Mar 17

Dordogne Design, putting Dordogne on the web.

www.dordognedesign.com

We specialize in web sites for the Dordogne region. We know how extremely difficult it is to get your name or business onto the search engines. We do not just design web sites, we help you get your site seen by potential customers from around the world.

Designing a web site is the easiest part, getting people to find your site amongst the more than 92 Billion!! (indexed by google in 2006) sites can be tricky and very expensive.
I have designed more than 20 Dordogne related sites to help advertise your web site after it has been launched.

Let Dordogne Design put you on the web, can you afford not to?

Here are some stats that show the importance of a web site:

Key facts and figures from 1 March 2007

  • Over 3.1 million tourists
  • Average length of stay (all accommodation): 10 days
  • Representing almost 31 million nights’ accommodation
  • A direct turnover of at least 980 million euros
  • Over 6,000 permanent jobs in tourism (6900 in July & Aug.)
  • Tourism in the Dordogne represents over 31% of the local economy

More facts and figures.

  • 77% booked part of their vacation online. (airline, ferry, rental car etc)
  • 93% of visitors researched the area online before visiting.
  • 71 % of visitors booked accommodation online

5 years ago, these figures would have all been below 30%, and 10 years ago they would have all been below 3%, however, in 3 year time they will ALL be above 90%

Dordogne Design

These figures show the importance of a web site, and no one can design, host, advertize and optimize your dordogne related site better than Dordogne Design .
Dordogne Design, owned by de Paulus who knows how to put the Dordogne and your site / buisness on the web.
With more than 20 Dordogne related web sites that are already high on the mayor Search Engines list are ready to advertise your site.
Advertising a site designed by Dordogne Design on all our parent sites is FREE, saving you hundreds of Euro’s, and focusing only on the Dordogne which will attract only people that are searching for Dordogne related sites.

Dordogne Design does not design web sites for a living, which means the prices are as low as you will ever find, and your web site is a de Paulus Project, which means he will always be there for you whenever you need help or advice.
Get in touch with Dordogne Design and see what they can do for you… Can you afford not to?

www.dordognedesign.com

Feb 11

Launched a new site today nowhere near finished, but then again, they never are.
This site caused me some severe headaches!!.. I had it up and running for about 4 days, when suddenly for no reason I got caught in an “Admin Loop”.. and could not edit the site. I stripped the database, I dropped the tables, repaired the tables, optimised the database, and spent 4 days trying to solve the problem, in the end I deleted everything and started from scratch.

The Vezere Valley… I have spent my whole life travelling, and have lived in numerous countries, but I just LOVE the Vezere Valley, I have spent 6 years exploring this area, and know what it has to offer, I know that the Vezere Valley has far far far more to offer than any of the guide books write about… www.vezerevalley.info

vezerevalley.info

ABOUT THE VEZERE VALLEY

In and around the town of Les Eyzies-de-Tayac are a series of prehistoric rock dwellings, the caves include some of the mostsignificant archaeological finds of the Upper Paleolithic (from about 40,000 to10,000 years ago) and Middle Paleolithic (200,000 to 40,000 years ago) periods;they are especially noted for their extensive wall drawings. Situated in the VézèreValley (the location of some 150 archaeological sites) the Eyzies-de-Tayac caves are among a series of decorated grottoes in the area that were collectively designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1979.

Following the discovery of flint and bone splinters in the area in 1862, a series of excavations were undertaken by the French geologist Édouard Lartet and the English banker Henry Christy.
Their work quickly established Les Eyzies-de-Tayac as the principal archaeological site for the Upper Paleolithic Period. Among their discoveries were the multicoloured animal drawings of the Font-de-Gaume cave and an incredible display of stalactites and stalagmites in the Grand Roc. A rock shelter at La Madeleine (the type site for the Magdalenian culture) yielded bone and antler tools. The cave of Le Moustier is the type site of the Mousterian industry, a tool culture known for its flake implements.
Cro-Magnon is the name of a rock shelter near Les Eyzies-de-Tayac, where several prehistoric skeletons were found in 1868. Sent to the site, the French geologist Louis Lartet began excavations in which he established the existence of five archaeological layers covered with ash. The age of the human remains found in the topmost layer (along with worked flint and the bones of animals of species now extinct) is Upper Paleolithic (c. 35,000-10,000 years ago), but the attribution of these to a clearly defined Upper Paleolithic culture is less definite. Traditionally regarded as Aurignacian, since typically Aurignacian artifacts were found in the rock shelter, they could be more recent, and it has been suggested that they should be assigned to the
Perigordian (a separate industry covering approximately the same time period as the Aurignacian), which would give an age of about 25,000 BC.

In Paleontology, the term Perigordian industry is given to the tool tradition of prehistoric men in Upper Paleolithic Europe that followed the Mousterian industry, was contemporary in part with the Aurignacian, and was succeeded by the Solutrean. Perigordian tools included denticulate (toothed) tools of the type used earlier in the Mousterian tradition and stone knives with one sharp edge and one flat edge, much like modern metal knives. Other Upper Paleolithic tool types are also found in Perigordian culture, including scrapers, borers, burins (woodworking tools rather like chisels), and composite tools; bone implements are relatively uncommon.

The Perigordian has two main stages.
The earlier stage, called Châtelperronian, is concentrated in the Périgord region of France but is believed to have originated in southwestern Asia; it is distinguished from contemporary stone tool culture complexes by the presence of curved-backed knives (knives sharpened both on the cutting edge and the back).
The later stage is called Gravettian and is found in France, Italy, and Russia (there termed Eastern Gravettian). Gravettian people in the west hunted horses to the near exclusion of the reindeer and bison that other contemporaries hunted; in Russia Gravettians concentrated on mammoths. Both appear to have hunted communally, using stampedes and pitfalls to kill large numbers of animals at one time. Gravettians
in the east used large mammoth bones as part of the building material for winter houses; mammoth fat was used to keep fires burning. Gravettian peoples made rather crude, fat “Venus” figurines, used red ochre as pigment, and fashioned jewelry out of shells, animal teeth, and ivory.
Archaeological finds in the Perigord, made another profound impact on the study of religion when in 1841 the discovery of prehistoric human artifacts and later finds gave clues to early man’s magico-religious beliefs and practices. These discoveries, notably the cave paintings in the Dordogne, northern and eastern Spain, and elsewhere, gave scholars encouragement to work out the course of man’s religious evolution from earliest times. Spectacular as prehistoric archaeology was proving to be, however, it could only yield fragments of a whole that is difficult to reconstruct. Even the famous cave paintings of Les Trois Frères, in the Dordogne, for example, which portray among other things a dancing human with antlers on his head and a stallion’s tail decorating his rear, does not yield an unambiguous interpretation: is the dancing figure a sorcerer, a priest, or what? He very likely is a priest presenting himself as a divine figure connected with animal fertility and hunting rites–but this remains as only an educated guess. Hence, it became attractive to many scholars of religion to try to supplement ancient archaeological evidence with data drawn from contemporary primitive peoples–i.e., to interpret the prehistoric Stone Age through present-day stone age cultures. This procedure has several pitfalls–partly because contemporary “primitives” are themselves the product of a long historical process and because their culture may have changed over the millennia in many and various ways.
Lascaux: A cave containing one of the most outstanding displays of prehistoric art yet discovered, located above the Vézère River valley near Montignac. It is a short distance upstream from another major cave-art site, Eyzies-de-Tayac. The two sites, with some two dozen other painted caves and 150 prehistoric settlements in the Vézère valley, were added to UNESCO’s World Heritage List in 1979. Discovered by four teenage boys in September 1940, the cave was first studied by the French archaeologist Henri-Édouard-Prosper Breuil. It consists of a main cavern (some 66 feet [20 meters] wide and 16 feet [5 meters] high) and several steep galleries, all magnificently decorated with engraved, drawn, and painted figures.
In all there are some 600 painted and drawn animals and symbols, along with nearly 1,500 engravings. The paintings were done on a light background in various shades of yellow, red, brown, and black. Among the most remarkable pictures are four huge aurochs (some 16 feet long), their horns portrayed in a “twisted perspective”; a curious two-horned animal (misleadingly nicknamed the “unicorn”), perhaps intended as a mythical creature; several red deer; bovids; great herds of horses; the heads and necks of several stags (3 feet [1 meter] tall), which appear to be swimming across a river; a series of six felines; two male bison; and a rare narrative composition.The narrative scene has been variously interpreted but is probably based on shamanism. Its central figure is a bison that appears to have been speared in the abdomen; hanging, or spilling, from the animal near the spear is a lined, ovular sack that may represent entrails. In front of the bison’s horns, and falling away from the animal, is a bird-headed man–the only human figure depicted in the cave–with an erect phallus. Just below, or beside, the man is a stick with a bird ornament as a finial. Another spear is near the man’s feet, and off to the left a rhinoceros seems to be walking away from the scene. Archaeologists have theorized that the cave served over a long period of time as a centre for the performance of hunting and magical rites–a theory supported by the depiction of a number of arrows and traps on or near the animals. Based on carbon-14 dating, as well as the fossil record of the animal species portrayed, the Lascaux paintings have been dated to the late Aurignacian (Perigordian) period (c. 15,000-13,000 BC). The cave, in perfect condition when first discovered, was opened to the public in 1948. Its floor level was quickly lowered to accommodate a walkway, destroying information of probable scientific value in the process–and the ensuing pedestrian traffic (as many as 100,000 annual visitors), as well as the use of artificial lighting, caused the once-vivid colours to fade and algae and bacteria to grow over some of the paintings. Thus, in 1963 the cave was again closed. In 1983 a partial replica, “Lascaux II,” was opened nearby for public viewing; by the mid-1990s it registered some 300,000 visitors annually.

The inhabitants of what was to become the Perigord region have left so much evidence of their existence and way of life that the valley of the Vézère has become a sanctuary to their memory and a prestigious prehistoric site. Industrious and prosperous tribes of Gauls who lived in the hills and already knew the secrets of iron joined together and became known as the Petrocores. Under the Romans, they built in the valley the important town of Vésone which became a city in the first century AD and part of the Roman Empire. After the invasions, the antique Civitas Petrocorium became the province of Périgord and played an important part in the struggle for the independence of Aquitaine, before coming under the French monarchy. The French king Henri IV was the last Count of Périgord.

During the Hundred Years War, the region marked the boundary of French and English possessions and was thus the scene of incessant combat, resulting in the many castles which were the bastions of rival factions. Feudal struggles were fierce and the spirit of liberty was evident from early on. The towns were dministered by consuls and walls were built to protect the cities.
After the destruction and massacres of the Wars of Religion (1562 - 1598), these military defences were used for the last time during the troubles known as “La Fronde” (1649 - 1652).
During the French Revolution, the Périgord region changed its name in 1790 and became known as the
Dordogne, with the capital changing successively from Périgueux to Bergerac then Sarlat before finally becoming Périgueux again.

Recommended accommodation in the Vezere valley:

Ferme de Tayac B&B in 12th Century former farmhouse / monasteryB&B Ferme de Tayac : www.fermedetayac.com Lovely B&B in a 12th Century former farmhouse / monastery in the hart of the Vezere valley

ENJOY the VEZERE VALLEY    

Jan 2

Been busy working on a site I had started a year ago www.artistsdisplay.com a site for all kinds of artists to display, manage and sell their art online. Based on various ways of advertising your art or web site, from Free link exchange to complete packages incl. unique web portals for artists..

The site is still being worked on, but is being tested live at www.artistsdisplay.com and should hopefully be finished by Feb. 1st .

To give this project a kick start, I am giving away 10 yearly memberships away worth $130 on a first come first serve basis, so if you are, or you know any artists, Please send me an Email and I will set them up with their own account so they can display, manage and sell their art online.



Dec 24

www.frenchdream4us.com has been removed, and is being completely re-designed.
What I will exactly be doing with it, I do not know, maybe I will make a site for artists in the region to show and sell their work, the site would be like www.scenicdordogne.com  and www.stunningplaces.com  (both mine)  but instead of photography it would be art.
I still have a few other sites I am working hard to get launched, so keep your eyes open.

Merry Xmas everyone, and I wish you all a very happy and healthy 2008 

Oct 30

A lot of people ask me ” What exactly do I need to have my own web site?”, so let me break it down for everyone with the same question.

  1. A Web site.
    hopefully we all understand this part 
  2. A Domain name.
    This is the name of your site for example this site is : depaulus.com
    For more info about Domain names: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_name
  3. A Web Host.
    This is the place that your web site will be hosted, your host will provide you with webspace, Email accounts, Databases etc
    More info: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_hosting_service

So, with these 3 things I am up and running?? eeehhmm not quite!, although you now have all the neccesities, you  still have to get your site onto the www. highway.

So how do I do that?? 

Ok, I am far to busy to give you a step by step guide on how to actually make your website, (just pay me to do that for you) .. So lets assume you have a website, now, you have to get your web site from your PC all the way to your Web Host.. To do this you need a Ftp programme, and with this, you “Upload” your website onto your Hosting Account. (Remember if you have a static .htm(l) site, the index.htm or index.html will be the homepage)

OK, this is sorted, am I ready to rock and roll??

eeeuuhhh welllll, unless you like to rock and roll all by yourself, then no,.. actually all the above was the easiest and cheapest part!!..
Congratulations your site has been launched, and of the 2.9 Billion internet users, you are the ONLY person that knows your web site is out there.. GOOD LUCK!!

Well hang on!!… So now what do I do??Well, first of all, you have to get word out to everyone that your site is out there, and you would appreciate a bit of buisness!!.. The best way to do this, is to submit your sites to all the major “Search Engines” .. Sounds Easy??.. Hahaha.. Yeahhh right!!

So now I have my web site launched and Submitted, all I have to do is wait for the money to start flowing in??

Believe  me. if that was the case, you would not be reading this, cos I would not be writting this!!.. But, very slowly we are getting there…. so now you “B&B” web site is live, and has been submitted… All is well??… Almost, one slight problem, is that your B&B website only gets mentioned on page 54298876.. which means you are still the ONLY person except for dear Aunty Mavis who knows your web site is out there!

OMG!! is there any hope?? 

Well, call it your lucky day, but that is where I could be of great help.
I can Design your web site, Host your site,  Manage your site, and Advertise your site.

Yeahh but that must cost me an arm and a leg!!

Don’t worry, I’m not in it for the limbs!!.. My prices are very low, so low actually, that if you manage to find someone offering what I offer for less, Please let me know, because I will start using them myself!!

For a FREE quote please contact me.