Countryside dwellers and townies

Countryside dwellers and townies

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Never you mind

Original Poster:

1,507 posts

112 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
Forget the north south divide a few threads on here recently has really shown a kind of big divide between those that live in rural areas and those that live in towns and cities. In those few threads people that live in countryside have been accused of having a big chip on their shoulders and townies have been accused of total ignorance.

Is it really that bad in real life or is PH not a real cross section of society?

Shakermaker

11,317 posts

100 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
We are definitely not a cross section of society on here..

TooMany2cvs

29,008 posts

126 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
Never you mind said:
...and townies have been accused of total ignorance.
This is more of a statement of basic fact, tbh.

A quick google finds this, from surveys of London children aged 7-14.
https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2000/oct/12/educati...

That was 17 years ago, so those kids are now in their 20s and early 30s - but there's absolutely no reason to think that's some kind of exception.

Many urban-dwellers simply don't understand that the countryside is a factory, with large machinery, not simply their playground.

James TiT

234 posts

86 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
How many people know where Milk and cheese comes from?

anonymous-user

54 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
James TiT said:
How many people know where Milk and cheese comes from?
Waitrose

rovermorris999

5,202 posts

189 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
James TiT said:
How many people know where Milk and cheese comes from?
Tesco? smile

juice

8,534 posts

282 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
TooMany2cvs said:
Many urban-dwellers simply don't understand that the countryside is a factory, with large machinery, not simply their playground.
This

Its mainly Dairy farms round where I live so on any given country lane (or right of way across a field) you have a reasonable chance of coming across cows.
September is peak time for heavy machinery for harvest (and prep for winter) so there's loads of tractors/combines etc trundling around.

Its fine, but you need to be aware that you're in a different environment to a city and act accordingly.

Mind you a lot of farmers are right miserable sods to be fair ! hehe

captain_cynic

11,991 posts

95 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
James TiT said:
How many people know where Milk and cheese comes from?
Tits,

Obviously.

TooMany2cvs

29,008 posts

126 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
juice said:
Mind you a lot of farmers are right miserable sods to be fair ! hehe
Who can blame 'em?

Monkeylegend

26,385 posts

231 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
captain_cynic said:
James TiT said:
How many people know where Milk and cheese comes from?
Tits,

Obviously.
A visit to the Doc would be in order if it was cheese.

juice

8,534 posts

282 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
TooMany2cvs said:
Who can blame 'em?
No, not really but I was just trying to be balanced smile

TooMany2cvs

29,008 posts

126 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
TVR Moneypit said:
Mind you, he also thought that ... that you could drive to Mexico only crossing the English Channel, so maybe not the best example?
He's not technically incorrect - although he is VERY ambitious...

Nobody's yet driven across the Bering Straight icebridge, although a few people have crossed by foot - but maybe one day it'll be routine... http://www.interbering.com/

PositronicRay

27,010 posts

183 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
TVR Moneypit said:
I know a bloke, late 30's, lived in the centre of London all his life, who did not know that fish fingers come from fish in the sea, that beef burgers come from cows, or that wooly jumpers come from sheep.

Mind you, he also thought that the Falkland Islands were in Germany, and the Falklands War was part of WW2, didn't know that Paris was the capital of France, and that you could drive to Mexico only crossing the English Channel, so maybe not the best example?
The Mexico thing ought to be possible, when the Bering strait's freeze.



Not sure if anyone's tried it yet maybe a good one for a grand tour Christmas special

227bhp

10,203 posts

128 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
TooMany2cvs said:
juice said:
Mind you a lot of farmers are right miserable sods to be fair ! hehe
Who can blame 'em?
Me. Don't do something that makes you miserable.
They all seem pretty jolly on Countryfile smile

Mammasaid

3,834 posts

97 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
Shakermaker said:
We are definitely not a cross section of society on here..
Judging by all the arguments, we're a very cross section of society....furious

captain_cynic

11,991 posts

95 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
Monkeylegend said:
A visit to the Doc would be in order if it was cheese.
Cheese is made from milk, so they're really the same source smile

Of course to make cheese from scratch, you must first create the universe.

Wiccan of Darkness

1,839 posts

83 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
PositronicRay said:
TVR Moneypit said:
I know a bloke, late 30's, lived in the centre of London all his life, who did not know that fish fingers come from fish in the sea, that beef burgers come from cows, or that wooly jumpers come from sheep.

Mind you, he also thought that the Falkland Islands were in Germany, and the Falklands War was part of WW2, didn't know that Paris was the capital of France, and that you could drive to Mexico only crossing the English Channel, so maybe not the best example?
The Mexico thing ought to be possible, when the Bering strait's freeze.



Not sure if anyone's tried it yet maybe a good one for a grand tour Christmas special
Hold on, some years ago that guy from Blue Peter, Duncan someone-or-other did a TV series where they drove from London to New York. Drove through the channel tunnel, and when it came to the Bering straight there was some weird caterpillar-tracked vehicle they used to cross the ice.

I can't remember if they made it, I believe I missed the last episode on account of having mumps or some other ghastly childhood disease.

Googling it, a few results suggest it was called The Big Race

StuTheGrouch

5,732 posts

162 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
TVR Moneypit said:
I know a bloke, late 30's, lived in the centre of London all his life, who did not know that fish fingers come from fish in the sea, that beef burgers come from cows, or that wooly jumpers come from sheep.

Mind you, he also thought that the Falkland Islands were in Germany, and the Falklands War was part of WW2, didn't know that Paris was the capital of France, and that you could drive to Mexico only crossing the English Channel, so maybe not the best example?
Your friend is a retard.

FredClogs

14,041 posts

161 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
I did live in a rural working environment, unfortunately the borough council has seen fit to include our village in it's local plan for expansion, so two farms are under threat and 100 acres of working agri land.


Guvernator

13,152 posts

165 months

Thursday 23rd November 2017
quotequote all
I love when I'm on the tube and you get the occasional country yokel family on a day trip to the big smoke who totally oblivious to standard city etiquette, try to talk to everybody (weirdo's) or worse proclaim loudly "This is very busy, I don't think I'd like to do this every day" at 2pm on a Tuesday

BUSY!? BUSY!? You haven't seen busy until you've experienced the shear joy of a 5pm rush hour crowd on a matchday, sandwiched between the armpit of a person who seems not to have washed for 5 days while being gently bummed by the semi-tumescence of the rather large gentleman pressed up behind you. mad