrounding that.

If you can't get it back on track then we will close the thread, which we really don't want to have to do as the issue here is a current and relevant one and we would prefer it gets discussed.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 3:40 pm
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That's fine, as long as people elsewhere understand that as well and can do so without throwing little quips in and then apologising afterwards.

That is why I asked if we could discuss Economic Migration inside the EU ?
Which is basically the meat and bones of what we are looking at here.

Is it not.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 3:48 pm
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This is the whole point, when a corrupt and blatantly racist country wants to throw its weight around, its quite easy for it to ignore its own laws

So why are you living, working, and (I assume) paying tax in such a country then? You have the right and freedom to live in a number of other countries, which possibly aren't quite so 'racist'.

This is all very tiresome. Freeride addict; you've single-handedly put me off ever booking a 'guided' mtb holiday with your cmpany, and any other Brit-run outfit which operates on a similar basis to yours, so well done. I'm sure that won't bother you, but I think you need to recognise the irony n your insular and sngle-minded stance ganst a system/nation you accuse of the same.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 3:54 pm
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I'm pretty certain that if a French company, with French staff came to set up something similar in the UK, they would encounter some resistance by the locals. Actually that is one of UKIP slogans?


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 3:59 pm
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Some one threw their toys out because the nasty French insisted they gain the same profesional qualifications as French people doing the same job,basically. There is a reasonable argumant beneath it al, but sadly obscured by petty insularity and stubborness, inmy opionon.

To be honest, not really worth wasting time over. Wish I'd not got involved really. 🙁


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 4:01 pm
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Stoffel + 1, certainly on being put off 'guided' bike holiday companies acting in this manner.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 4:32 pm
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"Racist" - fair enough, I stand corrected. Nationalistic is probably more appropriate in this particular case. (Although have you forgotten that France has banned wearing the Islamic Hijab in public?!).

Either way, it was [i]intended[/i] to be a derogatory comment.....Although I would also like to point out that these comments were aimed at a very specific minority of French nationals who unfortunately are certain individuals that work in government, and therefore act on behalf of all of the remaining open, welcoming and not outwardly corrupt nor racist French people I interact with on a daily basis.

"Corrupt" though, I do stand by that comment with respect to the administration concerned. Remember what I'm claiming is that the French are deliberately manipulating and mis-applying their own laws in an unjust fashion, in order to try to attempt to impose illegal restrictions on a foreign national from working in their country.....as follows:
a) my right to work with UK qualifications in France
b) not offering any form of test for me to demonstrate my competence if indeed (a) were in any doubt
c) ignoring my 13 years of professional experience

This is all very tiresome. Freeride addict; you've single-handedly put me off ever booking a 'guided' mtb holiday with your cmpany ....... I'm sure that won't bother you,

That's a shame on many levels, of course Im bothered, but ultimately I accept that this is the sort of argument that will polarise views. It was a very difficult decision to go public about the issues we are facing in France and one that I believe the French Administration were banking on me not being prepared to make.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 8:41 pm
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Don't worry too much. I admire someone who stands up for their rights and doesn't just accept bein bullied around by government bureaucrats. I'd certainly use TA, in fact I probably will.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 9:06 pm
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wrecker - Member
Don't worry too much. I admire someone who stands up for their rights and doesn't just accept being bullied around by government bureaucrats. I'd certainly use TA, in fact I probably will.

Spot on, infact ill see u guys in a couple of weeks. Like you say there will always be people who agree with you and those that don't. At least no matter how this pans out you can look yourself in the mirror and know you did what you thought was right. Good luck.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 9:25 pm
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I'd definately use TA !
I'd just hope that their Guides have as much spunk as he has.
Standing up for something that you believe in is a rare commodity these days, it's far easier to sit at a computer desk and give it big licks and belittle people with a holier than thou attitude.

I dare say when the dust settles and with a positive result there will prob be a post crop up on here about how this descsion has helped out with UK nationals working in the high Alps.

Good luck


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 9:28 pm
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Although have you forgotten that France has banned wearing the Islamic Hijab in public?!

No, what they did, was ban clothing intended to conceal the face, in public places. So, you can't walk around wearing a balaclava, ski-mask, Mexican wrestlers' hood or any other face-concealing clothing. The Hijab is not 'face cncealing clothing'. hAnd you know how you were going on about European laws?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-28106900

not offering any form of test for me to demonstrate my competence if indeed (a) were in any doubt

There is a test. Yu're just refusng to take it.


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 10:08 pm
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Good luck FA


 
Posted : 09/08/2014 10:41 pm
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freeride_addict: would you say Trail Addiction is a "nationalistic" company (or could be seen as such) for employing Brits guides only?
If I had an MTB guiding company here in UK certainly I would not employ Spanish guides [u]only [/u], sure I'd like to have some locals as long as they are competent.


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 12:16 am
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If your company catered mostly to spanish people, you might.

(though is it true that TA only employ british guides? ie is it a matter of policy)


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 1:17 am
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As an ex-guide working outside of Britain but mainly guiding Brits, I think the real reason that companies employ such people, is that the locals aren't stupid enough to work for the wages that these companies pay.


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 5:41 am
 grum
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stoffel are you on some kind of crusade against TA? Really struggling to see where all your animosity comes from.


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 8:21 am
 iolo
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walleater - Member
As an ex-guide working outside of Britain but mainly guiding Brits, I think the real reason that companies employ such people, is that the locals aren't stupid enough to work for the wages that these companies pay.

Going back to my previous statement, pay less, charge less, undercut the locals who have paid for the training.
Nice business plan.


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 9:13 am
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Northwind: well I see things differently, I thought if they were mostly Spanish clients/tourists they would value some interaction/knowledge with/from locals... when travelling abroad! Coming to UK to stay, cycle, eat , etc with Spanish people and not mixing with locals at all would be strange to me, but maybe you are right and it's me the strange one.
Don't know if it's TA policy but it could be seen this way. I don't know if French authorities are trying to protect French guides only or guides in general (proper wages and job conditions, etc.)could be seen both ways.

walleater: I hope this isn't the case of TA, but yes people here tend to see this jobs as a summer job for which you can be exploited, and not just a job.


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 9:17 am
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Iolo, judging by your man Math's with an S, if TA pay their guides £60 a day would you then expect a 5 day break in the region for £300 ?

And as there were 10 in the group would you then scale that down to £30 leaving the other 9 in the party to pay a proportion of the rest.
And then when you returned from a good days riding would you then feed your self and sleep in your car in the car park ?

I'm just trying to grasp your side of the argument, I'm looking at accom, food, cleaning, logistics, admin etc.

Maybe you should cost the week away, just pay a company for guiding only and then once in situ pay your own way, see if it works out cheaper.


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 10:00 am
 iolo
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I'm not saying about the accommodation and food, I'm sure it's top notch.
I'm saying the training costs are much lower by TA.
A competitor who also produces top notch food and accommodation but with the expensive french accreditation will always be more expensive.
Or have I missed something discoduck?


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 11:31 am
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One day, the French will recognise that competition is good. It's almost happening in the ski industry's. For years the ESF gave crap service and we saw the rise of new schools including those staffed by foreign instructors who could and would speak the language if the client. I made the switch for my family. Very slowly the ESF emerged and evolved to the extent that I often go back to them for collective "competition" classes. With people off using the competition, this means a class of 1-3 people for what becomes great value off-piste guiding, albeit I have to use my French.

But if we are going to complain about protectionism, let's also look in the mirror at our attitude towards foreign workers. Ok we are not as bad as the French, but we are far from perfect.


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 12:11 pm
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Miguelo - Member

Northwind: well I see things differently, I thought if they were mostly Spanish clients/tourists they would value some interaction/knowledge with/from locals... when travelling abroad! Coming to UK to stay, cycle, eat , etc with Spanish people and not mixing with locals at all would be strange to me, but maybe you are right and it's me the strange one.

That'd make sense if you only ever spoke to your guides but the reality is you meet a bunch of people- you're not just hiding in the chalet and running out to ride bikes. And bear in mind here, guests are choosing these companies- no doubt there are french vtt guiding companies out there we could choose to ride with.

But when you're doing the actual riding, language and cultural barriers can be a bummer, you want to be with people who get you and who you get. This isn't necessarily a problem of course but it's far less likely to be a problem with a UK guide.

Out with White Room, I loved riding with Yvan, who was [i]extremely[/i] french. Maybe my favourite guide. But even in our group there were some people that weren't so keen, understanding could be a bit tricky sometimes, there was far less chat etc.

Oh, and it's an side from this thought but if you're a company that provides pay + board and you employ a local, board isn't such a selling point...


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 1:22 pm
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Iolo, no not missed anything, sorry I thought you were on about the daily rate the guys get paid in relation to a week away and not the lengthy VTT accreditation and associated cost.

If that's the case then simple answer "I don't Know"
I don't know who pays for the course if you are a French Citizen working within your own country whether it's down to you as an individual or the company you work for and represent, more than likely the former, which does equate to that cost being passed on and whether that is built into a French guides daily rate over and above what a UK guide would charge again dunno.

But broken down in simple terms like that you can see how the problem has arisen, I doubt that there are many French companies employing that many UK guides without the relevant quals.


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 1:48 pm
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I don't know who pays for the course if you are a French Citizen

I'm sure someone said they get grants.


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 6:11 pm
 Del
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I feel like I should be able to travel freely inside the Economic Union and set up my stall to conduct a business with qualifications that should be recognised inside the EU without prejudice.

indeed you should, however what TA did was set up shop 13 years ago, and hope to carry on under the radar, in spite of local legislation. 'pioneering spirit', or a 'screw it, nothing to really loose' attitude?
i can see both sides of it. the french want people to be professionals and to be able to earn a wage that enables them a decent standard of living. if someone is looking at what to do for a living, and investing time getting trained, then surely they're going to look at what the rewards are likely to be once qualified.
i imagine the french want people to be able to stay, work, and live in the mountains, and be able to have a decent lifestyle, rather than those villages turn in to skiing and biking theme parks.
while i can see the benefit of what TA and other companies do in using seasonal employees, in terms of providing an equivalent, or even better, standard of service to their clients for a good price, companies like White Room show you can do all that while being locally qualified too.
fair play to TA for standing up to The Man and all, and I wish them success.


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 6:39 pm
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I'm not sure White Room is a totally fair comparison tbh- they've gone the IML route but they do winter season too so the argument about usefulness/validity doesn't really apply.


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 7:15 pm
 iolo
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wrecker
I'm sure someone said they get grants

I'm glad you cleared that up.
Would you care to substantiate this statement or shall we all just accept it must be true as someone said.


 
Posted : 10/08/2014 10:18 pm
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Don't think TA were running in 2001


 
Posted : 11/08/2014 7:20 am
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Trail Addiction run great holidays, I'm looking forward to my next.

I've spent quite some time living in France, it's a highly protected economy and very nationalistic. They make as difficult as they can for foreign businesses to set up. It is also far more corrupt a country than the UK. There are some very rich politicians both local and national who weren't that way when they started.

What TA are doing is not in any way economic migration. This is a visionary company which saw the potential of the region and setup a business which brings significant trade to the region. Had TA and some of the other UK guiding companies not gone to the region there would be a fraction of the number of UK tourists and materially less business and revenue for the locals.


 
Posted : 11/08/2014 7:28 am
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I like your debating skills wrecker.

Thank you, but I wasn't debating. Discoduck asked a question, I told him what was said earlier in the thread. I didn't portray it as the only truth (or any truth); hence the "I'm sure someone said", however you decided to get your knickers in a twist over a pretty innocent comment, so no I am not going to back anything up at your request.


 
Posted : 11/08/2014 7:35 am
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By the way the French don't offer the type of guided chalet based holidays that the UK companies do summer and winter. They have tried from time to time but the English generally book with English run companies and the French won;t pay for the format. The closest they have is Club Med, I have been to the one in Peisey Vallandry close to where TA are and the club is very nice but it's more than double the price.


 
Posted : 11/08/2014 7:39 am
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