Scenery is important. Even if you distrust people, you can enjoy the scenery. Here there are generally oldtimey homes, some nice trees, and a beach is pretty nearby, it’s not a fabulous beach, but its ok. What’s it like in your neck of the woods people?
Trees, so many trees, wondrous trees and stinky sticky trees, oh gods where does the forest stop?!?
Nobody else? Yall need to go outside and soak it all in and tell me about it.
Lots of trees and lakes and one single mountain you can see for miles. Go about 3 miles east and it is dense city.
I live in the middle of the city in a medium to large sized U.S. Midwestern city. There is lots of green grass, bushes and a few trees here and there sprinkled all over. The trees were all planted by immigrants to this area. They are not native to this region. This is a prairie region.
The winters here are very long and very harsh. The spring season is very short and sometimes barely noticeable because it goes by so quickly. The summers usually arrive very suddenly and are very, very hot and usually are very humid and muggy. The fall season is usually always the only season that is absolutely perfect and gorgeous. Balmy and beautiful.
A lot of roads, cars, and places to eat.
Like any other suburb. I like it, it’s not too loud and not too quiet. It’s like a mix of the countryside plus a busy city.
Mountains and trees.
And my neighbors.
A bee hive outside, always full of bees, never could focus on just one bee, they just disappear into the background. Also trees, with one special tree that has like white leafs: always stands out from the rest. And a security guard who’s always within sight when I open my windows early morning.
I live in the Cookson Hills in Eastern Oklahoma. The town of Talequah marks the beginning of this area, and it has a distictive feel to it. There is a lot of empty space back in these hills. One time I went pickup riding with this man I was working for, and we got back into country where there probably wasn’t a house every five miles or more. They’ve been growing marijuana in those hills for decades, and they have found strains that work well in this environment. I’ve been wondering how the legalization of marijuana will affect the marijuana industry in Eastern Oklahoma. The hills are covered with trees, and about half of those trees are gorgeous reds and yellows to look at in the Fall. The other half is scrub oak that looks pretty drab at the turn of the season. In summer it is hot and humid. In winter the trees are bare, and they look like stark spirits rising out of the land and reaching for the sky. They have a bleak beauty about them at this time. The Baron Fork River, a tributary of the Illinois, winds through all this area. There are a few good swimming holes here and there, and a lot of people go swimming in the Baron Fork during the summer. Sometimes you can get a sort of pastoral feeling back in these hills, like you’ve found your own, peaceful and scenic patch of earth.
My city is famous for plane trees. It used to be the capital of China. The then president Chiang Kai-shek planted plane trees along all the streets and roads in this city. Now these plane trees are nearly a hundred years old with its tall and strong build and leafy top. In summer those huge tops of the plane trees connect to each other providing vast green shade for pedestrians, cyclists, and cars. In autumn, the plane trees turn yellow and golden as if they had absorbed all the energy of summer heat. In deed autumn is the best season for my city.
It’s a small town nearly 1 hr from the nearest beach. There’s some mountains and a golf course nearby. It’s a mostly suburban neighborhood otherwise. I think it looks the best at night or dusk time.
I live on a small lake and have a large oak tree. The nearest decent beach is about 90 minutes away. We have a lot of water and swamp land nearby though. It rains a lot here.
My area is a newer neighborhood so not a ton of trees but I live very near two nice parks. Eventually I want to live near water.
Australia can be pretty rugged. It’s dry/pale green for most stuff and a lot of built up areas up where people live. Still. There’s places close to suburbia up where I live where kangaroos and snakes and stuff still live so that is cool.
We have some really great beaches close. It’s like 30 minutes away but where I live it’s brush…boring pale green and not much but houses.
Wow Im so jealous loll it’s really beautiful
There’s a large grass field outside my house. In the summer it gets filled with dandelions.
To my right, there’s a forest. There’s often deers walking in the forest, and they sometimes come out into the grass fields.
When I sit on my porch, I sometimes sit really still and birds start coming around, it’s very chill.
Denmark has forests with big trees, much bigger than they had where I grew up, so I’m always awestruck when I walk in a forest
It’s mountainous here, but for the most part the mountains aren’t rocky and jagged - they’re gentle and rolling. Lots of greenery. Lots of farmland. Small creeks and ponds everywhere. Cows and sheep dot the pastures. Very picturesque.
I don’t think I would move away from Cornwall or Devon.