The hills are alive. May 6, 2008
Posted by ourfriendben in homesteading.Tags: country living
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Our friend Ben is sitting here in the Hawk’s Haven home office, trying to concentrate on an editing assignment. But this is difficult because of what’s going on outside. No, I don’t mean the beautiful spring day just begging me to come out and relax on the deck, the greenhouse and gardens calling for attention, or the goldfinches flocking to the feeders. Our friend Ben is talking about the noise.
People think that country life is quiet, but nothing could be further from the truth. At this moment, a farmer is pulling a raucous piece of equipment through the field in front of our house. Next door, our neighbor is running his chainsaw. The neighbor on the other side is riding his mower across his yard for what seems like the third time this week. (Perhaps he’s trying to give our friend Ben, whose lawn-mowing efforts are casual at best, a subtle hint.) In the field behind our property, bull calves are lowing loudly in what sounds ominously like a “please don’t eat us” plea. And this is just the beginning.
Motorcycle cavalcades roar regularly along the tiny backroad in front of our friend Ben’s home, having discovered this scenic rural “tour route.” Rifle fire blasts frequently across our friend Ben’s synapses, as farmers practice for hunting season or actually take to the fields and woods shooting. (Our friend Ben goes around for months in terror for our deer-sized, deer-colored golden retriever Molly’s life.) Our friend Ben knows that, when the farm day is done, the farm families will take to their fields, roaring over them in groups on ATVs like some post-apocalyptic film set, though, rather than cresting the hill in order to wipe out the Hawk’s Haven family, they’re just relaxing before dark. And, of course, this doesn’t even touch on the sonic boom of the jets passing overhead, the thump-thump of the news and medical helicopters, and the relatively frequent and terrifying rat-tat-tat of the military helicopters, black and always flying in formation.
No, the country isn’t quiet. It’s no bouquet for the nose, either. Our friend Ben has to rush poor Molly back inside when the farmers are spraying toxic herbicides and other chemicals on their fields, the curious, throat-grabbing sensation of the smell making me feel like we’re being napalmed. (The poor chickens!) And of course, the stench of freshly manured fields is a sewage-like smell all its own, described by one cynical colleague as “Mennonite in Paris” after the equally stinky perfume “Evening in Paris.” (We are actually fortunate to have many Mennonite and Amish farmers in this area.) Mind you, as you know if you’ve ever smelled it, neither cow nor horse manure smells bad, per se—all that forage gives both a distinctive sweetish smell. It’s when cows, and especially pigs, have been confined in barns all winter, with their manure piled up and unable to dry out or compost, that it reeks. Agh!!! It takes several weeks for the fields to lose that spread-manure stench. Kinda hard to take when your own yard is ablaze with flowers and you want to go outside and smell them, not pig, uh, excrement.
So what’s my point here? It’s simply this: That what country living offers is not some return to the primeval Garden. Your neighbors are still trying to make a living, and they’re doing it in a noisy, sometimes stinky, way. If you’re moving from the suburbs, the gunfire will make you think you’ve stumbled into “Deliverance;” if you’re fleeing urban life, you can console yourself with the thought that at least no robbery, vandalism, or gang fighting is involved.
Instead, what country living offers is space: Space to spread out, to free yourself. Spacious, amazing views stretching out in in every direction. Space to live your life free of neighbors’ walls and windows on every side of your home, or neighbors crashing around over your head, below your feet, and on all sides of your suspended apartment/condo cube. Space uncluttered by the endless petty restrictions of condo boards and neighborhood regulations. (What do you mean, no veggies, no chickens?!) Space to free your mind, to think, to see. To be. Our friend Ben thinks that’s worth a little pig manure.




The aroma of manure — “Mennonite in Paris” to some in eastern Pennsylvania– is at least a natural smell and a small price for the wide vistas that stretch to the horizon. Yes, the noises stand out, but that’s because they generally have so little competition.
Good point, Thomas!
I’m bleary-eyed, caffeine-deprived and quite cranky today. How very timely your comparison of city and country life! Our upstairs neighbors woke us up at 1:30 a.m. with a screaming fight, slapping, stomping and door slamming. I wonder if a load of stinky manure spread on their front lawn would make them stop screaming at each other? I know, I know, that was not your point. Did I mention I’m cranky? Thanks for the much needed laugh–it helped put the world back into perspective, somewhat.
–Curmudgeon
Most welcome, Curmudgeon! A well-timed shotgun blast might restore quiet, as well…
I thought it was just my dad that could make being out in the country that noisy. Tractor, chainsaw, frontend loader, indignant cattle after being “worked.” I know just what you are talking about, but my family is the one making all the noise.
Deb
Ha!!!!!!!!!!!!
So true. It’s funny, but the first day of deer hunting season when we had first moved here it took me a little while to register that there were gunshots outside.
We live near someone who has a ton of dogs as well as a cattle farm. (Luckily not close enough to be able to smell them though). We are about a mile from the highway, but we can still hear the larger trucks drive by. Then there’s the septic trucks and logging trucks that seem to flow in an almost constant stream by our house. Okay, maybe not that frequently but now that I’m a country girl it sure seems that way!
Logging trucks! I remember them from a trip to Oregon, and they’re enormous! And gee, I just heard what sounded like an explosion outside…
Noise Pollution. Sometimes it drives me batty. I live in a small town neighborhood but late at night when young men leave their girlfriend’s homes, they drive like a bat out of hades to get home. The rev up all barrels to get the heck home by curfew and haul tail to get 500ft down the road to the stop sign. Then they leave the stop sign at 0-60 in 5 seconds to get another 500 feet. This wakes the howling dogs……redneck 1 and 2 come out on their front porches scratching where you don’t care to see them scratching…to yell at a car that is clearly already 1000 feet down the road. Now that is my 10 seconds after midnight.
Ha!!! But on the plus side, at least they still *have* curfews!
We moved from a cookie-cutter neighborhood where the houses are so close together that we could see right in the neighbor’s kitchen. Luckily, I loved those neighbors and we would often lament, “I had the windows open last night, did you hear me yelling at my kids? Please don’t call CPS.”
Now we can yell at our kids all we want, because we live on four, wonderful acres!
I love my space with all my heart. I’m quite sure I’d suffer mentally if we had to move back to a neighborhood. We don’t have any working farms nearby and so only have the motorcycles on the highway as our primary source of noise pollution.
As for your beloved Molly during hunting season.
http://www.tworoadsfitness.com/lightedlabcoat.html
Awww, I love the “lab coat,” CeeCee! thanks!!! And boy, do I envy you those four acres. We barely have one. (Of course, if I had four, then I’d really get into trouble! Goats, turkeys, guinea hens, geese, woodlot, ponds… Hmmm. Well, as I always say, first, the lottery, then the land!)