Morgan3820
Ejection Handle Pulled
Glad I chose to live in a small town in the countryside. Quiet
That’s all.
That’s all.
Except for those darn airplanes making all that noise at the local strip. Gotta sign that petition...Glad I chose to live in a small town in the countryside. Quiet
That’s all.
I moved to where I wanted to live. Then found the job.That’s hard to do with a lot of jobs. Spent most of my life living in cities because that’s were the work was. Fortunately now I have a job where I can choose a rural area to work and live. City life just ain’t my thing.
View attachment 88583
Selfie?
Except for those darn airplanes making all that noise at the local strip. Gotta sign that petition...
Despite the bear trying to get into our kitchen last week (my wife chased it out), the tree that crushed my wife's car during the recent storm, and probably no electricity for a week at least, yeah, I still like living in the woods.
As I kid I remember my friends house, especially since he had a T-craft there and gave me my 1st airplane ride at about 4 years hold...
You mean the daily crop duster 200ft over the house at 5am almost every morning isn't normal. Big piston engine job, not one of those quiet turbines.
Brian
That’s hard to do with a lot of jobs. Spent most of my life living in cities because that’s were the work was. Fortunately now I have a job where I can choose a rural area to work and live. City life just ain’t my thing.
I’m with you, rural life is great if you can afford it.
And anyone who says “Everything is cheaper in the country” simply is privileged enough to be able to ignore the fact that labor is too.
My last attempt at “country life” ended when I moved 65 miles for a 50% raise doing 1/3rd of the work of the lower paying job. That is when I realized that I like money more than country or city life.
I’ve, as an adult making such distinctions, always mandated that I would never willingly live anywhere that I couldn’t relieve myself urinary-wise in the yard.....pretty well defines no close neighbors, and the cows don’t pay any attention.
I’ve, as an adult making such distinctions, always mandated that I would never willingly live anywhere that I couldn’t relieve myself urinary-wise in the yard.....pretty well defines no close neighbors, and the cows don’t pay any attention.
It takes about 25 minutes to get to town (Coeur d’Alene, Idaho). Although we live on the lake, we have no near neighbors...wouldn’t give up country living.
Living outside the city does have its draw backs though. Lots of upkeep with dealing with Mother Nature. I’m essentially in the woods and I’m always dealing with downed trees, power outages, slow internet, poor water pressure. Lots of varmints too. Just in the past 3 days there was a Black Bear across the street from me, had two Raccoons that woke me up this AM and had these two deer in the driveway when I got home a few minutes ago.
Most of the folks I know who live in the country commute to work in the city. No how, no way. Life is too short to spend all that time sitting in traffic.
I'm still not seeing the drawbacks...
I moved from a semi-rural area in Colorado (about an hour from Denver) to San Francisco. I didn't think there would be enough things to do out there after I stopped working, without a long drive. I still think that would have been the case. There are many things I can do here that I couldn't do there, interestingly outdoor things, even before Covid. That said, the City has a lot of problems. One good thing about now is that there are fewer people! Besides, I live in a more mellow area, not a trendy or troubled one.We moved from the San Francisco noise and traffic to rural Sonoma County surrounded by golf courses and vineyards, and are loving it. We're both retired, so no commute except for the 20 minute drive to my hangar at Sonoma County Airport.
In 2002 we moved to a rural area about 5 miles outside a small town. My wife could keep horses, my son and I could shoot .22s in the backyard, etc. Neighbors raised cows and chickens. I accepted a 40 mile commute twice a day for the privilege.
But today the growth has caught up to us and there are housing developments replacing orange groves and businesses replacing pastures.
We’ll need to move again soon.
We bought our property figuring that by the time the kids were moving out of the house, the urban sprawl would likely catch up and we'd be able to sell off to a developer or sell at a significant premium to someone who wants this kind of property. We'll see how that pans out in another 15 years or so.
I'm still not seeing the drawbacks...
Our town is dying (at least it feels that way) so I guess in 15 years I will be in the country instead of in the city!We bought our property figuring that by the time the kids were moving out of the house, the urban sprawl would likely catch up and we'd be able to sell off to a developer or sell at a significant premium to someone who wants this kind of property. We'll see how that pans out in another 15 years or so.