Bus enthusiasts; LOL Does anyone really like travelling on a bus?? Horrors!!!..![]()
.Hey!!! I resent that! I really had an old school bus that I drove from British Columbia to the Maritime Provinces in the 90's with 3 teenagers. Now that was a trip! We took the seats out, bolted down a table and some plywood beds, put some air mattresses on them and hit the road. Took three months but we saw a lot of Canada. The only Province we didn't go to was Newfoundland and that was only because the ferry charged by the foot. :lofl:
Sorry, got a bit off topic there!
It's not for me, I've been way too spoiled to conveniences, but am convinced those who go that route live longer. IMO, it would be extremely hard work living off the land, but it's been done for centuries.
Spoken like a true anarchist Phil. There are indeed families who still live like that, aaand we still call them 'hippies'.
They tend to produce clueless kids who when they have to go out into the world are 'prey'. They dwell in welfare queues.
The joys of smug self suffiency and being at one with nature won't qualify them for a job much above roustabout in someone else's plant nursery.
To be entirely self sufficient in today's society means living a far lower level lifestyle than the norm and is that fair on the offspring? Education is compulsory, the kids are either home schooled by equally clueless parents, or go to school with others who have access to all the goodies the 'hippy' kids parents can't afford to offer them. Fine for the adults who choose that way of life but not every child will see the lifestyle as wonderful and resentment results.
Eventually the farm can't support the extended family and someone has to go and fend for themselves. Land good enough to support a family is expensive. Where do the kids get the money to buy another farm? They can't even afford internet connection and mobile/cell phones are too expensive for their income from selling apples and eggs to passing tourists to support. Imagine a kid looking for work these days who doesn't even know how to text?
They have to go out and work for da man to make a dollar and they're doing it from a handicapped position. Networking, old school tie connections, technology no, peer communication etc that can form a large part of what career a child achieves is denied to them. The world they grew up in doesn't give them a hint of how life is in the business world. There are only so many positions open for landscapers and field hands and they don't pay enough to buy a farm that's a certainty.
Technology is expensive, just fitting into society is expensive. I see it as selfish of 'hippy' parents who feel that merely feeding the kids and expecting that being at one with nature is enough these days. It really isn't.
Much as I hate to say it, Di is right - these days kids 'need' their electronics; don't exactly love to work, and would find it nearly impossible to get a job, regardless of how hard they work. Years ago, employers were glad to hire farm kids for their work ethic, but I know few adults who are hard workers these days; let alone kids. The world has changed from what we knew, and it's not coming back, far as I can see.
I don't see them as 'backwards' or 'clueless' by any means; I don't see city people as being able to survive if the grocery stores closed down; what on earth would they eat?? Those hippy farmers could beat just about any city dweller in basic survival, for sure.
You are still thinking idealistically Phil. You're viewing things from the city perspective and from how things are with people you know. Minimalist in the city is different from minimalist in the scrub. I knew a couple like that too, but they weren't inflicting their spartan lifestyle on their children. They didn't have any.
I'm also viewing from personal experience. Not far from the town I moved from was an area of said 'self sustainers' and it was redneck central down there. If your car broke down you could buy the wheels back from the nearest farm. Most have never heard of Socrates and the kids are 'out of the loop' and only come into town to go to school and fight with the 'haves.'
They aren't all mental giants with heads full of philosophy, many are the following generations of the 60s dopehead dropouts who don't know any better way to make a living. They don't qualify to home school because they barely made it past kindergarten themselves. Their kids don't all come out with PhDs either, many get through the system unable to read without moving their lips. Don't 'generalise' that all those bucolic self sustainers are philosophers. Most of their epiphanies occur while testing the efficacy of the latest 'crop'.
Bear in mind too that our welfare system is far more generous and easier to access than yours.
These people get all kinds of family support, 'baby bonus' payments and exemptions from land taxes if the farm is small enough and derives no income. Yet they still can't afford to support mobile phone bills and internet costs, if they are even able to connect to it. Many don't even have the power connected because it can cost around 10 to 20 grand to get lines in from the road to where some of them live. They can't afford massive solar panels to power more than a fridge and a TV and even fuel for the generators costs heaps here. Those with big families live from the welfare, not from what the farm produces, and that's a great grounding for the kids to grow up with too isn't it?
The honestly self sustaining turn out kids who have learned little else but how to milk a cow and to do without what everyone else has.
The welfare reliant ones turn theirs out with a welfare entitlement attitude and no prospect of being any more benefit to society than their parents. How is living off a farm a great option again????
Yes it's generalizing but there's enough of both those types to make one seriously suspicious of that lifestyle being much more than a self indulgence of the non competitive.
Do you really think that most small farmers, including several of my relatives, take on jobs for the fun of it? They'd love to live that 1890s lifestyle, but necessity to keep machinery maintained, the kids dressed and educated decently, the fencing to stay standing, and the land out of the hands of the banks keeps them working. The properties they have are largely pastoral and livestock based. The land isn't good enough for cropping and it's cheaper to buy a box of vegies than for one of them to stay home and dig weeds instead of making a salary.
There is also a difference in availability of good farmland. Sure there are little patches that accommodate that lifestyle, but they cost. Growing enough to eat isn't enough, you can't grow jeans and boots and tractors and fuel. They can't grow the money to buy a vehicle or to pay for it's registration costs. To produce saleable product for cash income requires more good land for more crop, or machinery for making cheese or whatever their niche is, and the means to market it.
In essence you need money to buy a lifestyle that doesn't require money.
Phil,
You are arguing from view of how it theoretically should/might work, in the right circumstances, in a suitable situation, and with the right minded people who are affecting no-one's lives but their own. That seems to be the viewpoint of the anti-government philosophy.
Simply imagine the wished for scenario and then attempt to conjure up ways to make the theory fit. It doesn't fit. You'd have to the change the world around it to make it fit. It's possible for some perhaps, but rarely happens.
I'm arguing from the viewpoint of how the world really works on small, 10 to 500 acre properties... here.
Other than a retired couple on the pension or welfare feeders, small time agricultural pursuits don't work all that well. We have 10% of your population and of that not much of it lives outside the cities. Not a lot of scope for making money from passing traffic if there's only 3 cars a day other than locals doing the trip. Getting the produce to market can cost more in fuel than it's worth, but that's nitpicking, I do that a lot.
I dropped out of the 'competition' too, I was lucky enough to be able to afford to. I, like you have no one relying on me to feed them. But had I had kids who needed to go to University and required the techno trappings of life to give them an even chance in life then I'd have taken another tack.
What started this is your shock horror that someone on the land should also have a job 'in town' as though that is a failing or something.
I see it as a responsible way of keeping the land in family hands to pass down to any of the kids who wants that life while still giving them all the options for other careers available to their peers. If they so choose to go that way! Being virtuously poor and philosophically 'free' may not seem tempting to a budding entrepreneur.
My argument is simply that parents need to think deeply about how poor they want their kids to be unnecessarily and about what options they might be depriving them of. What's fine for Mum and Dad isn't always what their children want. If they do want to 'compete', and they do want that Firefart then they should be given every opportunity to learn how to go about getting it. Keepin' 'em down on the farm isn't giving them street smarts.
Having to be home in time for farm chores isn't giving them the time to keep up with the social networking of their peers. I know, and agree, that is a horrible world out there, and one I don't want to live in either, but it IS the world they are being raised to survive in. It ain't 1890 any more.
Those I refer to with jobs and farms have kids who are indeed up to speed with their peers despite their relative isolation. 'Hippies' kids are not.
Being a dirt poor, welfare sucking, while still claiming to have the right to be living a 'new age' sustainable lifestyle as a shining example to society in general doesn't cut it for me. Sorry. But really you are envisioning people who already have money, are simply hobby farmers, livin' the dream but with no real world responsibilities right? Plenty of them around but they're only playing at it.
Guess who our biggest contributors are to the suicide figures here? Yep, small time farmers. That is, the ones who are trying to make a living solely from their own properties and not coping with being the generation that can't keep it viable any more.
We have a bit of a translation problem going on too. A 'homestead' here usually refers to the owners house located somewhere on a 'Station' (ranch) of something between 50,000 to a million acres with half a day's drive to the front gate. It is usually a small village unto itself with workers houses and repair shops on site.
Lesser acreages are referred to as 'Properties', as in a cattle Property etc., of a few hundred to a few thousand acres, and smaller ones still as farms whatever they produce.
It gets more complicated as you can have a Sheep or Cattle Station, but not a Wheat Station. Even if you grow crops from horizon to horizon you're still just a 'Grower' on a ...name your crop...' Property.'
Then you have places like Cubby Station that used to be into cattle and since switched to growing cotton resulting in explosive angsty spit fights in parliarment and the media, but is still referred to by the old name of Station, even though it no longer applies.
So as you can see we are arguing apples and oranges here. I know that the self sustainers you laud are viewed with contempt as 'hobby farmers' by those who consider themselves 'real' people of the land who have to work in mines or wherever to keep the wolf from the door and the title deeds within the family.
It's a matter of viewpoint isn't it?![]()
I'm not sure what you're tearing up about at the mention of welfare. Some of those big families on welfare can get thousands$$ a week! ... and yes, you're right they don't qualify as 'sustainable farmers' really, they just sprang to mind because whatever they spend it on it sure isn't their kids.
Here's the link to our Welfare benefits. Enjoy! ... and give me a heads up when you intend emmigrating, I'll buy some decent coffee.
http://australia.gov.au/topics/benefits-payments-and-services/
btw: the exchange rates don't make a lot of difference, until 2 months or so ago our dollar was worth more than yours.![]()