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Old 05-06-2008, 08:46 AM
Free at last! Free at last!
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Cumberland Co., TN
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2mares has a reputation beyond repute
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Good post as always LauraC. I dont know if im considered a local by association, a transplant, dm yankee, or just a sooner but ill make a few comments.
Snow
Dont throw that shovel away, I remember years I had to shovel out from under my car to drive about 50 ft, get out shovel again. I would actually like to see that again at least once or twice.

humidity
I hate the humidity, but after working a summer in Mississippi, I dont complain. much.

People
People are generally friendlier and more helpful than in Ohio, where i was born.

pick-up trucks
There are more pick ups because they are needed for farming and work and fun. I have one to pull a horse trailer, haul hay, manure, landscape stuff, etc.

teenagers
Both my kids worked at either Hardees or Dairy Queen after school and weekend while in HS. They also picked up work hauling hay and such.

Birds
On my way to work yesterday I was nearly knocked down by a pileated woodpecker, had a wild turkey and a guinea run in front of my turck and saw a whooping crane. It was an unusal day for birds. I couldnt say if they are unusally fat tho.

Congressmen
Yesterday on my way home I saw Senator Charlotte Burks mowing her lawn. Riding mower of course.
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Old 05-06-2008, 10:16 AM
Senior Member
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Location: Whiteville Tennessee
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JEANNE61 View Post
I AGREE . . only been there twice ..( to adamsville . tenn) where i'll be moving in about 3 mths . . from wpb fla .
one thing i resent .. the constant comments about those 'foreigners ' from 'up north' or fla. .

we're not that bad . . after all , we wouldnt have CHOSEN your state to live in (t he rest of our lives) if we didnt 'see something good in it ..

sure its gonna be a 'transition .' as any move would be . esp from city to country . .but again . that's why we CHOSe it ..
we dont want to change you . .we want to change OUR lives. .NOT YOURS ...

why not just accept that possiblility . and leave the 'foreigner' comments out of it ..
we're just like you. . just havent' been in the country mode for many yrs ..

i'm just hoping . .once they hear my (former ) NY accent . . i dont' get this kind of guff from the locals .. . i certainly dont intend to offend anybody in my new 'hood' . .

thanks for listening . . jeanne
If you dont come to McNairy County and say things like,"you should do things this way" or "how come you dont have a Macys?" you should be just fine. I am a Tennessee hillbilly to the bone and we only give a hard time to people who move here and demand that WE change.Another you can do to make your transition smoother would be to learn the words to ROCKY TOP!
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Old 05-06-2008, 10:28 AM
Up on the Mountain
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Quote:
Originally Posted by alleycat View Post
She did call our birds fat however.

;-)
Observation:

I don't know if this is because in Florida people show more skin and therefore are more obsessed with exercising but I noticed that people in Florida (where I live) are skinnier than the people that I have seen in TN.

I for one, am not a skinny minny and I feel more at home with the people in TN but I wonder if it is the food or culture or lack of facilities. Maybe people are just more laid back? What ever it is, I know I will fit in perfectly. It will be nice not to have to compete with the "size 2" bikini clad hussies who look like they could use a cookie and be with "average" size people for once in my life.
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Old 05-06-2008, 10:45 AM
JMT
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 2mares View Post
Congressmen
Yesterday on my way home I saw Senator Charlotte Burks mowing her lawn. Riding mower of course.
Charlotte Burks is a jewel. Her late husband was beloved and revered, and Charlotte is just as much the humble servant that he was. We're all better off for having her in the state senate.
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Old 05-06-2008, 11:17 AM
Free at last! Free at last!
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Cumberland Co., TN
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2mares has a reputation beyond repute
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JMT
I havent always agreed with everything she and tommy have supported, but yes they are/were great folks. I went to school with their daughter. She is still very involved with the community and hands on with ball games and such. It did make me look twice when I saw Mrs. Burks moving that big yard. LOL. I thought one her kids or grandkids would do that for her or she would pay someone. Just shows how down to earth she is.
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Old 05-06-2008, 01:22 PM
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Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Knoxville,Tn.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by LauraC View Post
Been in Tennessee a year (as of 5/15) and these are my observations. Transplants, do you share these observations?

1. Time to take the shovel out of the trunk of the car. Don’t think I’ll be digging myself out of the snow anywhere in Tennessee. I used my ice scraper once last year and that was the brush end, to brush the snow off my car. (Note: I’m retired. If you are outside at 6:00A or earlier, every morning in the winter, you may have a different take on this.)

2. The summer heat and humidity, on the other hand…good luck with plans for a forum picnic in August.

3. The jewel of Tennessee is the State Park system. Been to 7 so far: Norris Dam, Big Ridge, Frozen Head, Cove Lake, Fall Creek Falls, Ft Loudoun, Cumberland Mountain). They’re all different from each other but in my opinion they are the best things about the state. If you don’t take advantage of them, what can I say?

4. Oak Ridge electric has it all over the places I lived in Maryland and Long Island, New York. Where I used to live in Maryland if someone just sneezed near the wires, we lost power and sometimes it was for days. I’m talking your home, traffic lights and the stores. It was a regular occurrence to toss the food in your refrigerator/freezer. Once I was worried I’d freeze to death, the power was out for so long in the winter and that was because something blew up, not because of a vehicle accident or frozen tree branches. After a hurricane, my area in MD was out for four days…and I didn’t live anywhere near the water. I had the electric company emergency number on my cell phone contact list. On Long Island, NY, we lost power a lot, too, but there the issue was also frequent power surges and brown outs and worrying about your electric appliances. Now here in Oak Ridge there are all of these trees, a ton of overhead wires, a lot more traffic accidents and yet power outages are infrequent, haven’t heard/seen a power surge and when the power goes out, it comes back on fairly quickly. Plus, it’s cheaper here. Transplants, is this your experience in your TN town?

5. Food is not cheaper here than the place I left. Maybe the food tax is throwing me. Comments from other transplants? Also, I expected more produce here and local farm stands. Didn’t have them in MD, just expected them here.

6. The birds are fat here (and so am I ). I never saw such fat birds in my life – the ducks are huge, the geese are huge, the songbirds (even the little ones) have huge bellies. I’m thinking if it rains here more frequently than other places, then worms come up more, so the birds eat more frequently. Anyone have any other ideas about this?

7. I don’t see any difference in Tennessee drivers and Long Island or Maryland drivers except they don’t honk here. Tennessee drivers tailgate just like everyplace else, they drive in the rain/fog without their lights on just like everyplace else, they speed just like everyplace else and they don’t use their directional signals just like everyplace else. Of course, those could be transplants from rude states bringing their bad driving manners with them… What I do hear about more are uninsured/unlicensed/drunk drivers on the road. Now do I just hear about it more here because my local papers in the other two places wouldn’t report drunk driving/unlicensed/uninsured driver stops unless a fatal accident was involved? I don’t know. My car insurance (same company, same car) is cheaper here so that has to mean something.

8. Strangers are definitely friendlier here. In my town, I have got to have the nicest postal clerks, the cheery supermarket clerks always talk to you and you get chatted up on store lines and in the doctor’s waiting room. My supermarket people offer to go with me to my car when I have a lot of groceries. But let me tell you a story. When I bought my MD leased car in Tennessee, I couldn’t get the old license plate off where I register the car (in my TN town). In the parking lot of the county clerk’s office, a TV cable guy got out his tools and tried to help me get the plate off, a clerk (who is not with the motor vehicle people) came out and tried to help me get the plate off, my apartment complex maintenance man tried to help me get the old plate off, all to no avail (stripped and it looked like the back of the car would have to be dismantled). I called the Harriman car dealer (remember they didn’t sell or lease me the car) who told me to come right in, took the car into the shop as soon as I got there, got the old plate off, put the new plate on and didn’t charge me. Now anyplace where I lived before, no one (state employee or stranger) would have attempted to help me in the parking lot, I don’t even know what the MD maintenance guy looked like in the apartment complex I lived in for 12 years and I would have had to make an appointment at the car dealer. And get this, when I took my car in for an oil change, I had the wiper blades replaced. It rained the next day. The woman in the car dealer’s office called me to ask how the new wiper blades were working out for me.

9. I love my Tennessee doctor. He is the nicest and most thorough doctor I have ever had. He spends time TALKING to you. He looks like he’s 15 but, hey --- and he’s a local who got his degrees in East Tennessee. You know you always hear these stories about these Florida people who fly back north to go to the doctor. Well, I wouldn’t trade my Tennessee internist for all of the others I’ve had put together. I don’t know if I just got lucky or what since I didn’t get him by recommendation. Interestingly, his assistant is from Maryland. What are your TN doctor experiences?

10. Food: Gondolier cakes (carrot cake and red velvet cake). Buddy’s Barbecue potato salad. Big Ed’s pizza – take out. Now I have to tell you the Gondolier cakes come from Georgia BUT if you ever eat in Gondolier (it’s a chain, make sure you have a slice of one of the two cakes for dessert, even if you get take out.) Like the Maryland suburbs, no bakeries except what’s in the supermarket. I had my first corn dog in TN this past year.

11. High School kids still work in fast food restaurants here. I salute them unlike the apparently spoiled kids in my old Maryland neighborhood who don’t work at all after school.

12. College sports here are held in higher esteem than pro sports. Not so in the two former places I lived where it was reversed.

13. There are more pickup trucks here. I know, DUH, but why? Any theories? There were way more SUVs in Maryland than sedans. I see more sedans than SUVs here. I’ve been away from Long Island too long (12 years) to know what’s happening there, now.

14. Polite: I’ve mentioned this before…generally speaking, male natives hold the door open for you before they walk through it. I say “thank you.” They say “yes ma’m.” It makes my day. In MD, if they don’t let the door shut without regard to you coming through behind them, then they hold the door only after they go through it. Poop on them!

15. The churches here open their doors for non-religious uses of their facilities. My retiree book club meets in a Lutheran church meeting room. The Community Band has its annual Christmas concert in a Baptist Church. My Camera Club is meeting next week in a Unitarian Church because we can’t meet in our regular place. I don’t ever remember the churches on Long Island or in Maryland opening their facilities for public meetings. Although I’m not religious I feel the churches here are a bigger part of the community and I like it.

16. There sure are a lot of dams here. High dams, low dams, big dams, little dams. I’ve seen more dams in a year than I have the entire rest of my life.

17. There are more flowers here. Bradford Pear trees are the bomb – pretty in Spring and Fall.

18. Deer sightings are so common as to be ho-hum. If only those people who go to Cades Cove to see deer would realize, they’re all over Tennessee…try any State park.

19. I actually know what my TN Congressman looks like and what he does. I can pick him out in a crowd photo. He comes to my town a lot. Couldn’t pick my former MD Congressman out of a photo of three people.

20. Haven’t met or seen or read about any showoffs since I’ve been here. Material possessions, the way you dress, the size of your house, the car you drive, who you know, doesn’t seem to matter/impress people. I am not conscious of who is wealthy and who isn’t by looking at people or their cars. No one is flashy (makeup, jewelry, fancy clothes). Wealthy people don’t get any attention at all in the two local newspapers…and I like that. Not true for my former MD and LI, NY locations where impressing people with possessions and looks was a sport. Here you get attention for accomplishment…and, you know, if you get arrested. Is that true in your TN town?
Great post Laura,
1. We never had a shovel to begin with.
2.Last summer during our unusual hot humid weather, Bill and I learned, run out in the morning, get er done and then come home and finally understand the concept of Siestas. It worked for us.
3. I agree about the state Parks.They are impressive.
4. We never lose electric here like we did in upstate NY. The few times it has gone out, it has come back on within minutes. Also if for some reason, the power company has to shut off the electric to work on the lines, they always come knock on the door and tell you. In NY it was tough luck if you lost everything on your computer because they couldn't be bothered to let you know they had to shut it down.
5.I think we get more bang for our buck with groceries compared to NY.
6.I can't say I've ever given the birds weight issues any thought till you mentioned it. I'm just happy to recognize northern species in the winter.
7.Car Insurance is cheaper here and so is buying a car and registering it.
8.I think everyone I run across at all times is friendlier here. I agree.
9.Both Bill and I have found great doctors here in Tn. It is kind of novel to have a doctor actually spend time talking to you, instead of yessing you to death as they are doing that"yeah, yeah, yeah, you're right" as they shuffle towards the door.
10.With the pounds I've packed on since I've been here, I have no complaints about the food.I can't get a Java Chiller, Mocha, carmel from Sonic in NY.
11.High school kids and teens here in general are helpful, mannerly and downright nice. I haven't seen any pouty faced goth's in Dandridge.
12.I agree and GO VOLS!
13.SUV's are to expensive to fill with gas. Plus there isn't the pretentious attitude here. I used to be a 2 SUV family in NY, here we have a small Toyota that still looks great after 5 years.
14. Now this took me some time to get used to. I've been chatised by many older men for not waiting for them to open the door.In NY, you could stand there till hell froze over and no one holds the door, you're on your own there... When I first met Bill Oh baby was I impressed! He opened my car door, held doors open and helped me put my coat on and he lit my cigarette.His mama taught him well.
15. Can't comment on this one but I'll take your word for it.
16.Dam it, I've missed seeing the dams.
17.More flowering trees here and Spring is full of flowers.
18. Now in NY there are so many deer, the insurance companies give you one freebie deer accident every year. I haven't seen any deer on the side of the road here.
19. Sorry, I don't.
20.Yes, it is very true here. People are very down to earth here and everyone is treated with the same courtesy and respect. I like that about Tn. very much.
Pam
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Old 05-06-2008, 01:45 PM
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I believe she did, ac. I do have a huge attack Robin, yes, I said Robin, in my yard. He's just mad 'cause he has to wear "husky" feathers.

Just kidding Laura. Love your post. This native is going to cry now. And watch out for the turkey.
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Old 05-06-2008, 03:12 PM
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LauraC has a reputation beyond repute
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You guys think I'm kidding about the big birds but I just looked through some of my photo folders. Some of these aren't the best quality photos but look at the size of these birds and tell me they aren't huge for the little guys they are ---

[IMG][/IMG]

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Old 05-06-2008, 04:14 PM
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Could it be the French Fries? Lordy, those are hilarious.
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Old 05-06-2008, 04:27 PM
Lovin life in the boro!
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: The land of erternal summer to Murfreesboro, TN
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Great post LauraC and I agree with it 100%. Well except for the fat birds. I never noticed and I have geese in my neigborhood too, which is so cool! I have to start paying more attention to the birds and check out their weight!

I haven't been here a year yet, but I recently went back to Florida due to a death in the family. I felt an urge to move back, but once I came home it quickly passed. Everyday I drive around and am still in awe of all the beautiful trees and flowers and that feeling of peace I feel here. Just wouldn't trade that for the stress and "keep up with the Jones" life in Florida.
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