Coming Soon đ At the beginning of April, youâll be
introduced to a brand-new GoComics! See more information here. Subscribers, check your
email for more details.
I would have read her the riot act. I need my beauty sleep-and sure thereâs hotcakes on the griddle but Iâll cook my own breakfast later thank you very much, you unctous sow!
I definitely wouldnât like living on a farm. Up too early and down too early. Living is too farm-centric â focus and energy entirely on the farm, not much else. There is too much to living, things to see, places to go. Leave the lifestyle to who enjoys dedicating whole life to it. Itâs said farming is a clean lifestyle and thereâs not much crime and all and thatâs probably true, but I will take the city, crime and all.
One of the many, many blessings of growing up on a working ranch or a farm is that you not only learn self-sufficiency at a very early age, but you learn how to use your imagination, and to improvise.
Sorry, I despise people like this. Itâs not just that they expect you out of bed and at the breakfast table in the 6-zone, but the self-righteous, unspoken âOur way of life is better than yoursâ âWhat is it with you city folk anyway, thinkinâ itâs so cool to stay up past 9:00 at night, watchinâ that new-fangled telly-vision?â Hey, theyâre your guests â not your farm slaves. You couldâve at least given all of them a heads-up the night before: âLook, we know you hosers donât adhere to our crazy schedule back where you come from, but âround here Uncle Jeb is up at 4 AM to feed the hogs and Granny Fritzie will be servinâ hard tack for breakfast at 6 sharp, eh?â
I canât believe how worked up all these city folks get over âfarm lifeâ being imposed on them. In the city you have to deal with vegetarians, as well as vegans. (When I visit, you have to cook for me. When you visit you have to eat like me). Have they ever seen stars? Light pollution in the cities makes it impossible. Fresh air? You jest! Gangs? Two hour commutes? Constant traffic noise. Status seeking snobs. The list goes on ad infinitum, ad nauseaum. No thanks!
People who are biorhythmically unattuned to a farm schedule tend to gravitate to where they fit. Usually, the cities offer the shift diversity to accommodate different sleep requirements.
Iâm not very impressed with this farm arc of Johnstonâs so far.Her stereotypical characters seem to be from the early 1900âs,( Iâm still waiting for Johnboy to make an appearance) Iâll be spending Xmas on a farm in SW Manitoba close to where this storyline takes place,and no one gets up much before 8 am ( unless thereâs a calf to pull that is) much less cook hot cakes and bacon.These days,thereâs on-line cattle auctions, video survalence of livestock,travel to ag-conventions,and visits to Granny and Gramps at their condo in Palm Springs!
Excluding corporate agriculture, most farmers have to work in town in order to make enough money to continue farming. Oligopoly and olisipy are doing them in.
Baarorso about 7 years ago
I would have read her the riot act. I need my beauty sleep-and sure thereâs hotcakes on the griddle but Iâll cook my own breakfast later thank you very much, you unctous sow!
Templo S.U.D. about 7 years ago
canât argue with Elizabethâs cousin there on that statement
howtheduck about 7 years ago
The farm, where no one sleeps past 7 am and where the tractor parts store opens before 7 am.
capricorn9th about 7 years ago
I definitely wouldnât like living on a farm. Up too early and down too early. Living is too farm-centric â focus and energy entirely on the farm, not much else. There is too much to living, things to see, places to go. Leave the lifestyle to who enjoys dedicating whole life to it. Itâs said farming is a clean lifestyle and thereâs not much crime and all and thatâs probably true, but I will take the city, crime and all.
Rosette about 7 years ago
For a moment there, I thought Lizzie had doubled and was talking to herself. I must be tired.
Lee Cox about 7 years ago
And welcome to the realities of farm life, Elizabeth!
BiathlonNut about 7 years ago
Welcome to the farm.
Jogger2 about 7 years ago
âHoliday?â The animals donât know the word.
Linguist about 7 years ago
One of the many, many blessings of growing up on a working ranch or a farm is that you not only learn self-sufficiency at a very early age, but you learn how to use your imagination, and to improvise.
Asharah about 7 years ago
Mikeâs already up? But I guess he smelled Grandmaâs cooking.
phoenixnyc about 7 years ago
Anyone who wakes me up at 7 in the bloody morning when I donât actually have to be up that early has accepted the risks theyâre taking.
JennyJenkins about 7 years ago
So true!
rfeinberg about 7 years ago
Sorry, I despise people like this. Itâs not just that they expect you out of bed and at the breakfast table in the 6-zone, but the self-righteous, unspoken âOur way of life is better than yoursâ âWhat is it with you city folk anyway, thinkinâ itâs so cool to stay up past 9:00 at night, watchinâ that new-fangled telly-vision?â Hey, theyâre your guests â not your farm slaves. You couldâve at least given all of them a heads-up the night before: âLook, we know you hosers donât adhere to our crazy schedule back where you come from, but âround here Uncle Jeb is up at 4 AM to feed the hogs and Granny Fritzie will be servinâ hard tack for breakfast at 6 sharp, eh?â
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] about 7 years ago
Lynnâs Notes:
True enough. Nobody works harder than a farmer.
David Hironimus about 7 years ago
I canât believe how worked up all these city folks get over âfarm lifeâ being imposed on them. In the city you have to deal with vegetarians, as well as vegans. (When I visit, you have to cook for me. When you visit you have to eat like me). Have they ever seen stars? Light pollution in the cities makes it impossible. Fresh air? You jest! Gangs? Two hour commutes? Constant traffic noise. Status seeking snobs. The list goes on ad infinitum, ad nauseaum. No thanks!
Kind&Kinder about 7 years ago
People who are biorhythmically unattuned to a farm schedule tend to gravitate to where they fit. Usually, the cities offer the shift diversity to accommodate different sleep requirements.
Alphaomega about 7 years ago
Hippogriff about 7 years ago
Excluding corporate agriculture, most farmers have to work in town in order to make enough money to continue farming. Oligopoly and olisipy are doing them in.