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Accommodation
The elegant
and spacious former railway station of the little village of Sos sits
in the valley of the river Gélise at its foot and was converted during
1993/4 to a high standard to provide comfortably furnished holiday accommodation.
Although only a few minutes away from Sos village, the station is set
in peaceful wooded countryside and hidden from the village (during the
summer) by a magnificent avenue of hundred year-old plane trees.

A delightful swimming pool and pool house for guests' exclusive use were
added during 1996 and 1997. The station was inspected and classified Gîte
rural in January, 1999 by the Gîtes de France organisation with a
two “ears of corn” rating.
Inside
On the ground
floor are the living and dining room in the former waiting room and parcels
office which now form one enormous L-shaped space, with turn-of-the-century
posters advertising the delights of Lourdes and Luchon and the remains
of the 1924 timetable on the walls.
Instead of
the wooden benches in the old waiting room there are now several sofas
and easy chairs, with two dining tables and plenty of chairs in what was
the parcels office for meals indoors. High ceilings and thick stone walls
helped by internal shutters on all five large doors and windows ensure
relative cool in summer. A huge wood-burning stove ensures warmth in winter
or for chilly evenings.
There is a
music system (CD, record and cassette players - bring your own music or
browse through my CDs as you wish), a piano, some games and an extensive
library - but no television. A telephone is provided and calls
can be restricted or not as required. At the moment, there is no coverage
for mobile ‘phones at the station.
In the former
ticket office is a well-equipped kitchen, and the ticket-office window
looks through into the waiting room so the “cook” in your party doesn’t
feel too detached from the others. There are a full-sized conventional
cooker (3 gas rings, one electric, electric fan oven and grill), microwave
oven, dishwasher, washing machine and large fridge-freezer, along with
plenty of good quality pans, glasses, trays and crockery etc. in the handsome
chestnut dresser. There are teapots, cafétières, a toaster, a food processor,
scales (with metric and Imperial weights) an orange-squeezer, a pressure-cooker
and an electric kettle. A vast selection of tools (including the vital
corkscrews and wine coolers), sharp knives and other cutlery can be found
in the drawers. A separate cooler pantry houses food storage and another
fridge-freezer for drinks and ice-cream... Next door to the pantry is
a broom cupboard with a high chair, cleaning tools and materials, a steam
iron and ironing board. Tea towels, hand towels, oven gloves, aprons,
table cloths and napkins are provided, along with detergents etc. for
the washing machine and dishwasher, rubbish bags, clingfilm, foil etc...
There is a herb garden in pots outside the door and a stock of culinary
basics (salt, pepper, oil and vinegar, spices, tea, coffee, sugar etc)
and I will happily try and buy anything else you require if you let me
know in advance.
The original
oak staircase leads up from the ticket office to the first floor and what
was the station master's apartment until 1970. There are now three light
and airy bedrooms; two of them double (150 cm and 160 cm beds) and one
twin (2 x 90 cm beds). There is a big bathroom with a big bath, handbasin/wc,
and a huge shower room with a huge shower, handbasin/wc. There are
hanging cupboards (with plenty of clothes hangers), chests of drawers
and more books in each bedroom, with rugs on the attractive original pitch
pine floors. All beds are made up for your arrival with pure cotton sheets/pillowcases
and light bedcovers or cosy down-filled duvets according to the season,
and plenty of towels are provided, both for indoor and for pool use. Bedding
and towels are changed weekly during longer stays. There is a new high-sided
wooden cot with mattress, and two hairdryers.
Upstairs
again is the attic, which children love. This vast space of almost
a hundred square metres has been left open, furnished with four good-quality
90cm beds plus wardrobes and rugs and is perfect for indoor play should
the weather be wet. Some toys are provided, including Brio railways and
Micromachines galore. The attic roof is heavily insulated to ensure relative
cool in summer and warmth in winter, and there is a further shower room
with wc and handbasin.
Bedrooms
and bathrooms are heated by electric space heaters as required, and hot
water is provided continuously by three large-capacity immersion heaters.
For your peace of mind there are smoke detectors and fire extinguishers
on each floor, and a fire blanket in the kitchen.
Outside
Outside, there
are about six acres of long, thin, level grounds where the railway used
to run. The former goods platform now makes a suntrap terrace on the south
side, although you may prefer to sit in the shade of the 100-year old
catalpa or plane trees during the heat of the day. Whatever you choose,
there are plenty of tables and chairs for outside use.
Pool
Down a broad
tiled path lies the 12m by 5m pool, surrounded by wide tiled terraces
and equipped with tables, chairs, and sunloungers. The pool is normally
available for use from Easter to October, though it isn’t usually what
I would call warm enough until the end of May/early June. A pool house
provides further shade under its wide veranda, along with a shower, wc,
double sink/drainer and another fridge-freezer inside, and a large
barbecue outside. Another kettle and a cupboard full of plastic picnic
ware, glasses and cutlery make meals round the pool easy. The pool is
entered by steps in the semi-circular “Roman End”; water depth in the
shallower end is 1.2m, with a hopper to 2.4m at the deeper end. The water
is slightly salted and treated by an electrolytic cell rather than conventionally
chlorinated (much gentler on eyes and skin), and powerful pumps, filter
and an automatic robot help to keep it all clean. A pair of submerged
floodlights encourage swimming in the velvety nights under the stars.
A start has
been made on creating a garden round the station buildings, but at the
time of writing it consists largely of rough-mown grass.
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