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Author Topic: Where do you live?  (Read 13106 times)

CLKD

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #15 on: November 04, 2014, 07:23:03 PM »

Rural areas are well known to have lower wages than people earn in towns.  Agricultural workers don't earn much, years ago they often lived in 'tied' cottages which meant that if they were ill and were unable to work, they were made homeless.  Having spent a lot of time in the Fens recently it's obvious that MOST of the harvesting is by hand - which is where migrant workers help, they arrive in mid-Summer, are housed in basic accommodation, begin early i.e. 5.00 a.m. and stop after 9.00 at night.  We could hear the machinery working all night and the factory down the road was producing something containing onions!!!! phew.  Without migrant workers we wouldn't get food onto the table.

Acres of pumpkins - a lot of which have been left to rot due to heavy rains recently - potatoes were being harvested as were sugar beets for the factories, being put into heaps first ……

It's never been the cost of housing but the price of the initial deposit! Even now ……. which is why our young people are unable to buy within the villages where they were raised. 

Even now, some properties are sold with an 'agricultural tie'  :-\.  One doesn't need to eat/drink as much as we do overall, therefore food can be eeked out …… buying in bulk or in a consortium works in some areas.  DH and I buy in bulk when we can, we have 'cards' to a huge warehouse and go there about every 3 months.

It is well known that not only on Motorway Services but in rural areas fuel is hellish expensive.  Many years ago we saw that fuel in Scotland was really pricey, even though the [oh the word won't come: the place where it's stored and distributed from:] was close by  ::) that's it - distribution centre!

Did our shop there today: bought lots of kitchen roll, Kleenex man-sized boxes and coffee at special offer even within the warehouse - sacks of bird peanuts are £12.99 rather than over £30 elsewhere.  It's storing lots of stuff that becomes difficult ………  :D

When growing up in the back of beyond we walked or cycled, only the wage earner had a car.
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honeybun

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #16 on: November 04, 2014, 07:43:41 PM »

To live where we live has always meant a reasonable commute to work. An hour each way minimum and sometimes more. If the weather is bad then it becomes a challenge. Trains.....one an hour.....buses the same. Ferries, one every fifteen minutes  ;D

It was worth it to bring our kids up in a quiet town. We now live in a village of about 1000 people.
Petrol is bought out with town as its cheaper. I live in a county that has huge amounts of poverty and huge amounts of wealth dependent on what part you stay in. I'm lucky, we have been here for 30 years, bought small, saved up and bought bigger. We are most definitely not rich. Just bog standard normal.


Honeyb
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CLKD

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #17 on: November 04, 2014, 07:45:17 PM »

A train ?  ;D …….. I would have to travel 22 miles in 1 direction, 12 in another and 13 to get to a Station.  Buses now run hourly through the village but I have no idea what a fare is these days. 
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Ju Ju

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #18 on: November 04, 2014, 07:51:22 PM »

I live in a 'popular village', which means expensive! Lucky we moved here before the prices exploded. 1986. Our house could be sold for 8 times what we payed for it. Our daughter would love to move back, but the rents are ridiculous.
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honeybun

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #19 on: November 04, 2014, 07:51:51 PM »

Only trouble with our train service is the line runs very close to the sea. If we have a combination of high winds and a high tide then the trains stop.  ::)

You would think someone could have planned that a bit better.


Honeyb
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CLKD

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #20 on: November 04, 2014, 07:52:24 PM »

We moved here in 1983.  Supposedly a 'popular' village houses take ages to sell  :-\ regardless of any price range.
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Ju Ju

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #21 on: November 04, 2014, 08:59:01 PM »

Usually houses sell fairly quickly here. It's quiet, but well connected road and rail wise. Good for those who want to commute to work.
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dulciana

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #22 on: November 04, 2014, 09:36:26 PM »

In a flat within a converted Victorian school building.  A bit quirky but with enough room to fit an organ console into the living room, where we've also got a "minstrel's gallery" - different!   ::)
« Last Edit: November 04, 2014, 09:39:57 PM by dulciana »
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catdude

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #23 on: November 04, 2014, 11:20:57 PM »

I'm in rural west Wales and have been for the last 15 years. I grew up in south east London but always felt a country girl at heart. Love it here other than when the weather makes commuting difficult!
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Suzi Q

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #24 on: November 05, 2014, 12:59:38 AM »

Watching Country File this evening and seeing children going to City Farms to learn about animals: and I know there are petting farms across the UK ………. being told that Schools are no longer teaching farming ……. we didn't get told about farming other than in general geography.  Perhaps because I was raised in the Fens  :-\ but that didn't mean I knew about farming because it was 'out there' …… other than we need calves so that cows continue giving milk and that the beef is a side-product …...

I would love a small holding: ducks, chickens, turkeys but not sheep or pigs, would get too fond of those  ::): a large lake for fishing …….. but that is a responsibility ….

Where do you live and how much do you know about farming in general, other than buying your milk, cheese, yoghurts etc.?

I now live in a seaside place in Brisbane Ozz
IN England I lived on the Wirral which is more or less farming and light industry hills green land and the sea surrounding the Wirral  peninsualr  so we saw farms every day and market gardens PLUS my family came from Ynos Mons (Anglsea) and Id spend 6 weeks to 12 weeks a year there on my Aunties farm no leccie no water this was the late 60s no indoor toilet no TV and I was 16 Id go from Wallasey 2 TVs at home Dicos Youth clubs cinemas BUT most of all my school holidays I spent in GWALLCHMAI no English spoken exceot on the crystal radio it was like stepping back in time to a time Id never known BUT for the most part I loved it I hand milked cows I collected the eggs and had a YOLK yes with a bucket at each side to collect drinking water from the well over a mile away I did this from birth (not the water hehehe) till I joined the RN at 16 and I loved it BY the 80s before we came to Ozz leccie and water@Tv all came to the farm they got rid of the milking and made holiday cottages as they had been there since 1940 when they were 20 but the farm and Gwalchmai the lanes the well are all still there almost locked in a time wharp it looks exactly the same as it did in the 60s thank god
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Hattie

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #25 on: November 05, 2014, 09:17:15 AM »

My father was a tenant farmer - the farm was part of one of the large estates that are now probably very diminished due to death duties. The house where i spent my early years is now divided into 3 homes.

Latter day migrant workers - my father had a two workers on the farm who were ex prisoners of war from the nearby camp - one was from East Germany the other Latvia and couldn't return after the war due to the Soviet Union. Gangs of local women used to come for the potato harvest.

I now live in a small property on the edge of a village in a completely different county- i finally feel 'at home' here but there is a sore issue when it comes to housing for families who have lived here for years and you are made to feel aware of it.

Hattie X



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CLKD

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #26 on: November 05, 2014, 10:02:47 AM »

However: property sales have always been 'free' to whoever pays the asking or above, many properties were derelict and if the locals don't do them up then they should accept that incomers may buy them!  We bought in West Wales and paid into the local economy, even then (1976) some said that the English should to home!
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Hattie

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #27 on: November 05, 2014, 01:49:46 PM »

I very rarely watch 'Country File' now - just the odd bit maybe before something else starting or to catch the weather for the week - i feel it can often present an idyllic view.



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CLKD

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #28 on: November 05, 2014, 01:52:50 PM »

No where is idyllic.  It's what you make of it that counts  ;).  I like our garden, wish I could pick it all up and take to a bungalow about 5 miles inland …….. first choice would be the Sussex coast, 2nd Northumberland ……

Not many people, myself included, think of how our grub reaches the shelves because we are more remote from visiting the butcher/baker etc.; it was when I was back in the Fens a couple of times recently that I remember how much hard work gardening, producing crops for the table, stock care can be!

I have in the last 3/4 years started to look upwards when visiting our local towns - some of the architecture is fab., if there is an information 'shop' do go in and have a look-see - you'll be surprised at how much you miss 'locally'!
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honeybun

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Re: Where do you live?
« Reply #29 on: November 05, 2014, 02:44:17 PM »

My hubby is English and has been in Scotland for over thirty years now. We moved to this area about 27 years ago and then to this village four years ago. Unless your born here like my kids we are "in comers " . Really doesn't bother me. My hubby fits right in with his English accent. I was born 30 miles away....and he's the one who fits  ;D

Lots and lots of English people here and the further north you go the more there are. During the property boom in the South of England quite a few sold up for huge amounts of money and moved north. A lot of hotels are owned by English people.
Far from resenting this I feel that life and money have been breathed into the areas they go to.

Honeyb
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