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The Rural Way by Victor Davis Hanson
pjmedia. ^ | January 12th, 2014 | by Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 01/14/2014 10:16:23 PM PST by dennisw

Hard physical work is still a requisite for a sound outlook on an ever more crazy world. I ride a bike; but such exercise is not quite the same, given that the achievement of doing 35 miles is therapeutic for the body and mind, but does not lead to a sense of accomplishment in the material sense — a 30-foot dead tree cut up, a shed rebuilt, a barn repainted. I never quite understood why all these joggers in Silicon Valley have immigrants from Latin America doing their landscaping.

Would not seven hours a week spent raking and pruning be as healthy as jogging in spandex — aside from the idea of autonomy that one receives by taking care of one’s own spread?

On the topic of keeping attuned with the physical world: if it does not rain (and the “rainy” season is about half over with nothing yet to show for it), the Bay Area and Los Angeles will see some strange things that even Apple, Google, and the new transgendered rest room law cannot fix.

We have had two-year droughts, but never in my lifetime three years of no rain or much snow — much less in a California now of 39 million people. I doubt we will hear much for a while about the past wisdom of emptying our reservoirs and letting the great rivers year-round flow to the Bay to restore mythical 19th-century salmon runs and to save the Delta three-inch bait fish. As long as it was a question of shutting down 250,000 irrigated acres in distant and dusty Mendota or Firebaugh, dumping fresh water in the sea was a good thing. When it now comes down to putting grey water or worse on the bougainvilleas in Menlo Park, or cutting back on that evening shower, I think even those of Silicon Valley will wonder, “What in the hell were we thinking?”

I do all the yard work on my three-acre home site and putter around the surrounding 40-acre vineyard. Mowing, chain-sawing, pruning, and hammering clear the head, and remind us that, even in the age of the knockout “game” and nightly TV ads for Trojan sex devices, we still live in a natural world. In the rural landscape, you are responsible for your own water. So you must know about what level resides the water table, and how deeply exactly your pump draws from, and the minutia of well depth, casing size, and type of pump. You know roughly how much sewage you’ve deposited in your cesspool and septic tank, and whether your propane tanks is half or a quarter full. There is no “they” who take care of such things, no department of this, or GS9 that to do it for you. Those who help you keep independent — the well drillers, pump mechanics, cesspool pumpers, asphalt layers, and assorted independent contractors — remind you that muscles and experience, not always degrees and techie know-how, are still important in extremis.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: vdh; victordavishanson
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1 posted on 01/14/2014 10:16:23 PM PST by dennisw
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To: dennisw

mark


2 posted on 01/14/2014 10:19:47 PM PST by clintonh8r (Don't twerk me, Bro!)
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To: dennisw

It is largely because riding a bike in spandex is a self centered activity, and that is fine, just don’t impede traffic in your “smart shorts” but don’t kid yerself, you aint doing it for anyone but you.


3 posted on 01/14/2014 10:25:08 PM PST by mylife (Ted Cruz understands the law, and he does not fear the unlawful.)
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To: dennisw

Reagan stayed in shape by working on his ranch.


4 posted on 01/14/2014 10:36:07 PM PST by kaehurowing
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To: dennisw

I can’t particularly say that yardwork (in typically 105-110 degree summertime Texas heat-index) offers much solace to get my mind off the vomitous depths of what America has succumbed to, both politically and culturally.

Contrarily, I do find my 20-mile-long bike rides, three times a week, during tolerable seasons, actually does relax me a fair bit. Along with getting back home from such intense physical jaunts, and then popping in a dvd of some old black-and-white western. That combination proves as generally effective a tonic possible for me.


5 posted on 01/14/2014 10:37:48 PM PST by greene66
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To: mylife

Bingo!! It’s doing the mundane stuff that you feel has nothing to do with you, that’s hard, and then doing it day after day after day. It’s the mental component that can be the hardest of work.


6 posted on 01/14/2014 10:40:44 PM PST by SgtHooper (If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you.)
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To: dennisw

Meh. Sounds like a city boy living on 3 acres and calls it “country.”


7 posted on 01/14/2014 10:49:16 PM PST by HonkyTonkMan
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To: SgtHooper

ride YOUR BIKE AROUND A LARGE OUTSIDE MALL WITH TUNEIN OR PANDORA PIPED INTO YOUR IPHONE .....LISTEN TO GREAT ENTERTAINING CURRENT CUTS BY BRIAN KILMEADE, HOWIE CARR AND OR ROGER HEDGECOCK ET AL...YOU CAN RACE THRU AN HOUR WITH GREAT EASE....AND YOU GET LOTS OF SCENIC ENTERTAINMENT TO BOOT....WORKS GREAT...A GREAT CALORIE MUNCHER...VERY PLEASANT...


8 posted on 01/14/2014 10:53:55 PM PST by jimsin
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To: HonkyTonkMan
Meh. Sounds like a city boy living on 3 acres and calls it “country.”

Hanson's 3 residential acres are surrounded by a 40 acre working vineyard that grows grapes for raisins. He was born on the property, helped his dad maintain the property and work the vineyard.

He still lives there. And still works the vineyard. He has a farmer's respect for the land and the hard work to gain a living from it.

He may be an academic...but he's no "city boy".

9 posted on 01/14/2014 11:08:50 PM PST by okie01 (The Mainstream Media -- IGNORANCE ON PARADE)
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To: HonkyTonkMan; All

He also mentions a 40 acre vinyard.


10 posted on 01/14/2014 11:21:26 PM PST by gleeaikin
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To: dennisw

VDH brings it home.


11 posted on 01/14/2014 11:21:29 PM PST by Eagles6 (Valley Forge Redux)
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To: dennisw

It could be a lot of people are prisses who don’t like getting “dirty” - sweaty from exercise is okay, but no dirt, broken nails, callouses.


12 posted on 01/14/2014 11:33:26 PM PST by informavoracious (Root for Obamacare and healthcare.gov failure!)
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To: okie01

correct!!! VDH comes from a farming family and is still farming as best he can. He is retired now from the California university system where he taught for 30-40 years

IOW he comes from the land is not an urban dilettante


13 posted on 01/14/2014 11:38:58 PM PST by dennisw (The first principle is to find out who you are then you can achieve anything -- Buddhist monk)
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To: SgtHooper; mylife; All

Those of us who are old enough to remember a world without TV dinners -

We grew most of our food from seed, in gardens we tilled, hoed, weeded, then picked & canned the harvest, and then laid in provisions for the winter.

(I can’t remember which annoyed me more, shelling peas, or the dad-gummed lima beans! The endless baskets, and the sore fingers! Must have been the lima beans!)

We traded with our neighbors (meat for milk, etc), and helped each other out when things got tough, or someone was hurt - all of that now only a memory in those of us now too old to explain it to our urban offspring.

We see our adult children ridiculing our warnings, and we see our grandchildren lolling on the couch in front of the TV, oblivious to the effort it takes to keep them living like mythical olympian gods and goddesses.

We are beyond worry for them now, for we fear they are doomed. The very idea of mundane work, so they can eat, be warm, or even have potable water completely escapes them. They “know” it is their birthright, and that government gives it to them, along with whatever else they fancy, like a cellphone.

My question, for those of you sharing my grief, who might offer some slim shred of hope - how do we go on seeing the oncoming disaster, when all around are pretending that the music is still playing, like on the Titanic?

Where can we find hope for their future?

All I can see ahead is desolation, a new dark age of barbarism. Please tell me that I am wrong, and that I have overlooked something when trying to discern the future.


14 posted on 01/14/2014 11:39:20 PM PST by jacquej ("It is the peculiar quality of a fool to perceive the faults of others and to forget his own.")
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To: informavoracious
It could be a lot of people are prisses who don’t like getting “dirty” - sweaty from exercise is okay, but no dirt, broken nails, callouses.

Victor Davis Hansen has made this same exact point in many of his columns

15 posted on 01/14/2014 11:40:56 PM PST by dennisw (The first principle is to find out who you are then you can achieve anything -- Buddhist monk)
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To: dennisw

Yep.

Working out side on your own spread does reap benefits. I am almost finished putting in 250 feet of no climb, red top, horse fencing with a 1x6 board on top in a cross fence project. Including cutting down and cutting up a large oak tree. All the holes were dug by hand with a post hole digger, 8 feet apart. I live down South so the ground is not frozen ever, but tree roots, rocks and clay do make it difficult at times.

I am pushing 70 so I could only work hard at it for 3 hours a day at first until my body told me to quit but now I can do twice that and feel a lot stronger stretching and nailing off the wire, cementing in the gate posts, etc, etc.

Next project is a pump house for the well and to clean all the water weeds off a small pond on the back 40. It is hard work for an old man but I enjoy it. And my dogs seem to enjoy watching me do it too.

Being outside working on a cool winter day with occasional gaggles of vocal Sandhill Cranes flying in from up North, watching the cows and their new younguns in the back pasture is a pleasure to savor, not work to avoid.


16 posted on 01/14/2014 11:47:59 PM PST by Uncle Lonny
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To: HonkyTonkMan
I worry though not about the way we look or talk, but rather about the use of the land. It no longer grows people, or produces for the nation a 5% minority of self-reliant, cranky and autonomous citizens, who do not worry much about things like tanning booths, plastic surgery, Botox, male jewelry, tattoos, rap music, waxed-off body hair, or social media. I think our impoverished society reflects that fact of agrarian loss, in the sense that never have so many had so much and complained that they had so little while being so dependent on government — and yet they are so whiney and angry over their lack of independence. The entitlement state is the flame, the recipients the moths. The latter zero in on the glow and then, transfixed by the buzz, are consumed by acquiring what they were hypnotized by.

You should have clicked through and read the whole thing. I ran into one of those angry whiney dependents today, demanding that government do more to regulate the fast food industry because greedy corporations are poisoning the world with undisclosed trans-fats.

I thought he would choke to death when I pointed out that the free market already provided an app for that and that health conscious adults would probably have more success taking control of their lives instead of demanding the government control others.

17 posted on 01/14/2014 11:53:07 PM PST by Valpal1 (If the police can t solve a problem with violence, they ll find a way to fix it with brute force)
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To: dennisw

ping


18 posted on 01/15/2014 12:11:36 AM PST by gattaca (The heart of the wise inclines to the right, but the heart of the fool to the left. Ecclesiastes10:2)
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To: jacquej

Disaster may be our only hope for a return to self reliance and true community.


19 posted on 01/15/2014 1:03:06 AM PST by Louis Foxwell (This is a wake up call. Join the Sultan Knish ping list.)
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To: dennisw
"I never quite understood why all these joggers in Silicon Valley have immigrants from Latin America doing their landscaping."

In most cases, it's probably because they don't have TIME to spend hours doing landscaping. I have children and work 45-55 hours per week(as does my wife), and I sure as hell don't want to dedicate what spare time I DO have landscaping or mowing the yard. I'd rather pay someone else to do it.

20 posted on 01/15/2014 2:21:58 AM PST by KoRn (Department of Homeland Security, Certified - "Right Wing Extremist")
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