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Mrs. Groovy was born in Brooklyn and lived in Manhattan prior to our illustrious marriage. The respective populations of Brooklyn and Manhattan are 2.6 million and 1.63 million.

I was born in Queens and lived in Nassau County until Mrs. Groovy and I moved to North Carolina. The respective populations of Queens and Nassau County are 2.44 million and 1.4 million.

Mrs. Groovy and I currently live in a town called Louisburg. Its population is 3,004. In our corner of Louisburg, we have far more four-legged neighbors than two-legged neighbors.

I ain’t going to lie. Moving from a place teeming with people to a place teeming with cows is the very definition of culture shock. It’s so damn quiet and uneventful.

But Mrs. Groovy and I love it. Part of that has to do with our age. The seventh decade of life doesn’t require nearly as much action as the second, third, and fourth decades of life. The larger part of it, however, has to do with our dispositions: Mrs. Groovy and I simply love simple, unabashed country charm. Here are some examples of what I mean:

Country dogs are weird, but fun, and a little more free-range than their city cousins.

This dog loves sitting atop his master’s pickup truck while his master shops at Walmart.
Sally and George, two beautiful Pyrenees, love visiting us from a neighboring farm. Here’s Mrs. Groovy and our neighbors Tim and Cheryl corralling them so they’re safe and their master can pick them up at her leisure.
Here’s Sally and George from another visit. They were joined by their friend Dobie.

Last year, our farming neighbors grew tobacco. This year they grew southern snow (i.e. cotton).

Here’s the cotton after it’s been harvested—shrink-wrapped in pretty colors and all ready for transportation to the mill.

And, yes, we occasionally get real snow in North Carolina. Here’s some real snow from a few years ago.

Rural North Carolina is much more God-fearing than city North Carolina. And what rural North Carolina town would be complete without a cowboy church?

Jason Brown, Louisburg’s lone celebrity, has a balloon festival every year at his farm. Here are the balloons flying over Groovy Ranch.

If you live in the country, you’re bound to get visits from exotic creatures. Here are two such creatures who visited Groovy Ranch this year—Manny the Mantis and Eddie the Eagle.

Did you know that North Carolina suffers the occasional tornado? I didn’t until I moved down here. A few months back, a funnel started to form across the street. Fortunately, it dissipated, and Groovy Ranch was spared the wrath of nature.

As I mentioned earlier, we have more four-legged neighbors than two-legged neighbors. Cows, in particular, are everywhere. Here are some of our cow neighbors.

Cows also make life interesting in other ways. They sometimes escape. We came across two escaped cows about a month ago. Mrs. Groovy texted the town’s matriarch for help. Martha knew their owner and she quickly alerted him to the breach in his fencing. It’s our understanding that the fugitives were safely returned to their pasture.

Here’s another example of everybody knowing everybody. One day after Mrs. Groovy and I completed our constitutional at Owens Park, a stray beagle appeared out of nowhere and approached us as we were getting into our car. We put the beagle in the backseat and took him to the Dollar Store for Scoobie-Do snacks and to see if anyone might recognize him. Sure enough, the cashier knew whose dog it was and gave us the fellow’s address. Here’s me saying goodbye to our new beagle friend.

Our four-legged neighbors aren’t always cows. Sometimes they’re goats. And they make life interesting as well. Here’s me rescuing a goat that got his head caught in the fence.

Finally, rural North Carolinians aren’t nearly as parochial as my left-leaning brothers and sisters might suppose. In fact, they’re much more “live and let live” than the New Yorkers in New York City and on Long Island. A great example of this is the local building department. Mrs. Groovy and I visited the building department to see what permits were required to build a welding workshop, a gazebo, and a cement platform to mount the bison. The only item that required a permit was the welding workshop. The building department didn’t care about the gazebo and the cement platform.

Another great example of this is my neighbor Mike. I went over one day and told him I was ready to mount Billy Bob on our front lawn. I then tried to tell him that I would consult him on the placement of Billy Bob to make sure its placement didn’t cause any problems. He cut me off mid-sentence: “It’s your property. You do what you want.”

Okay, groovy freedomist, that’s all I got. Have a blessed Hannukah, a merry Christmas, and a very happy New Year. See you next year. Peace.

18 thoughts on “Why I Love Country Living

  1. I moved to my current city, Durham, NC, from Washington, DC, and I have loved it ever since. Every now and then, someone gets the audacious gall to ask me when am I moving back, to which I tell them when a certain warm location hosts the Winter Olympics.

    1. LOL! I love it. Great response. Mrs. Groovy and I moved to Charlotte in 2006. In 2018 we moved up to the Raleigh area to be by family. So we’ve been honorary southerners for 18 years now. And like you, we haven’t regretted the change in scenery. Leaving New York was the best move in our lives. Thanks for stopping by, my friend. It’s great knowing there’s another blogger in the neighborhood who is a kindred spirit.

  2. I sure do miss North Carolina. Having lived in the Greensboro area for about 15 years, we moved to Texas for a job transfer and wound up in a north Dallas, TX suburb with small home lots, horrific traffic, and endless urban sprawl. Every day I hear James Taylor singing “Carolina in my Mind.”

    1. I had no idea how beautiful ready-to-harvest cotton looks until I move south. And I had no idea how beautiful tobacco plants look either. Mrs. Groovy and I moved down to North Carolina in 2006 and it was the best move of our lives. Thanks for stopping by, Maylee, and sharing your love for country living. Cheers.

    1. I’m jealous—of your weather and your Antarctica trip. I love your adventurous spirit, girlfriend. And I will pop over. Merry Christmas to you as well. Cheers.

  3. Well, we do get a drag racer once or twice a year on our quiet street. And our mailbox has been mowed down twice. It’s like the dark side of the moon out here at night . And if you’re driving even moderately fast and don’t know the streets well, you’re bound to hit something. After the second mailbox incident we just propped it up and stabilized it. No complaints from our sweet mailman Ashley. Maybe Mr Groovy will add a photo?
    Mrs Groovy recently posted…Why I Love Country LivingMy Profile

    1. Oh, yeah, I forgot all about our mailbox casualties. And oddly enough, both casualties happened during the day. So I don’t think alcohol was involved. Just drivers not paying attention. I’ll upload a picture of our current mailbox configuration as soon as it gets a little warmer. It was 13 degrees in Louisburg yesterday!

  4. Your rural area sounds like mine, though we don’t have any jerk chicken. We have deer in our yard almost every day. We have a red shouldered hawk living on our property and I see multiple bald eagles almost every time I go fishing. No traffic, nothing stolen from us in the 45 years we’ve lived here. Neighbors who feel like family. It was a good place to raise our kids and a good place to be now.

    1. Thanks for sharing, my friend. And I loved the additional benefits to country living you pointed out. I’ve been in the wilds of North Carolina for four years now and haven’t suffered one theft or traffic jam. Live is pretty damn good. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. Hope you have a kick-ass 2023, Steveark. Cheers.

  5. I’m with you on loving the country life! I just wish you wouldn’t have let the world know our secret – we don’t want all those City Folk moving out to our rural heaven!

    1. Excellent point! The only thing that saves us is that my blog is one of America’s best-kept secrets. Merry Christmas, my friend. Looking forward to seeing you and Jackie in 2023. Cheers.

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