A City Boy’s Guide to Country Etiquette
If you knock it down, you replace it ought to be the rule.
(I published this article a couple of years ago and I have since realized that it’s probably a piece that will bear repeating because (1) there are (hopefully) new readers and new neighbors who will not have seen it and (2) I keep noticing things to add to it.)
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By Bob Gaydos
For most of my life, I’ve lived in small cities (Bayonne, Binghamton, Annapolis, Middletown) and one large town (Wallkill), which is really a mall-dotted highway surrounded by housing complexes. Throw in a few years living on college campuses. Basically, it’s been city or community living.
When you live with a lot of other people close by and you want to be relatively content, you learn the rules of the road, the do’s and don’ts of getting along. Mostly, it’s mind your own business and don’t make a lot of noise.
A few years ago, I moved to the country, a bit of upstate New York between the Hudson River and the Catskills that is often protected from major weather issues by the imposing Shawangunk Ridge.
Country living means owls, woodpeckers, coyotes and starry skies, oh my.
It’s nice. Well, usually. It’s quiet. Usually. In any case, it most definitely has its own rules of the road. Things a transplanted city boy ought to know. Something I call country etiquette.
The notion (see how I used the word “notion“ instead of “idea“?) that there was such a thing as country etiquette grew out of a recent conversation about a not uncommon country experience.
A couple of years ago, our quiet summer evening at home was disrupted by a loud squealing of tires and a loud thud. Right in front of our house.
We rushed out to find a car sitting in a culvert in front of our house, a distraught young woman sitting behind the wheel and our mailbox on the ground, post and all. I don’t recall who called 911, but state police arrived quickly, talked with the driver (who was shaken but not hurt), someone called a tow truck, we went back in the house and eventually everything was back to normal, except for the mailbox. Its career was over.
In short order, we replaced the mailbox and occasionally wondered what happened to the young driver. I suspected alcohol may have been involved.
A couple of weeks later, the whole scene repeated itself. Nighttime. Squeal. Thud. Car. Culvert. Young woman driver. Unhurt. Mailbox kaput.
Deja vu all over again, as Yogi Berra once said. Same follow up. Police. Tow truck. Mailbox flattened.
Again, we replaced it and the new one has survived ever since. But here’s the thing. Neither driver offered to pay to replace the mailbox (they both got out of their cars and talked to us) or to have it repaired. Now, it seems to me that a basic rule of country etiquette ought to be that if you wipe out someone’s mailbox (and get caught at it), the decent thing to do is to make it right again. Pay for a new one.
And that’s what got me thinking about other rules of country etiquette. What are some things to help someone new get along with neighbors who may not live right next door? Here’s what I’ve come up with so far:
— Having a handy supply of eggs is nice, but keep your chickens in your own yard as much as possible. Free range doesn’t mean the whole neighborhood, or, especially, the busy road.
— Don’t shovel your driveway snow into the road. It’s only extra work for the highway crews and it’s dangerous.
— When driving, wave at people walking along country roads. It’s neighborly.
— Walkers, please wear reflective clothing at night. It’s awfully dark out there sometimes and the roads are often winding and have no shoulder. We’d like to get to know you.
— Don’t let your dog walk on the road side. Preferably, don’t walk your dog on the road at all. Some drivers are less attentive than others. (See reference to mailboxes above.) And yes, clean up.
— Slow down for people at their mailbox. (A personal peeve of mine.) You can even wave.
— In fact, slow down in general. Posted speed limits are not merely suggestions.
— In special fact (and this is a new one added from personal experience), if you see someone backing out of their driveway or road to get on the typical two-lane road in the country and you are a good quarter mile away, slow the heck down. Let them get out in peace in one piece. It’s hard enough to back into a narrow country road with trees often blocking your vision without worrying whether that driver whizzing down the road is texting or talking on the phone or so totally engrossed in something on the radio that they don’t see you, even though you see them.
— In further fact, if you’re not going to back up a lot of traffic, just be nice and let people back out of their driveways even if they haven’t gotten their rear end out yet.
— Be patient with a farm tractor on the road. He’ll be out of your way shortly, or he’ll pull over as soon as he can. He’s working.
— Be honest at roadside honor stands. Act like there are cameras in the trees.
— Free stuff at the foot of a driveway is really free. If you want it, take it. Someone always does.
That’s what I came up with so far. If you have other suggestions, please leave them in the comment section.
While I’m at it, I figure I might as well add another feature of country living — a potpourri of handmade road signs. Here are a few I noticed:
— Corn maze, hay ride, pumpkins, pickles, sweet corn
— Beef sale
— Fresh garlic
— Sunflower patch, mums, hay for sale
— Farm fresh eggs
— U pick pumpkins
— Fresh key lime pie
— Baby Fox
— We buy ATVs dead or alive
Like I said, nice.
‘Til next time at pet-friendly Tractor Supply.
Tags: Annapolis, Bayonne, Binghamton, Bob Gaydos, Catskills, chickens, Corn, Country, eggs, farmer, Hudson River, mailbox, Middletown, owls, Shawangunk, tractor, Wallkill