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Reply to "City versus country living."
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]First what do you define as "country living"? For example I grew up in far out, deep 20906, on an acre lot, larger home, lots of wildlife, neighbors too far away to actually get to know them, 3-4 miles to the closest grocery store, snow plows never used to show up - and now when they do show up that area is the last to be plowed. OR do you mean on a farm, 20+ acres, 10 miles to your closest grocery store, very little vehicle traffic. [/quote] 20906??? Lol. And did you think Olney was farm country? I mean, sure…I partied in fields in Olney/Brookeville/Derwood/Ashton, etc. when I was in high school back in the late 80s/early 90s, but even then I wouldn’t consider it the country. And ftr, I grew up in 20906. [/quote] "LOL"? what is wrong with you that you feel the need to come in with such an aggressive, in your face reply? 1) if you grew up in 20906 you would know its not Olney 2) I grew up in a part of 20906 in the late 70's, a section that apparently you don't know about. It was quite rural. 2) Did you take a moment to reread what I wrote in the first few sentences? I was careful to distinguish the difference between my old neighborhood and "real" country living which is why I asked OP to define what THEY meant by "country living". Go take your daggers elsewhere.[/quote] Did you live off of Layhill Road? I asked if you thought Olney was the country as well. I obviously know it’s not 20906…it’s actually further out and still had legit farms in the early 1970s (as did Derwood/Brookeville/Ashton, etc). The reality is *no place* in the suburbs can be defined as the country. I’m struggling to define where the country actually begins in 2024 given places like Hagerstown and Kent Island are (over) developed now. [/quote]
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