We live in the middle of nowhere...I knew this before, but yesterday, the point was really driven home. There is a 25 mile stretch of highway between the animal shelter and my house and I guess I was a bit more observant than usual as I drove along. I passed about 15 vehicles parked in front yards which were for sale by owner, including a huge pontoon boat and not one, but two old hearses. (The hearses weren't even for sale by the same person, they were a few miles apart...what are the odds?) I also drove past a couple of "Deer Processing" signs, and a very perplexing "Meat Madness" sign--I probably don't want to find out what that means! I passed a few 4 wheelers racing through the ditches on the side of the road, but most disturbing was the guy on a dirtbike...he was wearing protective safety gear and a helmet as he sped through the fields, but the chubby, bald baby who was balanced on his lap was not! I arrived home just in time to see the neighbors trussing a whole dead pig to a spit in preperation for today's pig roast. I'm really not one of those preachy, judgmental vegetarians, but seeing a whole animal like that, ears and snout and all, was too much for me--the sight of it made me cry a bit. It's a lot easier to watch someone eat a hamburger, with its total lack of facial features!
There are some benefits to living in such a remote area, though. At night there are no city lights competing with the starlight, so the sky is all twinkly and beautiful. We routinely see deer, rabbits, ducks, geese, squirrels and tons of songbirds in our yard. There is almost no traffic on our road (although I fear that the ratio of drunk drivers to sober drivers may be disproportionately high in this area!) And there are lots of gorgeous things growing in our yard, like pears:
And roses:
And these pretty red things:
And apples:
And these beautiful blue things:
And these lovely yellow things:
And these attractive pink things:
Hmm, when I lived in Norway, I used to blame my ignorance of the flora on the fact that I had never seen these strange Arctic plants before...now I don't have an excuse. Beyond the basic roses, tulips and dandelions, I really don't know what anything is. But they're beautiful to see, and all the flowers and the stars and the wildlife and the amazing lake views more than make up for the, ahem, quirks of rural life!