What Part of the Country (or Which Country) Are You From?

Discussion in 'Places I Have Lived' started by Yvonne Smith, Feb 1, 2015.

  1. Kate Ellery

    Kate Ellery Supreme Member
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    I know the paradise area it’s a very nice area ( suburb ) in Adelaide , it has lots of old established vey old gum trees so it’s nice and green ,we are going out that way to our dancing venue tomorrow night at Tee Tree gully.

    We are in Adelaide for a couple of days dr apps / Costco shopping / go to Apple to look at latest watch ..and the list go’s on.

    We’ve been to the Mount as MG is often referred to it has some fascinating natural features such as the blue lake
    https://southaustralia.com/products/limestone-coast/attraction/blue-lake
    The area has lots of under water giant caves which attracts lots of divers,
    some have been lost and never found doing what they loved diving in km’s of underwater caves
    https://weareexplorers.co/sinkhole-caves-underwater-rainforests-mount-gambier/

    MG ( which is South Aust ) has been on the news constantly because allot of Victorians travel there for medical treatment, cause it’s very close to the Victorian border .


    The Vic’s are still in strict stage 4 lockdown ( been so for 5 months )

    and no one wants them in crossing into any other states which are COVID free especially SA we don’t want them here ......Mount Gambia it’s manned by the army and police to keep anyone infected states out.

    especially the Victorians ....so I saying that lots of Victorians are missing out on medical treatment that’s normally obtained in MG

    Victoria has had something like 20.000 infections and lots of deaths compared to SA has had about 460 infections

    @Peter Renfro
     
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    Last edited: Oct 1, 2020
  2. Peter Renfro

    Peter Renfro Veteran Member
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    Finger Lakes.jpg

    I live in pretty much dead center between the two largest lakes Seneca on the left and Cayuga on the right
     
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  3. Yvonne Smith

    Yvonne Smith Senior Staff
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    That looks like a beautiful area to live in, @Peter Renfro , and I have enjoyed looking at the photos you have posted in other threads that show the area around your home.
    Are you close enough that you can drive to Lake Ontario ? Which town to you go to for basic shopping, like groceries, etc ?
     
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  4. Peter Renfro

    Peter Renfro Veteran Member
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    Lake Ontario is about an hour north. Close enough for ice fishing if the ice is good. We are centrally isolated. Seneca Lake is 38 miles long and Cayuga 40. We go either to Ithaca, Watkins Glen, Seneca Falls or Geneva. All are just at or a bit better than 20 miles. Hospital is in Geneva,but most get sent to Rochester about 70 miles. Trumansburg or Ovid we do our bread and butter shopping, but the small town prices are just to high for major groceries.
    The geographical realities prevent us from being anything other that a backwater. That forty five minute drive to get to an interstate kills any chance of industry. We have always been a bit of tourist area, but the wine tourism has really taken off in the last thirty or so years. The state has also opened up the small batch brewery and distillery market. Don't really like that everything seems to be alcohol based,not only with the state blessing but also encouragement.
    I think this is a good place to live, kids graduated in classes of less than a hundred, we still have 4-H, and Future Farmers. More churches than bars. They put a 4 way stop at Main and Seneca last year. been a two way stop since the late sixties. Back during and after the war when Sampson Navy then Air Force and Seneca Army Depot were in full swing there actually was a stop light.
     
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  5. Terry Coywin

    Terry Coywin Veteran Member
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    Wow, that is a lovely area to live in Peter. We've been up that way several times in years past.
     
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  6. Lon Tanner

    Lon Tanner Supreme Member
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    I was born in Newark, New Jersey and spent my pre-teen years 5 to12 in Paterson, New Jersey. The WW 2 years 1941 to 1946 were exciting times for a young kid but I am glad that I never had to spend my teen years and adult hood in either of those two present day hell holes.
     
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  7. John Brunner

    John Brunner Senior Staff
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    I was born in Indiana, and lived in Crawfordsville where the 4H grounds were literally my back yard, and school and Doctor Shannon (office-in-home) were within walking distance.

    Crawfordsville.jpg

    It was nowhere near this built up back then (who here cannot say that?)
    The woods to the left of 4H were larger, and there was only one small 4H building and a stall where they kept a couple of critters. I used to find all sorts of arrowheads in the creek there.

    They would park all sorts of agriculture equipment at the fairgrounds during the off season. I used to climb up in it all the time and play with the controls & levers whenever I wanted. They stored hay above the critter stall, and my elementary school friends and I would just kick around up there.

    All the kids walked to school except for a couple from the farms who got short-bused in. They brought their lunches (there was no cafeteria), and the rest of us walked home to eat, then returned for the afternoon session.

    We moved to Vienna (Fairfax County, VA) in 1963 when I was 9. This was the year after the Beltway opened up, for those familiar with the area.

    My father worked for G.C. Murphy's his entire life, managing store for much of the time, and got transferred quite a bit. He got transferred to the store in the old business district in Arlington VA, which is why we moved.

    [​IMG]

    Pretty retro, huh? Here's what part of that area looks like today:
    [​IMG]

    I got lots of stories of kicking around those old stores with their old hand-operated stock elevators, snack bars where you mixed your own sodas, old time candy counters with nuts roasted on-site, live pet departments with escaped parakeets flying around the store, neon dyed Easter ducks & chicks...

    I lived in Vienna until a couple of years after high school, moved to Richmond under the pretense of helping my father with a staffing shortage in his store there. He had pancreatic cancer and did not want to tell us he was sick. He died a year or so later, I moved back to Fairfax County, living a year in Fairfax and a year in Falls church.

    I got married, ended up buying a house (circa '78) in Vienna. It was a house I used to deliver newspapers to as a kid, right up the street from where I grew up. We divorced soon after, I stayed in the house (I hated apartment life.) That little Podunk town ended up getting national recognition as the town to live in for many years running. I think it was because it was an established bedroom community that was near all the big city stuff, but for the most part density was not gonna change. My tiny 600 ft² home got replaced by a McMansion, just like all the other homes on my block.

    I lived there until 2010, when I moved to Louisa County VA, where I am today (in between Richmond and Charlottesville). My company was closing offices to save real estate costs, and forced folks to work from home. A bunch of us got permission to head for the hills (I was already reporting to someone in another state, so the difference was slight.) One coworker moved to South Africa and kept her DC area job. I chose this location because it was within commuting distance (100 miles) for emergency meetings, and we have a satellite office about 30 miles away where I had a place to work rather than sit at home alone all day.

    Sadly, I see some changes happening in the short time I've been here. Our republic is meant to keep government oversight close to home, but all that seems to mean is you get to witness first-hand the corruption you can do nothing about. Lots of insider deals when developers and politicians speed-date in growing areas.
     
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  8. John Brunner

    John Brunner Senior Staff
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    I think I've been in that part of the state, Hugh. Really pretty area. Would that be Bryce Flooring you refer to (I won't name the county)?
     
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  9. James Hintze

    James Hintze Very Well-Known Member
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    Interesting. I grew up in southeastern Idaho, as a farm boy outside a village of about 750. Our HS graduating class was 28. If I mention the Lost River Range, you'll know where it is.
    Growing up our house was never locked, and when people visited, they didn't knock, but just walked in. An anecdote: As an adult I and family were visiting my parents one summer, and one morning when I got up and came into the kitchen, Dad asked me: 'Did you use the pickup and leave it somewhere?' When I answered no, he just shrugged the shoulders, and went on eating breakfast. 'Dad, if your pickup has been stolen, aren't you going to report it?' "Nawww.' Some time later the pickup drove into the yard. A neighbor's car had run out of gas or something on his way home the night before, snf walking home.he helped himself to Dad's vehicle and drove home.
    I graduated from the U of Idaho. I lived in Austria during my graduate studies, then lived in Baton Rouge Louisiana, Miami FL, and now near Gainesville Fl. Both wife (Grew up in Austria) and I miss the mountains.
     
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  10. Yvonne Smith

    Yvonne Smith Senior Staff
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    I have a friend who lives near Salmon, Idaho, and many years ago, I was helping another friend who needed to get to the Challis area to see his family. It was a long drive, but the scenery was so beautiful there, and the mountains were awesome.
    I lived near Boise for a while, but other than that, I have not spent much time in the southern part of the state. When I was selling insurance, we went as far south as White Bird Pass and Riggins, which is trapped in a narrow valley between two huge mountains and the river.
     
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  11. Terry Coywin

    Terry Coywin Veteran Member
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    A friend and I drove across the country, east to west and back again. Going westward, by the time we reached Idaho, all I could remember was Sun Valley. I know Averell Harriman had built it and Ernest Hemingway had lived there. Didn't have much time to linger, but as I recall, it was a beautiful place.
     
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  12. James Hintze

    James Hintze Very Well-Known Member
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    Did you drive over the mountain pass from Ketchum to the Lost River Range (where I grew up)?
     
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  13. Terry Coywin

    Terry Coywin Veteran Member
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    Yes, we did. By that time I was utterly exhausted as driving always tired me out quickly. From Idaho on, I did not want to do anything but sleep. We were pressed for time as we had a wedding to go to and since my old college roomie hadn't seen much of the country, wanted to drive. I wanted to fly. Never again.
     
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  14. Silvia Benoit

    Silvia Benoit Veteran Member
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    In Yonkers, New York.......about 40 minutes by car from NYC
     
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  15. Silvia Benoit

    Silvia Benoit Veteran Member
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    I was born and lived in Buenos Aires until 1980; my parents were French. In 1980 I moved to US and I always lived in NY except from 1997 to 2001 when I resided in Pennsylvania.
     
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