The weather is extreme, down to 40 F below in winter, snow on the ground for 3-4 months, pipes and stored liquids freeze, our home is heated by wood only with some solar gain. Summer is hot but relatively short. Temps can be around 100 F for days or weeks. Growing tomatoes, peppers, corn and melons is a crap shoot because there is always a threat of freeze, and a lot of work for a probable poor harvest.
There is no cable TV, only satellite. Internet is via satellite, broadband if you have line of site (small % of people can do this) or dial-up. Electricity is not pervasive and is expensive to bring in. Phone lines managed to touch most property lines, but the phone service (appropriately called Frontier BTW) does not have a voicemail service! Oh, and there is no cell service or texting service here. You have to go to town to see if anyone has called or to call out and don't break down on the way as you cannot call for a tow.
There is only one paved road and that is the main road up most of the valley floor before becoming a gravel road. If you live where you travel on dirt roads, you can expect regular vehicle repair bills for suspension, wear and tear, vibration damage, dirt contamination, slamming into a small boulder in the road because the car slid or it was hidden, tire repair for flats and wearing out tires faster. Everyone's car is the same color, dirt brown.
Jobs are scarce with no city around. Most jobs have to do with construction, animals or health. Shipping rates are high and delivery times long as we are so far out.
Everyone waves at each other. Whether you know the person or not, it is cultural here to wave as you drive by or others drive by. Love it. Unlike the city where people do not want to deal with others, people here interact with strangers more often and more comfortably. People stop to see if someone needs help when parked along the road . . . no reason to be there unless something is not normal.
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Welcome to my world,
Frontier Woman @ frontierlivingtoday.blogspot.com
<< Taken last summer. This is the same wild horse herd that we fed on Monday night.
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