Hi dot, schutzi, and i.maid. Still a bit out of it or would have commented on your posts here. I had plans to wax all lyrical about a bit of nostalgia of my own. May yet get round to it, but in the meantime:
I did say sqad was the champion of this thread, but you 3 are champions too, with your reminiscences of real farming.
We weren�t your actual farming kids, but we had the run of a huge farm with cornfields above our heads to get frighteningly lost in (while playing hide-and-seek, so not for long), open fields and meadows to roll around in, and native deciduous forest all around. Then the rot set in with building blight (tho it did seem to spread less malignantly in those days), but even that meant half-built houses to explore, chasing one another over open joists and being out cold for half an hour after falling thru three floors of them into the cellar, and coming round to find one�s playmates still agitated about whether to get help in such forbidden territory (I did come round, so no parents were ever told).
I thought I knew all about nostalgia, but then I went to study in Japan. The whole country is awash with nostalgia. They are the most nostalgic people in the world. The Japanese for roughly �the old folks at home� is Furusato, and there is a song of lost childhood and not blue, but very green remembered hills, called �Furusato�, which I think is my favourite of all such songs:
That mountain where we used to chase rabbits/that river where we used to fish for young carp/which even now my dreams roam round/ � my never-to-be-forgotten country home!
And it goes from strength to strength over all the following verses.
And as I said at the start, I haven�t started about my own nostalgia yet!