by MrBill » Wed 27 Dec 2006, 03:50:09
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('thuja', 'S')ure Bill, but you have enough money to buy a fantastic pied de terre out in the country where you can hire people to grow your food and grapes for wine. I'm guessing you wouldn't have to worry about mortgages, bills, etc.
I grew-up on the farm and apprenticed as a carpenter before I went to school to study agriculture. My step-brothers have such exotic jobs like welder, heavy duty mechanic and tool push in the oil patch. My step-sister is an oil well engineer and works at the nearby gas plant. Her husband's family have a cow & calf operation. My step-father's family have a fully integrated mixed farm from grain through to feedlot. But they still need to take work off the farm to make ends meet like working at local the Co-op delivering bulk fuel.
The silver spoon was shoved so far up my ass that when I was going to college I had to work 3-jobs, 100-hours a week, during the summer to pay for my tuition.
But, yes, an old farm house in Tuscany or Piedmonte on some land that grows grapes DOES sound nice, but when TSHTF, I guess I will settle for a couple of quarters of mixed farm in N. Alberta near friends and family.
In the meantime, I earn and save. That and sweat equity. I at least try to practice what I preach. It is the best I can do to prepare for an uncertain future?
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.