RickB
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2000
- Messages
- 15,190
- Location
- Up the road from Dollar General WNC
- Tractor
- Just a Scag
This is TBN. Being correct is optional.Not to harp on this, but from a pure geographical basis, you simply aren't correct.
This is TBN. Being correct is optional.Not to harp on this, but from a pure geographical basis, you simply aren't correct.
I've been opposed to those for years, on the basis that it's the people's choice to elect the same people over and over again. Yet my viewpoint is starting to change... if an incumbent doesn't step aside, it leaves little room for new ideas.term limits!
Ha. I’ve been wrong on here plenty of times myself. Its a basic human right, or something.This is TBN. Being correct is optional.
we have term limits for presidents.....except fdrI've been opposed to those for years, on the basis that it's the people's choice to elect the same people over and over again. Yet my viewpoint is starting to change... if an incumbent doesn't step aside, it leaves little room for new ideas.
Until FDR there were no formal term limits. It was simply an agreement, started when George Washington refused to run for a third term.we have term limits for presidents.....except fdr
again, what's good for the president should be good for the congress.Until FDR there were no formal term limits. It was simply an agreement, started when George Washington refused to run for a third term.
Pretty simple. Anything east of the Mississippi is a glorified steep hill at best![]()
At the end of the day, I don't want to sound like a Texan, but as far as elevation on "high ground" goes, I've stood at some pretty high points loving what I'm seeing.LOL. I Really missed the mountains after I left Calgary and moved east. Then I discovered cottage country here in Ontario and I feel better now. Pretty good hill right behind our cottage. And a nice creek running down, underneath the road, and right across the front of our cottage into the lake. Reminds me of the little streams that I used to fish in the Rocky Mountains South west of Calgary when I was a kid.
What's a mountain and what's not is entirely relative to the surrounding area. In California, there's a "coastal mountain range" which rises about 3000' from the coast (0' elevation obviously) to the peaks about 15-20 miles inland. These "mountains" are green typically, and while they're typically steep in spots, they're decidedly "hills" in other parts of the world, but they're still rugged and very tough to live on (because steep, hard to access, and... lots of slides).Well, by definition, the hills are higher because the peaks are at a higher elevation. All the relief nonsense is just about the fact that the base of the Appalachian hills are narrower. The Appalachians seem like a longer range until you realize that the Black Hills are considered by geologists to be part of the Rockies range. The biggest claim the Appalachians can make is that they are older.
The people who named the Appalachians had not seen actual mountains yet, so they didn't know any better, bless their hearts. By the time white folks saw the Black Hills they had already seen the Rockies, so in comparison, they seemed like hills. East coast bias has been here since the Pilgrims landed.
Beautiful picture that captures the ideal of rural...At the end of the day, I don't want to sound like a Texan, but as far as elevation on "high ground" goes, I've stood at some pretty high points loving what I'm seeing.
Thing is though, the below pic is my back yard mowing (which I do for my shooting range LOL).
View attachment 717202
Elevation per my zip code is slightly over 1,000 feet (and there is a creek right behind the tree line at the bottom of the picture that my boys loved to play in).
Be it well over 10k feet or at sea level, what makes you happy is what makes you happy.
Be it we retire somewhere else in NC, East TN or out west where the snow isn't to bad, I'll be happy as long as my wife is by my side (Florida or the North East is out of the question though, and my wife agrees, which is one reason why I think I married her).
End of day, we don't want to stay here as the place is too big for us. We bought the place with enough room for kids along with the idea that my father might live with us on his own floor (basement).Beautiful picture that captures the ideal of rural...
Can you retire in place?
mt Shasta might be the best of them all!What's a mountain and what's not is entirely relative to the surrounding area. In California, there's a "coastal mountain range" which rises about 3000' from the coast (0' elevation obviously) to the peaks about 15-20 miles inland. These "mountains" are green typically, and while they're typically steep in spots, they're decidedly "hills" in other parts of the world, but they're still rugged and very tough to live on (because steep, hard to access, and... lots of slides).
I grew up in Mount Shasta CA, where we were at 3250' and literally 10 miles away the mountain peak is at 14162'. Now that's a mountain!
My guess is that in the 16-1700's the Appalachian mountains earned that moniker because you couldn't farm it like the valleys. Not flat? Mountain.
If you love it….just stay. My place is a lot to take care of, but as I get older the thought of moving gets placed further back in my mind. When we travel, we always say “I like our place better”. That’s a good sign.
All comes down to ones needs I believe and what you want to do when you retire.I agree 1000%. I do not want to move anymore.
My thought is as the land takes too much work I’ll convert to hay and let someone else harvest. Not what I’d prefer but it’ll be fine.
Personally, looking forward to a single story house.
Honestly, would love to see a pic to get ideasI built mine in 1994.
2600 square foot level entry rancher with lots of glass and I’ve never regretted a single day.
Curious, is it just you and your wife now in the house? I'm assuming 2 stories?I built mine in 1996, about 3900 sf. But we went with a basement. Sometimes I regret having stairs, but it allows for wifes huge craft room to be kept out of the main house.
a large single story does sound nice though.
Honestly, would love to see a pic to get ideas
I forgot to add, would prefer a breezeway from the garage to the house. Our neighbor up the road has a breezeway, and when I stop by just to shoot the ***** catching up on whats going on per our local road, sitting in that breezeway is REALLY nice (the irony is they are both in their 70's now, and they complain about having two stories).
That said, Mossroad mentioned something I'll remember. If a two story house, walk out basement with enough room for a elevator from the basement to first floor that will accommodate a wheel chair.
My dad lives in the walk out basement, but the stairs are getting harder and harder for him, and he can't walk up to the driveway from the basement with the hill when he goes outside from the basement.