Contact Title

Contact!

We are always glad to receive email, even if we do not know the sender. Since this site has been operational (mid-1995), we have answered a huge number of questions about how it feels to live here, what the area is like, and so on. A great many of these requests have come from students who have to do projects that in one way or another pertain to France.

In all this time, we have never failed to answer a single mail, though it is not always possible to write back as quickly as people would like. Nor do we feel that we should be in the business of writing essays ourselves. This is an excerpt of an actual mail we once received:

"What is France like? I need this for school. 2000 to 3000 words would be great. I would like by tomorrow if it is not too much trouble."

We usually answer this type of mail by asking the sender to be much more specific. The more effort we feel someone puts into a query, and the more specific the questions are, the more we are inclined to provide answers that will be helpful. We also like to know a little bit about the person who is contacting us. A few details about the sender are always welcome. Bottom line: we're glad to help, if we can, but please be reasonable.

You can contact us in several ways; take your pick from the list below:

By electronic mail

Send an email to our family mailbox
(checked every day)

Send an email to Daniel's private mailbox
(checked every day)

Send an email to Daniel's mailbox at work
(checked on business days)

Send us comments, questions, etc. about this site
(checked every day. This mail link also appears at the bottom of every page)

Report problems with this site
(checked every day)

By Fax

(33) [0]4 93 65 22 21 (Fax as well as voice line)

A person might answer the phone; if that happens, they will hang up upon hearing the fax machine tones. Alternatively, an answering machine mght pick up; if that happens, just wait for the end of the message with the beep. Either way, the fax machine will take it from there.

NOTE: On October 18, 1996 all telephone numbers in France changed from 8 to 10 digits. When calling from within France, the full ten-digit number needs to be dialed regardless of where in France one is calling from. When calling from abroad, the leading zero of the ten-digit number is omitted; in other words, only the last nine digits of the telephone number follow the country code. The "33" in the fax number given above is the country code for France.

By Snail Mail

Daniel Kiechle
c/o Amadeus s.a.s.
SEP Quality Assurance & Releasing
485 route du Pin Montard - B.P. 69
06902 Sophia Antipolis CEDEX
France




<< Previous

Family Home

Next >>

Home | Site Info | Family | The Area | Trips | France | Work | Odds & Ends




This page was last modified on November 30, 2003
Send feedback about this page to feedback@kiechle.com
http://www.kiechle.com/family/contact/contact.htm

All contents © 1999-2008 The Kiechles