I'm back in my rural little town and I love it! Post rural pics from your cunt!
I'm back in my rural little town and I love it! Post rural pics from your cunt!
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I thought there were no spaces left in the old world to rural areas.
My front yard.
All the little towns are becoming ghost towns unfortunately but there's plenty of space left
comfy af my dude
another pic
It's usually like that
they dont even know what rural means
My view right now. Just stopped raining but already reaching 27 C outside.
But in my place it's like that
Where are the refugees?
Comfy af thread
Looks great dude
>Windows Phone
Works great. Never any problems. I support OP's choice.
hey rural bro
I used to have Lumia 950 and it had a wastly superior camera to those 12 and 13 megapixel babbies that are in today's top models from iphone and samsung. I now have Galaxy S8 and the camera is horrible in comparison.
Bit southwest of where I live.
a Q'ero village
a town in the apurimac region
This used to be the view from my house, from my backyard, but I had to move to a c*ty because of a lack of local jobs. I'll return, though.
Do people live in those huts?
another one in the ayacucho region
wow though
Near where I live. Im surrounded by lakes in my muncipality.
Also near where I live. Nice walking route. Almost nobody comes here. They did find a dead person a while ago here iirc.
cusco's sacred valley
yeah, the Q'ero people, natives almost untouched by the colony
What crops do they grow in those plantations?
Yeah, it was beautiful. It's a rural area near the Oregon coast. Unfortunately, there's not too much of an economy there aside from logging/fishing, and I'm not from a logging or fishing family.
What region is this? Reminds me a bit of some country house my uncle has in Liguria, with smoother terrain.
seems cool at the beginning but those places are boring as fuck
Could never imagine living like that, for a prolonged period of time, but rural Peru looks comfy as fuck, would definitely hike and camp around there. Is it safe?
Why did your parents move there then, what did they do?
They both worked for the US federal government doing forest management. I like the forest, but those jobs are mostly based outside of the region now. I don't want to move to Washington, DC to start a career.
Do you have a boat? How expensive is boat registration and that sort of thing in your area?
Abruzzo :)
No we where not rich enough for a big boat and just went with my grandfather on his boat. Don't think going with a boat is that expensive, lots of germans and richfags from the south hire boats and go sailing for a day or weekend. I am trying to get into windsurfing though. Pic related, sailing race they hold each year.
where? looks like paradise to me
Thanks, really nice place, amico.
That's the Oregon coast range as he mentioned, it's an amazing place, but pretty rural, and very wet. Also a big logging center, and somehow the government lets them use these industrial herbicides that poison the locals. Alaska might be a bit less disturbed...
Look up "Yachats, Oregon". It's in that area. But it's a bit remote.
so jealous, it's such a beautiful place, I've only ever camped there. I'm on the other side of the range in the valley, so I can't complain
It's lush. That's one of the best things about it - it rains a lot, but that means a lot of things grow, and the whole area smells like it's full of fresh plants and trees. There used to be large sanitariums for tuberculosis patients in that area of the coast. Unfortunately, the lowlands (including parts of many towns) will eventually get wiped out by a tsunami, but a lot of the land near the coast is actually elevated, and I suspect it will rebuilt more quickly than people expect.
thanks
absolutely stunning landscape, so much space
there are areas the size of Luxembourg with no towns in them at all, just douglar firs and noble firs and some pines and stuff
pic related is a ghost town that was once the wettest city in the continental US... takes about 2.5 hrs to reach on logging roads, and I couldn't even find the town site after a whole day
Why is Oregon so based and beautiful?
Well, it was known as the land of milk and honey after it was found, and fueled the Oregon trail which was how the west was populated. It's probably almost as big as France, too. It's pretty good, Montana is similarly nice but without the coast and rainforests and volcanoes and desert.
depends on the altitude, it's hard to see in the image but the terraces on the left go way up
maize is cultivated in the lower part of the valley and potatoes near the mountain top, they also grow other things but its manly those
they don't use all the terraces thou, its not pictured but there's also many more terraces on the right, in general 60-80% of all terraces in Peru aren't cultivated
you see, in Peru, aside from some small rice terraces, nearly all terraces were made in pre-columbian times when the andes was more densely populated, nowadays as the rural andes of Peru is more sparsely populated, many terraces are unused and in ruins, like pic related, Laraos, a town founded by the Jaqaru people with many unused and ruined pre-inca terraces
Took this in Rotterdam 2 weeks back.
Most good pictures from the Netherlands are urban sadly.
How did you go there?
How come it is so irrelevant compared to Cali and Washington? It seems to be objectively better than those
1 million dollar question
Netherlands or Japan?
driving on the left, so japan?
Washington actually has more impressive volcanoes, and the Olympic peninsula is a more impressive rain forest, and the San Juan islands are beautiful. We also share the Columbia River Gorge... But, Oregon has Crater Lake, the desert, and some nice waterfalls and other formations.
California is huge and has most of what Oregon has if not more. Both Washington and California just have a lot more people. Oregon only has one major city, Portland, and most of the state lives in the valley south of Portland. So the rest of the state is near wilderness.
Otherwise, it might be an international thing. Most Americans know about Oregon because of the history of the expedition of Lewis and Clark and Sacajawea and then the Oregon trail that followed. The whole region was known as Oregon before anything. It's popular nowadays, in terms of people moving here in the past few decades.
No I mean why didn't Oregon become the major west coast state?
Seattle and San Francisco had better ports, California struck gold and invited many people south, Washington was also closer Vancouver, BC which was developing as a major city because of the lumber industry and shipbuilding industry, and Seattle followed that sort of trajectory. Portland has always been a pretty large city, though. California and the Central Valley just has a better climate, more people could make more money in the south where they could grow food longer, so more people followed the Applegate trail and other gold rush trails and then, the railroad went to San Francisco.
A lot of Oregon is also wasteland, 2/3 of the state is just sagebrush in the east, and then the west is just dense forest outside of the valleys. Even the coast is rugged and dangerous.
Portland also had one of the most dangerous ports in America, which was a problem
pre-inca water management in Laraos, those squares are from where the water is released, according to the level that the lagoon is damming
>Randstad
user verkeerde draad
Rural betekend iets anders dan gevuld met turken, negers en Marokkanen.
Bump
Washington has a huge inland port system and it's closer to Alaska. Seattle really became a large city during the Alaska gold rush in the mid 1800s
Are Washington and Oregon considered attractive states in the US of A, or are they average?
I would definitely consider going there if I were to move to america.
The entire western US is incredibly attractive but Washington and Oregon are more so. You can come to Portland or Seattle but everywhere else you'll be seen as an outsider and the rural northwest is pretty xenophobic. We can't even stand americans from other parts of the country
They're known as particularly striking, but sometimes get overshadowed by California, Wyoming, and Utah. People definitely know all about what Oregon and Washington look like just from media and culture and stuff, and now with the internet I think the waterfalls and volcanoes make east coast fags jealous (they have eroded mountains)
Too bad. Attractive places generally means higher cost of living, increasing population and thus changes in the mindset and landscape.
Well I will probably never live there anyway, it is just daydreaming.
is it full of refugees?
Very safe for latin american standards regarding crime, the cities, those in the coast mostly are more dangerous (crime ridden)
Best time to visit the Peruvian andes is in the months of May and June, since there is not as much rain as in the rainy season, but it's all green, from June onwards, the landscape becomes more yellowish.
It's also beautiful in the rainy season, more beautiful I would say as it has a misty and magical look but some days/weeks you can't see shit as the clouds could cover everything, there's also a greater risk of landslides in the rainy season
Yes... nice and flat
Check out this guy biking from Alaska to Argentina, he's currently in Peru
youtube.com
Dov'è?
M
Some pics I took recently.
hnggggg
Where's that?
Terronia
Dorset, England.
I'm getting some strong Monty Python vibes here
Thank you. Lovely scenery.