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weibel
Explore "weibel" with insightful episodes like "Le témoignage poignant de Laura Weibel, survivante d'un crash d'avion de tourisme", "#10 • Reprendre la pâtisserie familiale, icône du paysage aixois - Adrien Weibel, directeur de la pâtisserie Weibel", "#23 Benedikt Weibel", "Hockey O'Clock - Episode 015 - Bader, Weibel, Hornich" and "Life Begins at 55: How I Overcame Illness to Travel the World" from podcasts like ""Le reportage grand format de France Bleu Loire Océan", "La Vie Aixoise | Ancre ta vie à Aix-en-Provence", "Tête-à-Tête", "win2day Hockey O'Clock" and "The Expat Chat"" and more!
Episodes (5)
#10 • Reprendre la pâtisserie familiale, icône du paysage aixois - Adrien Weibel, directeur de la pâtisserie Weibel
Aujourd'hui, je suis avec Adrien Weibel, le directeur de la pâtisserie Weibel, commerce de référence pour les habitants d'Aix-en-Provence.
Adrien m’a accueilli dans ses bureaux, ancien appartement de sa grand-mère, juste au-dessus de la pâtisserie.
Dans notre échange, Adrien m’a parlé de sa vie de designer à Paris, de son retour en terre aixoise et de la reprise de l’entreprise familiale. Il m’a aussi parlé des projets à venir pour la pâtisserie.
Vous verrez qu’Adrien est profondément attaché à sa famille, à ses racines et que pour lui, avoir fait le choix de reprendre la direction de Weibel, c’est oeuvrer pour pérenniser ce que son grand père, son père et son frère ont fait avant lui avec tous les avantages mais aussi les contraintes que cela implique.
Merci à Endonora qui a rendu cet épisode possible. Et pour découvrir les parcours proches de chez vous, vous pouvez télécharger gratuitement l’application en cliquant ici : https://howto.endonora.com/LVE0422
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📩 Pour contacter Adrien :
• Instagram de la maison Weibel : @maison_weibel
• Site de la maison Weibel : http://www.maisonweibel.com/
• Adresse de la maison Weibel : 2 rue Chabrier, 13100 Aix-en-Provence.
🎙 Pour me contacter :
• Instagram : @la.vie.aixoise
• Linkedin : Anne-Claire Duval
#23 Benedikt Weibel
Hockey O'Clock - Episode 015 - Bader, Weibel, Hornich
Life Begins at 55: How I Overcame Illness to Travel the World
Facing death is the ultimate motivation to revisit your life’s purpose and ask yourself whether what you are doing is truly making you happy. For Barbara Weibel that challenge came to a head in 2007 when, dealing with lymes disease, she realized her corporate life was making her richer but leaving her feeling empty inside.
She hopped on a plane to Vietnam writing the story of her journey while away. Upon returning to the US she discovered that over 1200 people had found her journey worth reading and with that as her motivation she embarked on a permanent travel lifestyle that has taken her to 60 countries over the past 9 years.
Barbara has become one of the world’s biggest travel bloggers and has proven that a single woman in her 50’s can travel the world safely with the right attitude. Her saying “Faith and fear can’t live in the same place” has been her source of comfort along her journey.
We caught up with Barbara in Croatia where she shared her insights into how she lives her life and why the American dream is not delivering on its promise.
You can follow Barbara’s journey at her popular blog www.holeinthedonut.com . If you’re looking to send a picture from your own journey Barbara offers $1 e-postcards of her travel photos. Barbara is a strong supporter of charities in many of the countries she visits and you can support her work with an e postcard from her many travel photos at www.holeinthedonut.net
What I learned from speaking with Barbara:
- There are no barriers to being a perpetual traveler. Barbara has not allowed age, sex or any other barrier to stand in her way to doing what she loves. She is happier for the experience and stands as motivation to millions of baby boomers that the best years don’t have to be behind you once you reach your fifties or sixties.
- Travel is all about people. A wonderful as many of the countries have been that she has visited ultimately it’s the people that make the difference. You can’t build a relationship from an air conditioned bus during two weeks of annual holidays. If you base yourself in a location and put yourself out there you’ll be continually staggered at the kindness that your fellow humans will show you
- Barbara highlighted many of the well-known expat destinations as being well worth visiting (and Columbia again gets a mention from those who have visited there) but what was particularly interesting was her take on eastern Europe, including Hungary, but particularly the Balkan states such as Croatia, and Bulgaria. These places offer a lot with very affordable lifestyles and I feel sure they will become increasingly popular as expat havens in the future. We will be following these areas with more interest.
- Being a woman doesn’t expose you to greater travel risk. Barbara has had no incidents in 9 years (outside of the US that is) and believes much of the concern is misplaced