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-   -   what is your town like (https://www.quiltingboard.com/general-chit-chat-non-quilting-talk-f7/what-your-town-like-t96880.html)

quilter on the eastern edge 02-06-2011 05:13 AM

I live in the most easterly city in North America - St. John's, Newfoundland. We have a population of about 180,000 in the metropolitan area. If you want to have a look at some wonderful pictures, here's the link

http://bitstop.ca/newfoundland/st-johns/

These pics can better describe my home town better than I can.

And there is not one LQS in this whole city!!! The closest one is about a 20 minute drive outside the city.

desqueak 02-06-2011 05:14 AM


Originally Posted by Hosta
I live in a town (25 square miles) that used to be all farming now it is all houses and there is basically a main street with 10 pizza shops one grocery store and lately five car repair shops have moved in. There are also a wide variety of empty stores. There is no local recreation for teens nothing but a park with a fish pond. Our biggest building besides the schools is the library. We have only one claim to fame we host a dinky corn festival every year. I have been wanting to start a quilt group but can't seem to drum up much interest. I have been here my entire life my husband was born in a house a couple miles from where we live. I just wish there was something here to draw people out of their houses and into a community spirit. Everything that has been tried has died out after a couple years.

Hello from North Central WV......my Aunt was raised in N. Ridgeville, and my late neighbor taught school there. My aunt now lives in Grafton, and I visit on occasion, but not like in years past....my grandparents moved there years ago...but they have now both passed. Such a nice topic...I will post about my town as a new post.

Moon Holiday 02-06-2011 05:21 AM

1 Attachment(s)
My town is 22.4 square miles and is nestled along the Connecticut River and part of the Gardner Mountains. We have a population of 843. There are no stores in our town (that means no gas stations, no convenience stores, no coffee shops, no pizza shops... nothing). The largest business in town is Pete and Gerry's Organic Eggs, where my husband is the marketing manager. We live in the center of town... a few doors down from the Town Hall, the Post Office, church and the Library.
The little yellow crescent shape on the map is our town.

Monroe, NH
[ATTACH=CONFIG]64703[/ATTACH]

Greendragon6889 02-06-2011 05:38 AM

I don't really have a town to call my own..since my DH's job closed down 7 yrs ago we've moved several times..Right now we live in Clovis,NM it has a college and military base. I'd call it a small city.

marthe brault-hunt 02-06-2011 05:42 AM

I used to live in Terrebonne Qc, in a old stone house built in 1782, ten acres of land, 4 horses, a cow, chickens, geese,ducks, rabbits dogs and cats for 35 years. 8 years ago we moved in Lasalle, (montreal is at the next street corner) in a condo on the second floor. IF i look outside from my kitchen, I' m facing one of the biggest shopping mall. I do not need a car anymore, the bus stop is right at the door and the subway station is a 5 minutes walk, My husband had to have dialysis that is why we moved in the city. It is a very ethnic surrounding,Black, Chinese, Arabic, bilingual French and English.

damaquilts 02-06-2011 06:00 AM

Can't say I have a home town. Right now I am in VA but I really liked Fairburn GA. Small town, knew a lot of people. It has a small business district and it was growing for awhile. Then the housing market crashed. It is about 20 minutes south and slightly west of the Atlanta airport. Not a crowded as the north side of Atlanta.
I would love to move back if I could just find a place I could afford.
I want a place with room around me. Not with neighbors who can look over your fence from their deck.

Becky Crafts 02-06-2011 06:01 AM

We moved from NH/MA to central Florida for the warmth & lack of the white stuff. Not sure what to call our area..not in the city, yet not really suburbs either. Everything we need is within 10 miles, people are wonderful! We all help each other. Two grocery stores next door, big mall with large JoAnn's & about anything else you'd want behind us. Town center is historic and beautiful. Definitely the hub with Farmers Mkt & even a museum. The weather as well as the medical facilities are top notch and we're about 20 minutes from Disney & Universal. Been here almost 12 yrs & love it!

sewwhat85 02-06-2011 06:02 AM

warsaw mo used to be a booming lake town lot of tourist in the summer every year less and less in the down town

TanyaLynn 02-06-2011 06:21 AM

We're outside a small village that started dying after WWII and no one has had the courage to bulldoze it. We have 3 small churches, 1 school, 1 postoffice. Everyone who lives here seems to have been born here except for a few who decided it was in commuting distance to Dallas -1 1/2 hrs. We regularly have drug busts, lots of meth labs, etc. Used to be a small farming commumity - now a few larger ranches. We choose it for its location between the medical centers of Dallas and Houston, thinking the people would be friendly like other places. Wrong. Very Clannish, very red-neck- very few collage educated, hard to find a subject to talk about if you don't talk Nascar, horses, weather or politics. We've become hermits. Closest grocery is 25 miles. This is not the rural bucolic America of our Dream Life.

Homespun 02-06-2011 06:42 AM

Cowan is small-3 home run quickie markets with gasoline--post office--4 restaurants--antique store--insurance office--artisan depot--railroad museum--small library--bed and breakfast in old hotel--overstock grocery store--trains run through about every 30 minutes--around 2100 people--I love living here.


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