remy_lebeau8
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2010
- Posts
- 4,342
Double post.
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Hell, thats the furthest south for me, cept for just one time to Ohio
Head a couple hours north..I'm guessing...and I'll show you hiking country![]()
*cough*
Hey, he's used to Michigan...southern Michigan...think about it![]()
I have no idea how people can live in such a flat spot. They pile up garbage into hills to ski on!
I have no idea how people can live in such a flat spot. They pile up garbage into hills to ski on!
We have a town not far from my home that's named Flatville, for a very good reason. There is beauty in flatness, if you take the time to enjoy it. Nowhere is the sky so overwhelming. Watching summer storms roll in makes me tingle all over. You can feel it in the air, and smell it in the wind.
Being near big water brings me peace. Meditating on an empty beach is even better. There's something about the waves rolling in, one after the other; it's like a physical mantra that you feel in your bones.
I love the Michigan side of Lake Michigan. Endless beaches run nearly from Buffalo all the way up to the tip of the Leelanau Peninsula. Walking the dunes is awesome (if exhausting).
I am sick, and I have a sick kid to look after, and I am sleeping on the floor in a quarantine environment so that Mrs J424 stays healthy. I can't train which sucks because my early season form has been excelent and it's slipping away. Not a lot of reason to be happy on paper, but yeah, I really really am.
J
You can have the flatlands. I'm sure they're necessary for something. I like a little relief in my view.
Has Perg abandoned his thread? I haven't seen him around in a while.
Being in the ocean brings me peace. Chin on my board, salt in my eyes and sun on my shoulders. The cool water around my legs. It's good.
Every cloud is different, in shape and shade and size, and they come in layers sometimes, with the lower ones outpacing those above in entrancing patterns.
Find a small rise (or even an upstairs porch) and you'll see the fields spreading out in patterns of green below you. Corn is different from soybeans; wheat from alfalfa. And in the autumn they change into differing shades of golds and browns. In the winter the fields are furrows of black dirt, striped with lines of shifting snow.
You'll see grain elevators lined up in three mile intervals, and know that they're connected like dots on paper by the tracks of trains. And river valleys are winding lines of trees that disappear into the distance. The sky spreads out in endless shades of blue.
At sunset, the west can be brilliant with color and if you turn a slow circle the sky darkens until when you face east, it's darkened to nearly black, with the first stars coming alight. Like I said, there is beauty there, and relief for your eyes too, if you just sit back and drink it in. I once lived in a farmhouse in Iowa. I've never found a place more peaceful than that, and doubt I ever will. It makes me smile just to remember it.
I'm sorry, but a few cross country trips have the flatlands turning my nose. Nothing like heading west on I-80 in the evening and then the smell of a feed lot damn near chokes you.
I'm a view snob. I've had it pretty good all my life. And now, the sunset is always different from my window. If i look up in winter, i might see the aurora.
It's comforting to me to be high on the mountain and look out at the world, It puts things into perspective. It's a safe place.
Laughing about the smells. You've got that right.
Luckily I didn't live near one of those, but the guy who managed the farm I lived on did raise sheep one year and had them packed in so tight you could walk across their backs. You could stand at one end of the pen and clap your hands and the nearest ones would jump, then the next ones, then the next ones, until you had a full wave running back and forth, up and down the lot of them, like fans at a basketball game.
Sheep are really stupid. Pigs are smart. Cows always have snot running out of their noses, and goats can escape anything built to enclose them. Mice invaded the house every autumn when the fields were harvested, so you'd better have cats with claws. Farm life isn't always idyllic, that's for sure. But at times it could be breathtakingly beautiful out there.
It's not for me. It's by me, for everybody. I would have called it "Perg-style," but that sounds too much like "illmatic kyle."Is this some sort of vanity search loophole? You can't just go around making threads for yourself.
Perg you're banned for 48 hours.
Laurel you need to made my mod role official now.
Driving home just down the road...
There's beauty everywhere. I've been in the very far north where there is absolutely nothing and it's beautiful. An austere beauty, but still, very nice to look at.
Pretty shot. What part of the world?