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BS: Remote places where you have lived

Bert 29 Jan 09 - 01:09 AM
Stilly River Sage 29 Jan 09 - 01:11 AM
Bert 29 Jan 09 - 01:14 AM
VirginiaTam 29 Jan 09 - 01:20 AM
Bert 29 Jan 09 - 01:49 AM
Barry Finn 29 Jan 09 - 02:51 AM
Peace 29 Jan 09 - 03:00 AM
Georgiansilver 29 Jan 09 - 03:03 AM
Jim Carroll 29 Jan 09 - 03:12 AM
CarolC 29 Jan 09 - 03:30 AM
Joe Offer 29 Jan 09 - 03:45 AM
Michael 29 Jan 09 - 04:41 AM
gnu 29 Jan 09 - 05:45 AM
Janie 29 Jan 09 - 06:22 AM
Leadfingers 29 Jan 09 - 06:44 AM
GUEST,Cats 29 Jan 09 - 08:00 AM
Lizzie Cornish 1 29 Jan 09 - 08:13 AM
VirginiaTam 29 Jan 09 - 08:22 AM
Bee-dubya-ell 29 Jan 09 - 10:14 AM
Stilly River Sage 29 Jan 09 - 10:22 AM
Desert Dancer 29 Jan 09 - 10:31 AM
Jeri 29 Jan 09 - 11:42 AM
CarolC 29 Jan 09 - 12:03 PM
Stilly River Sage 29 Jan 09 - 12:27 PM
HuwG 29 Jan 09 - 12:35 PM
bubblyrat 29 Jan 09 - 01:10 PM
artbrooks 29 Jan 09 - 01:18 PM
Becca72 29 Jan 09 - 01:24 PM
Ebbie 29 Jan 09 - 01:24 PM
mouldy 29 Jan 09 - 02:53 PM
Rapparee 29 Jan 09 - 03:12 PM
GUEST,astro 29 Jan 09 - 03:53 PM
Michael from Manitoba 29 Jan 09 - 03:58 PM
Michael from Manitoba 29 Jan 09 - 04:00 PM
Michael from Manitoba 29 Jan 09 - 04:02 PM
Charley Noble 29 Jan 09 - 04:54 PM
GUEST 29 Jan 09 - 07:14 PM
JennieG 29 Jan 09 - 07:53 PM
kendall 29 Jan 09 - 08:03 PM
Alice 29 Jan 09 - 08:53 PM
Alice 29 Jan 09 - 09:02 PM
Charley Noble 29 Jan 09 - 09:24 PM
Alice 29 Jan 09 - 10:40 PM
Donuel 29 Jan 09 - 10:50 PM
katlaughing 29 Jan 09 - 10:53 PM
Charley Noble 30 Jan 09 - 08:52 AM
artbrooks 30 Jan 09 - 09:16 AM
3refs 31 Jan 09 - 09:03 AM
Charley Noble 31 Jan 09 - 10:04 AM
Naemanson 31 Jan 09 - 08:26 PM
Bert 31 Jan 09 - 10:33 PM
Rowan 01 Feb 09 - 06:22 PM
Charley Noble 01 Feb 09 - 09:36 PM
CamiSu 01 Feb 09 - 11:15 PM
diesel 02 Feb 09 - 05:50 AM
Mark Ross 02 Feb 09 - 02:37 PM
Alice 02 Feb 09 - 02:56 PM
frogprince 02 Feb 09 - 03:02 PM
Alice 02 Feb 09 - 03:03 PM
Alice 02 Feb 09 - 03:24 PM
Alice 02 Feb 09 - 03:41 PM
dwditty 02 Feb 09 - 03:59 PM
GUEST,Mrr 02 Feb 09 - 04:29 PM
skipy 02 Feb 09 - 05:16 PM
Charley Noble 03 Feb 09 - 08:24 AM
Amos 03 Feb 09 - 11:17 AM
GUEST,Chris B (Born Again Scouser) 03 Feb 09 - 11:44 AM

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Subject: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Bert
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 01:09 AM

A spin off from the cello scrotum thread.

How about Waggoners Wells, Hants, England.


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Subject: RE: Obit: Remote places where you have lived
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 01:11 AM

That intro to this thread is enough to make ones head spin. I haven't read the other thread to have some context. Just how remote and how strange are you looking for?

SRS


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Bert
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 01:14 AM

Anywhere that you have lived that you consider to be remote.

Waggoners Wells is in the home counties in England and is 3/4 of a mile from the nearest road.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: VirginiaTam
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 01:20 AM

Athens West Virginia when it was only Concord College and next to nothing else.

and George W Bush Land - a farm house outside Midland Texas. God I hated it there.

The best was Kent's Store, Fluvanna, Virginia. Church about 2 miles away from our house, General Store and (oddly) a Funeral Home about a mile away and a handful of farms in just over hollering distance from us, fields, and woods and stream. Just lovely.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Bert
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 01:49 AM

Here are some pics Actually the it was half a mile to the nearest road and 3/4 of a mile to the nearest main road where you could catch a bus. which is really remote in South East England.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Barry Finn
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 02:51 AM

Lahina Roadstead, Maui. It was a 1/4 mile swim to the shore. After leaving a bars at 2pm, the 1/4 mile swim back to the boat/home was spooky, unless there were dolphins in the vicinity. I always kept a change of clohes & a bar of soap in the car just in case there was no dingy & sharks had been sighted.

Barry


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Peace
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 03:00 AM

FGH.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Georgiansilver
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 03:03 AM

Milton Damerel in North Devon... not that remote really but certainly the most remote place I have lived.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Jim Carroll
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 03:12 AM

London - they don't come any more remote
Jim Carroll


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: CarolC
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 03:30 AM

One place (in Garrett County, Maryland), the nearest neighbor was a mile away, and the nearest paved road was about two and a half miles away, but there was a dirt road that ran past the house. Our mailbox was also about two and a half miles away at that location.

Another place (also in Garrett County), the nearest neighbor was about a quarter of a mile away, but so was the nearest road, and we had to walk the quarter of a mile from the road to the house in two or more feet of snow all winter, and the winters are very long in Garrett County. That house was literally in the middle of a cow pasture. The cows kept trying to get in the basement to get away from flies. Sometimes we would come home and find a cow with its head and shoulders in the basement and its big behind sticking out the door.

In another place, we were the last house on Painter Hollow Road a few miles from Fort Ashby, West Virginia, and after us there was only trees and hills for miles and miles. The nearest neighbor before us was about a quarter of a mile away.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Joe Offer
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 03:45 AM

Racine, Wisconsin.
San Angelo, Texas
Fresno, California

You don't want to go to any of those places...


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Michael
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 04:41 AM

The remote place where we live is down the back of the sofa.

I'll get me cushion cover!
Mike


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: gnu
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 05:45 AM

Nain, Labrador. Makkovik, Labrador.

When I used to hunt partridge, I would spend as much time as possible in a travel trailer way back near the bog country in Kent County, New Brunswick. Spent 6 weeks there once. Only saw humans (well, my relatives) on Saturdays.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Janie
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 06:22 AM

Richie County, WV - 3 miles out a dirt track.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Leadfingers
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 06:44 AM

Habilayn - Forward supply Airstrip in The Radfan Mountains - What usd to be the Aden Protectorate .


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: GUEST,Cats
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 08:00 AM

not seriously remote for down here but loads of people think we are.. We live in the hamlet of Rillaton on Bodmin Moor, 8 houses and 2 farms but what a fabulous community atmosphere especially at Wassail and Crying the Neck when the whole hamlet turns out.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Lizzie Cornish 1
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 08:13 AM

Sidmouth.

I've lived here for 8 years now. You can go into so many shops here for years and you don't get that friendly "Hi there! How ARE you!" (unless you come into our National Trust shop of course. :0)   In every place I've ever lived, (apart from London), I've always got to know people really fast, but nope, not here.

Never lived in such a 'remote' place, where people keep behind their doors or stay in little cliques..So weird.

I was talking to two people the other day about the local GP surgery here. They were both telling me how unfriendly and cold some of the staff are. One lady told me that when she *was* actually treated really kindly by one of the receptionists, she burst into tears, as she was overcome with emotion at being shown such feeling. She's a former nurse, too. Sad, huh?

Anyone wanna buy my house? :0)

Went back to Dartmoor yesterday..now how 'remote' is that? Within minutes of getting off the bus.."HI! Where have you BEEN? Haven't seen you for AGES!" came floating out of one of the shops.....even the bus driver, on the return journey said a really cheery hello to me...and the last time I saw him was 9 years back, but instantly, there was the warmth and friendliness.   

I didn't want to come back here..

Ho hum..

Curse the housing market slump... :0(


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: VirginiaTam
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 08:22 AM

Cats - I think I have been through there to see the Hurlers. We kept getting lost and going round in circles. Lucky you. Such a lovely area.

Bert the photos are gorgeous.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Bee-dubya-ell
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 10:14 AM

I live in a fairly remote location. It's 1/4 mile through the woods from my house to the paved road, three miles down that road to the nearest highway, ten miles to the nearest small town (population 500), twenty miles to the nearest town of any real size, and forty miles to the nearest real city. There are about twenty families that live either on our road or on adjoining spurs. That's probably enough to merit some sort of community name, but we haven't been dubbed with one yet. When describing where we live to others, terms like "a few miles north of" or "between X and Y" tend to figure into the conversation pretty regularly.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 10:22 AM

Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument probably fits the bill then. 150 miles from Phoenix or Tucson, where you did any major shopping. 35 miles from Ajo where you did overpriced shopping in little stores for bare essentials if you ran out and had to make a trip or right at the border was Lukeville, a really high-priced wide spot in the road with way overpriced gas and groceries. 2 miles across the border to Sonoyta, Sonora, Mexico for groceries and dining when the border is open. Some groceries and other purchases can't be brought across the border. Nowadays Sonoyta is a rather dangerous place, but it was a sleepy desert oasis when I lived in the area over 25 years ago.

SRS


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Desert Dancer
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 10:31 AM

Kabul, Afghanistan. Suburbia there (at the time -- back when the King was still in), but pretty remote from what I as a 3rd-grader thought of as civilisation.

~ Becky in Tucson


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Jeri
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 11:42 AM

I've been places that were remote, but never lived anywhere very remote. I've had this fantasy of one day standing somewhere and looking in all directions without seeing some sign that people had been there before. Out in the Mohave desert, I could see power poles and roads. Same with the woods in New Hampshire. You think you've finally found it and then look down to see a bottle cap or look up to see a contrail or a plastic bag stuck in a tree.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: CarolC
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 12:03 PM

This is a good place to go for not seeing any signs of humans...

La Verendrye Provincial Park

At least it was when I was there in the early '70s. We were canoe camping, so we didn't even see any trails for most of the time we were there. We saw a couple of places where other people had camped, and trails at some of the portages, but most of the time (about ten days and about 100 miles), we saw no signs of human activities. Except sometimes at night, we could see Skylab traveling across the sky, but it looked more like a star than something man made.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 12:27 PM

I was travelling across Colorado into Utah and passed through Dinosaur National Monument during late fall, a quiet time of year. I drove up to a picnic area (I'm looking at a map now) called Escalante Overlook. I got out of the truck, the only person there, and got myself some lunch and looked around. I could see the highway down below, but at that time of year there were no insects or birds, no animals, nothing, no wind. It almost hurt my ears it was so silent. It's not even like in a cave, where you can hear your own breath and echo from steps and such. It was a wide open bright cool space without a speck of noise.

SRS


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: HuwG
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 12:35 PM

Consolidated Muchison Mines; a mining camp in South Africa 30 miles from Tzaneen in one direction, but only 20 miles from Palabora (another mining town) in the other.

OK, there were several hundred miners and some of their families living there, but for an expatriate Brit, it could get hostile, especially when the British Lions tour of 1980 produced some bad feeling.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: bubblyrat
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 01:10 PM

Not easy to find anywhere really remote in England, but---as a child,aged about 10,my family lived for a while in a remote cottage,on a hill,three miles from the village of Easebourne ,in Sussex.It had previously been inhabited by a Cowdray estate (for whom my father worked) gamekeeper . I don't know what you would call a "gamekeeper" in the USA, but in England,he is the man who rears and protects pheasants,partridges,etc.,so rich people can shoot them !!
Anyway,the house had NO electricity,so we had paraffin (kerosene)lamps and candles at night.The water supply was at the end of a 3-mile plastic pipeline serving cattle-troughs on nearby farms----ok in winter,but in summer when the cows were a-drinkin'all day,we had no pressure !!There was only one other house anywhere near us, so I only had one friend (sadly,another boy !!).There was a deep well in the garden,which gave me nightmares !!
But-----we were surrounded by quiet,peaceful forests,full of deer,squirrels,lizards,snakes,birds,and I could explore (which I did !) to my heart's content . .....And I LOVED every minute of it (except the well-dreams !). Go back there tomorrow if I could ?? You bet !!


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: artbrooks
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 01:18 PM

Salt Lake City, Utah...a l o n g way from civilization.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Becca72
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 01:24 PM

Jeffersonville, Vermont. 5 businesses in town: gas station, hardware store, restaurant, PO and a UHaul. It was about 15 miles to the nearest grocery store. I moved there from the largest city in Maine (which still ain't sayin' much) and was kept awake at night by the sounds of peepers....and nothing else.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Ebbie
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 01:24 PM

The remotest place I have lived - except in my mind! - was in the Oregon Coast Range. It wasn't all that far from a small town (Yamhill, Oregon, the town that Nicholas Kristof, the world-traveling journalist, is from) but we had no neighbors and the dirt drive leading to our cabin dropped sharply down from the gravel road above. I was 21 and lived there one winter with my two brothers. They had a rural milk route- their day began at 3:30 in the morning and they were home again before noon. We had a German Shepherd dog and a milk goat that thought she was a dog. Wherever the dog and I went in those woods the goat traeled along.

Jeri, I had that experience of no sign of human habitation. I was camping with my brother in the Cascade mountains way, way high in the mountains. The first night I stood outside and there was nothing to say that humans had ever been invented, except the camper behind me. Just the black sky, silver stars and shadowed mountain peaks and deep dark valleys.

Another time we were camping on the Wallowa river in southern Washington state. I went for a hike upstream on an old jeep trail. Three miles or so from camp I heard what I identified as a vehicle coming up behind me.

I really didn't want to meet anyone so far from others and I thought fast - Should I head back briskly and when I met them just wave breezily and keep moving? Or should I go to the river's edge and pretend to talk with somone on the water? Or?

While I dithered there, I suddenly realized what the sound was: an airplane.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: mouldy
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 02:53 PM

Living in a Land Rover/tent for nearly 4 months while travelling from South Africa to the UK. For example: northern Niger desert...camping about 300yards from a main route (tyre tracks which go from oil drum to oil drum, one km apart)....not even a blade of grass...no other vehicles for over 12 hours...peaceful!

Andrea


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Rapparee
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 03:12 PM

Line Papa, Korea.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: GUEST,astro
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 03:53 PM

Pleasant Valley Idaho...out in the boonies...

I lived in a commune there in the early 70's in a mansion that had been built in the 1880's. There was French wood paneling that had been brought out in wagons, its own cemetery, and three stories. It was nowhere near any towns, but we had some of the wildest parties that I can't remember....ah, youth...


astro


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Michael from Manitoba
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 03:58 PM

Interesting topic, interesting posts.
For me:
A log cabin in the Klondike valley, Yukon
Whale Cove (pop. 200) on the left-hand coast of Hudson Bay
Currently, the middle of a square mile of Manitoba bush. Closest neighbors: jetliner passengers passing at 30,000feet


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Michael from Manitoba
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 04:00 PM

That should read [Hudson Bay] I've spent too long away from folks


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Michael from Manitoba
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 04:02 PM

Is there something wrong with me? I wrote 'That should read Hudson Bay' But the important bit didn't post. Duh.
    Anything enclosed in <angle brackets> is read as an HTML command, and is invisible (unless you know certain tricks) ;-)
    -Joe offer, Forum Moderator-


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Charley Noble
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 04:54 PM

How about Emdeber, Ethiopia, in the heart of the Gurage cultural area? I worked and lived there for a year in a traditional round thatched house from 1967-68, when I was serving as a Peace Corps teacher in their secondary school. Emdeber is about two hours southwest of Addis Ababa by reliable car, longer if not reliable. Oddly enough, I'll be making my first return visit there in a couple of weeks and will be soon posting an introductory thread with links to my website where I'll be posting some old pictures and hopefully some new ones.

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: GUEST
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 07:14 PM

Oenpelli in Arnhem Land in the upper back blocks of the Northern Territory, Australia was pretty special. Living in a one room donga occasionally invaded by King Brown snakes - thank goodness for our Doberman.

YIU
gecko


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: JennieG
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 07:53 PM

Rowan, are you reading this thread? I'm pretty sure Rowan has lived/worked in Antartica.

Cheers
JennieG


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: kendall
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 08:03 PM

If you don't count a month in the Davis straits (between Labrador and Greenland) in a ship, then my home village would be next. A place called Kennebec, a remote part of the town of Machias in Washington county, eastern Maine. Population, two hundred, 5 miles from town on a one lane dirt road.
So far back in the woods, we had to come in to hunt.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Alice
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 08:53 PM

Sihuapilapa, El Salvador, Central America

in the middle of a forest, Sanders County, Montana


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Alice
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 09:02 PM

Sihuapiliapa is not a town. It is the name of a rural part of El Salvador along the la Litoral, the coastal highway. A satellite photo shows the lay of the land, forest over old volcanic flows.

click for satellite view


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Charley Noble
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 09:24 PM

Alice-

Looks pretty remote to me!

How far was it from a good latté or milk shake?

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Alice
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 10:40 PM

had to be home made coffee and I didn't trust the milk.
roasted coffee beans on a comal, ground coffee on a stone metate


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Donuel
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 10:50 PM

Greene NY


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: katlaughing
Date: 29 Jan 09 - 10:53 PM

SRS, Dinosaur Natl. Monument was one of my fav. places to go as a kid and was on the way to my dad's in his last few years. Love it up there when it is cooler, non-touristy-time.:-)

About fifteen miles out of town which was in the middle of Wyoming. We were on the old Oregon Trail about a mile or two off the two-lane-paved-turned-to-gravel-just-before-our-turn-off road from town. It was tough to get to in the winter when it snowed and and the wind blew, but our kids all say it was one of the best, more fun places they've ever lived and we loved it, too, esp. the critters and acreage we had.

We had three neighbours on the dirt last mile, but in a WY blizzard they might as well have been on the moon.:-)


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Charley Noble
Date: 30 Jan 09 - 08:52 AM

Alice-

The coffee procedures sound familiar.

Where I was in Ethiopia the villagers also grew coffee bushes. They would process the berries, char them on a griddle, and than mash them up with a wooden mortar and pestle, and drop them into a clay jug of boiling water.

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: artbrooks
Date: 30 Jan 09 - 09:16 AM

Well, I can't really say I "lived" there, but I'll contribute Guard Post Ann, in the Korean Demilitarized (hah!) Zone, about 400 meters southwest of Panmunjom. It was (and still is) a small hill with 30-40 US soldiers on it at the end of a 1 kilometer dirt road. I was assigned there for six months in 1969, one week on and one week off. Our mission was to die as slowly and loudly as possible when the North Koreans invaded.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: 3refs
Date: 31 Jan 09 - 09:03 AM

Little Cornwallis Island, Nunavut Canada. I was there for 6 weeks and I tell people I was outside twice-the day I arrived and the day I left!


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Charley Noble
Date: 31 Jan 09 - 10:04 AM

As an afterthought where I was in Ethiopia seemed only "remote" to me; the indigenous agricultural system supported population densities in access of 300 people per square km.

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Naemanson
Date: 31 Jan 09 - 08:26 PM

I was going to throw Talofofo, Guam, in there. We are about 3500 miles west of Hawaii and 1500 miles southeast of Japan. But I have plenty of neighbors and that seems to be the ruling criteria here so I guess I'm not remote at all.

Of course, on my first trip out here I sat on an airplane for what seemed like forever and then when we changed planes in Hawaii the guy in the seat next to me commented that we were halfway there.

If we are going to talk about remote then I could throw Van Buren, Maine, into the mix. If you look at the map of Maine and follow I-95 with your finger you get to the Canadian border. Leave the interstate and follow Route 1 north until you get almost to the top of the state. You'll see Van Buren.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Bert
Date: 31 Jan 09 - 10:33 PM

...a plastic bag stuck in a tree... We call those "Yuppie Tumble Weeds" Jeri.

Yea, we'll allow time spent on a boat Kendall. Remote enough for me.

Seems like us Mudcatters are a pretty remote bunch eh!


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Rowan
Date: 01 Feb 09 - 06:22 PM

Thanks JennieG; my typing is somewhat restricted at the moment.

Interesting comments abound here. Yes, I spent all of 1969 (14 months, in all) at Mawson with 27 other blokes, including 4 US fellows working on the Pageos programme. Once the sea ice formed the nearest open water was 250 nautical miles away, meaning access by ship or plane was out of the question, and the nearest "civilisation" was 800-odd nautical miles around the coast. Around July I had a recurrent dream where two Viking longboats pulled into Horseshoe Harbour and gatecrashed our Saturday night parties. Interestingly, all the invaders were more blokes; it's interesting how isolation can affect you.

I've often sought out such places, though. It's relatively easy in Oz to find places where you can squat on your heels and survey the landscape and detect no sign of people, not even contrails. SW Tasmania has always been that way and I was a member of one of the ealiest groups to do various trips that are now much more frequently travelled. Even Wilson's Promontory (the southernmost bit of mainland Oz), where I did most of my thesis fieldwork still has places where you can achieve the isolation effect.

When I ran school camps at Steiglitz, 60 miles west of Melbourne and four miles from the nearest electricity, I was one of two residents and could tell by the sound of a gear change a measured mile away, whether I was about to be visited. I've always valued being in places where sounds carry useful or interesting information and are welcome, rather than the usual cityscape where most sound needs to be filtered out of your perception so you can detect the important bits.

Where I live now is like that; almost a kilometre from the nearest road, 5km from the nearest "hamlet" and 20km from the nearest population centre with its 25,000 people, highway bypass, uni and more decent coffee shops than you can poke a stick at.

So it's only some aspects that are currently remote.

Cheers, Rowan


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Charley Noble
Date: 01 Feb 09 - 09:36 PM

I'm musing over "remote."

Is it far from the maddening but familiar crowd?

Is it far from any humans?

Or is it just far from home?

My students in Ethiopia translated one of their sayings as "I am a clever and my home is far" which I interpreted as meaning "People from the outside world are respected for their wisdom." But then again old people in the village who never traveled were also respected for their wisdom. How can both be true? Maybe the students were just trying to flatter us.

If you like to travel back with me to Ethiopia, here's a link to my website: click here for website!

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: CamiSu
Date: 01 Feb 09 - 11:15 PM

Benton, New Hampshire. We used to say that of the 250 residents, 180 lived in the Glencliff home for the Elderly (at the far end of a 7 mile dirt road, or at least 15 miles by paved road.) The year we were there there were 6 people at Town Meeting. We had electricity, but heat was a woodstove and there was NO insulation. And it was a very cold winter.

Before that, the ranch outside of Lyons, Colorado. It's not remote now, but was rather then. I could get dressed off the clothesline with no worries.

Our town here is hardly remote (we are on the main road) but there are less than 1100 people in town, and the only traffic light in the county is a bit more than 2 miles north of me in the next town. And it is a friendly place. O'course, I have never been anywhere I didn't find friendly after we'd proved ourselves. I am so sorry for your unfriendly town Lizzie.

CamiSu


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: diesel
Date: 02 Feb 09 - 05:50 AM

Great to hear Rowan's story, and no less all the others.

I've shared a bit of there. Lived for 16 months in Halley base (Z4 1990-92) Antarctica. The ship that brought us in, nearly broke down in the ice on the way burning out one of 2 propulsion motors.. also when the ship left, it was the last for us to see of 'outside world' until the same ship came back a year later. First mail, letters from home.

Would I go again - absolutely !

Family first now though ......

rgds
Diesel


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Mark Ross
Date: 02 Feb 09 - 02:37 PM

Butte, Montana, the Only Island in the World surrounded completely by Land!

Mark Ross


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Alice
Date: 02 Feb 09 - 02:56 PM

LOL,
island in a time warp, too


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: frogprince
Date: 02 Feb 09 - 03:02 PM

Stationed for 18 months on a submarine tender tied up on Guam,1965 - 66. I guess the most remote place I've been for as long as one week would be Bagio, Mountain Province, the Philippians. Most remote place I've ever been at all? Pobably on a rope ladder, descending into a cave, nowhere in particular in the uninhabited "boonies" of Guam.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Alice
Date: 02 Feb 09 - 03:03 PM

forgot to include Fairmont Hot Springs, where I live a few months each year while working in Butte.

Gregson, between Anaconda and Butte, no town there, but a hot springs hotel


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Alice
Date: 02 Feb 09 - 03:24 PM

Many or maybe even most of the place names in Montana are not towns. They are locations that were named by the railroad as stations or spurs that no longer are used or even exist, but have a name on the map left over from railroad history. That is true of many of the place names on that google map of Gregson. There is a town of Anaconda, but Crackerville and Gregson and the rest no longer exist as towns. Ramsay is a small cluster of homes built along the highway, but there are no services. The internet brings up weird info about Crackerville, as it counts the town of Anaconda and others living nearby and give Crackerville a population number as a total of Anaconda and outlying homes.
The Crackerville area is a floodplain that is part of America's largest Superfund Cleanup site, where there is arsenic and heavy metals in the soil washed down from the mining in Butte.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Alice
Date: 02 Feb 09 - 03:41 PM

Here are some photos from around Gregson/Fairmont


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: dwditty
Date: 02 Feb 09 - 03:59 PM

Khanh Duong, Vietnam


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: GUEST,Mrr
Date: 02 Feb 09 - 04:29 PM

Abidjan, Ivory Coast; Tunis, Tunisia; and Alexandria, Virginia.


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: skipy
Date: 02 Feb 09 - 05:16 PM

New York! yes New York! it's a tiny village (collection of houses really) behind RAF Coningsby in Lincolnshire!
Skipy


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Charley Noble
Date: 03 Feb 09 - 08:24 AM

Mrr-

Alexandria, Virginia?

Maybe the people but not the place! LOL

I did spend a summer in remote areas of Maine, near Moosehead Lake, doing reconnaissance geological mapping. Remote from most inhabited places it was, at least two hours by jeep over logging roads. However, the black flies and mosquitos kept us company.

Cheerily,
Charley Noble


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: Amos
Date: 03 Feb 09 - 11:17 AM

Squirrel Island, off Boothbay.

Rabat, the capital of Morocco.

Various strange corners of ships. During one refit, I slept on the flying bridge.

A tent in the mountains up above Placerville working a couple of old claims.

A room over a stable on the grounds of an old Sussex hotel.

A very cheap wino-hotel on the old Market St. row in San Francisco.

The waterfront of Corfu (Kerkra), on the west coast of Greece.

A shipyard in Grand Canaria, in the Canaries.

Those are the oddest ones. None really too remote.

I used to build snow-caves where I could hide out and msoke cigarettes at boarding school. Felt very remote.


A

A


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Subject: RE: BS: Remote places where you have lived
From: GUEST,Chris B (Born Again Scouser)
Date: 03 Feb 09 - 11:44 AM

Isleworth.


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