By EDWINA FREEME
It started with a drinking game. My husband and I would sit with a glass of red in front of Escape to The Country and have a small sip every time anyone asked to be shown period homes and then complained the ceilings were too low and the house too dark.
Or, anytime they specifically requested an eat-in kitchen, an Aga, and visible beams and were then put off because said property was too near the M1 or the A32 or the V65.
By the time then inevitably fell in love with a barn conversion in Sussex they couldn’t afford, our glasses would be empty and we would be deep in conversation.
This moving to the country thing. Could we do that too?
Late last year, we did it. I threw in the towel on what was probably the best job I’ll ever have, we packed up our young daughter and life in the ‘burbs of Brisbane and moved out of town.
We now live in an incredibly rundown Queenslander house on 11 acres of snake-ridden farmland in the Lockyer Valley, about an hour west of Brisbane.
We’re above the flood plain, which is what everyone always asks about first. The second thing they ask about is the snakes, at which point we put on our most resigned faces and shrug. They’re just a fact of life here, you know? You do what you have to do.
I think that implies we’re out there, calmly knocking them over the head with a shovel (which is of course, incredibly dangerous, somewhat immoral and highly illegal), but I can assure you our approach is more from the shout-at-them-until-they-take-off-and-then-stay-inside-for-the-next-week school of reptile management.
Our property is more of a renovator’s dismay than delight. It features not one but two rundown houses, each seemingly trying to beat the other in a slow, creaky race to collapse.
Top Comments
I don't know one teenager who'd choose to live in the country over the city. Give your kids the freedom of public transport, meeting friends after school and hanging out in the city free to roam and experience life. Give them a chance at getting a good job. Let them hang out with educated people and get some street smarts, not just drive their beat up old commodore up and down the one main street, stereo blaring, looking for action.
im 19 and would chose the country over the city any day.
If you honestly believe that's what it's like growing up in the country then you're incredibly ignorant. Not at all what my teenage years were like 10-5 years ago in Gympie, Queensland. Definite advantages to living in the city - but your take on country life is not my experience.
I love our country life! We farm for a living, plus have a rural ag sales business as well. Busy life for us, and there are times where a 9-5 seems like such a wonderful idea.
Country Life Bonuses:
Kids can be naked at any age. Grown-ups too. No-one to see you when the closest neighbour is 20 minutes drive away!
Everyone getting a real, true understanding and appreciation for the food we eat and the water we live by.
Dirt can be fun! When we have enough water to fill the paddle pool, it then gets dumped in the back yard for muddy puddles, mud pies and bike stunts.
Country Life negatives:
Food shopping is ridiculously expensive. Everything shuts early. The bakery will actually run out of bread at about lunch time.
Services will quite often say we don't exist in the system. I assure them that I am actually here, but regardless they seem to think I am a liar.
It is such a long drive to anywhere. Two and a half hours to my closest family member!
Small town syndrome, where everyone knows your intimate details. Not a fan of this one at all!