pgj2015 wrote: » Roscommon. its not on daft now. might be sold. it seemed a bit too good to be true.
Deleted User wrote: » Both mine learned to drive as soon as they turned 17. It eased my burden a lot!
Ms2011 wrote: » These threads are always the same: I love the city/country and couldn't imagine living anywhere elsewhere. I hate the city/country and would never return. It's all relative to your circumstances and personal preference.
Julissa Eager Matchless wrote: » The last thing people should want is their teens hanging around on corners or wandering around the town. Contrary to some I would see the inability to get around by themselves as a big advantage of country and makes it much easier for parents to keep control on teens and know where they are. When I was a teenager I was far too busy working on the farm to be hanging around the town causing trouble like the people in our nearest time used to do.
Multipass wrote: » 3000 per year insurance, not a hope in hell for mine.
John_Rambo wrote: » I appreciate the town close to you are pretty rough with lots of social issues. In other parts of the country there are lots of really nice towns, villages and suburban areas where teenagers hang around in parks, beaches, cafes and pizza restaurants. They're well behaved are usually involved in sports and don't cause trouble.
DoozerT6 wrote: » Not everybody in the country lives on a farm. That would of course have kept me busy, but unless you LOVE farming it could also build resentment that here you are, stuck baling hay when your mates are on holiday or just off for the day having the craic on their summer hols. My point wasn't about just wanting to hang around the town though, but as multipass said above, about fostering a sense of independance and normalising the fact that another life exists beyond the confines of your garden. Or the farm.
pgj2015 wrote: » I grew up in the countryside, about 2 miles from a busy town. I am looking to but a house now and I saw a 7 acre site in the middle of nowhere overlooking a lake for only 50,000. I would have bought it but it was too far from where I work so I had to leave it. That is the ideal place I want to live, the lake would have been great as I have always been into fishing.
Thelonious Monk wrote: » Just don't go ruining a nice lake for the rest of us. I can't believe this happened, it's a f*cking disgracehttps://www.thejournal.ie/lough-salt-5069041-Apr2020/
pgj2015 wrote: » what is a disgrace?
Thelonious Monk wrote: » You think that monstrosity blends in with the environment?
meeeeh wrote: » I don't buy that as I don't believe that any teenager enjoys spending all their time working on the farm. There are differences in how remote area you live but there is also this magical thing called bicycle which can get you quite far in half an hour.
Ms2011 wrote: » We paid 56k for a doer upper an hour outside Dublin, best decision we ever made. Yes we are still doing it up but we have no mortgage, a huge advantage in our current economic climate.
deathbomber wrote: » Obviously the appeal of no mortgage is great, but in an hour outside Dublin you can be half way across to the Whest, you must be in Laois :<
meeeeh wrote: » Something like that is 50k for a reason. We are an hour away from Dublin in the country and have no lake yet houses go for 300k more. If something is too good to be true...
NSAman wrote: » Not always the case. The house I am in currently was valued at 7 figures. It was bank owned in a recession after a messy divorce. It came with 5 acres. yes it was in need of modernisation but the house was/is something special. The work has been done by me and herself to bring it up to the standards that we like. we also added more land to it. It was purchased for a song... literally.. some of those ‘too good to be true” deals are actually just good deals.
Ms2011 wrote: » This was more or less the case with ours, we bought it for 56k ( ex army barracks, acre of land, stables and outhouses) 5 years ago, we've done alot of work to it and more needs doing, it's worth at least 3 times as much now though.