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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To want a Country Living lifestyle?

498 replies

meditatingwithdolly · 18/03/2025 20:57

This is lighthearted. I've had a series of unfortunate events in the last year and have moved to a very deprived area with a lot of social problems, which is probably causing me to fantasise a bit more than usual. Subscribed to Country Living magazine on a whim as it was very heavily discounted. One of the highlights of the month is hearing it fall on the doorstep and I have to grab it quickly before it gets stolen. It provides wonderful escapism, the sky is blue all year around, everyone is sooo happy washing rocks in rivers and the animals are never PITAs, unlike my pets. No one ever has money problems, and the cost of living is an afterthought as sustainability and self-equilibrium are the utmost priority.

Women have lovely, fulfilling jobs that "they stumbled upon entirely by accident" eg Jilly, who was always very frustrated by the lack of solar heated plant pots for her oriental orchids that she fell in love with on her travels in SE Asia, and one day whilst walking her collie-cross dog Shep in her 50 acre paddock, she stepped in wild horse dung and had the wonderful idea to give up her full time job and start a sustainable business making her own handmade pots from dung. She did the completely obvious thing of untying her neck scarf, filling it up with as much dung as she could find, and carried it back to her 6th century renaissance 12 bedroom house, where her husband Robert greeted her with a warm smile at the site of her Dick Whittington style knapsack, and immediately started building her a cosy workshop-cum-snug where she hosts the local edible flower supper club 3 nights a week, when she's not up to her elbows in excrement. She had no idea if her £199 pots would take off, and was most shocked when she had 10,000 orders in her first week.

No one needs a business plan or a budget, peace of mind and a sense of zen is much more important than bringing in a wage. Forty two year old Carol was so stressed by her teaching job that she just handed in her notice and planted 40,000 carrots in her small holding. Originally intended to be a business, Carol admits sheepishly that she's so fond of each one (who she has given names to) that she cannot bear to part with them. "My husband Marcus jokes that they are my babies", she laughs, "but in reality it's true. These carrots have regulated my sensory nervous system, which the daily grind of work had just worn away. I simply had to give in to what my body was telling me. Watching each and every one of them grow and develop their own little personalities is nature's way of giving back to me".

First world problems keep these people awake at night, such as 31 year old Jackie, who couldn't find curtains for the nursery that reflected the personality of her unborn son. "I really sensed that he he felt a deep connection with the Ottoman empire, and I was just flabbergasted at the lack of relevant material on the market", she laments. At 39 weeks, she jumped upon a flight to Istanbul, after having a dream that the perfect print was in Topkapi Palace. "Everyone thought I was utterly mad", she laughs, but when she was hypnotized by the Turkish style tulip motif tiles in the palace state room, baby Freddie shot out of her uterus, confirming to her that this was the perfect print for the nursery. Three hours after giving birth she opened her business designing bespoke curtains for equally distressed parents-to-be. "They understood the stress as they were undergoing the same thing. Being able to relate to them really helped me zone into what it was that they really wanted. Sometimes words aren't enough, you have to be able to finely tune stress signals others are giving out in order to see their vision". Jackie (and baby Freddie) now work out of her garden studio, and she has been commissioned by the Royal Family to produce the perfect print for sash window in King Charles' water closet. "Every morning I wake up with a warmth that radiates throughout my body, and I love that Freddie has input in my work, this is all because of him, really".

AIBU to want to a job like this? Where everything is a lovely colour and all the materials are made of earthen clay and rare plant dyes? No money problems, no annoying customers, no bins that haven't been lifted by the council (there's no need for a bin anyway, all rubbish is fully compostable). Do people really have a business where people pay to meditate with sheep, or is Country Living an entertaining work of fiction?

OP posts:
Thread gallery
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SabrinaToolmaker · 09/04/2025 18:54

meditatingwithdolly · 09/04/2025 18:05

Sorry to go back to H&G but I feel irrationally angry and disappointed with it. I've been waiting for more than 10 days for it to arrive, attached is an example of one of their 'new collections'. Just in case anyone is thinking this is a rustic Handmaid's Tale, it's a beekeeping outfit. Not only is it £1000+ (not including the bespoke willow woven mask which is probably about £2.5k), but they have the audacity not to even give any explanation as to why someone was inspired to make such a monstrosity. And I think beekeepers are supposed to wear gloves, rather than carry mushroom brushes? Shame on you H&G!

Grin This truly amazing, thanks for sharing OP. I did wonder why someone had a wicker basket on their head and a Christmas tree skirt round their shoulders. And the stripes remind me of a clown outfit but in vair tasteful neutrals.

You can get colostrum in smoothies in boujie places in the US. I’m not sure if it’s a thing over here or not.

meditatingwithdolly · 09/04/2025 19:00

SabrinaToolmaker · 09/04/2025 18:54

Grin This truly amazing, thanks for sharing OP. I did wonder why someone had a wicker basket on their head and a Christmas tree skirt round their shoulders. And the stripes remind me of a clown outfit but in vair tasteful neutrals.

You can get colostrum in smoothies in boujie places in the US. I’m not sure if it’s a thing over here or not.

My husband is from a different continent and when I visited his family for the first time, someone presented me with a 2 litre bottle of sheep's colostrum as a present 😷I'm usually very polite and would feel obliged to eat a present, but really had to make my feelings known on this one.

OP posts:
FlummeryTart · 09/04/2025 19:23

Don’t even know if I should post this, in case you all go all of a dither!
Yes, my dears, this is an original copy of CL from April, 1992, sold for the princely sum of £1.70. Bargain!
Looks like it was definitely less Araminta and her nettle flip-flops and more old Lady Fwafwhar and her herd of Jacob sheep.
What am I bid?? 🤪

To want a Country Living lifestyle?
ChardonnaysBeastlyCat · 09/04/2025 19:30

Oh to be able to join the badger watch!

SabrinaToolmaker · 09/04/2025 19:47

meditatingwithdolly · 09/04/2025 19:00

My husband is from a different continent and when I visited his family for the first time, someone presented me with a 2 litre bottle of sheep's colostrum as a present 😷I'm usually very polite and would feel obliged to eat a present, but really had to make my feelings known on this one.

Shock was it an item you could buy or from their own sheep?

meditatingwithdolly · 09/04/2025 20:04

SabrinaToolmaker · 09/04/2025 19:47

Shock was it an item you could buy or from their own sheep?

You buy it from farmers. You cook it in the oven and it sets like a blanc mange and you either sprinkle sugar or salt on top. It's expensive, so considered a good present.

OP posts:
NeverDropYourMooncup · 09/04/2025 20:26

meditatingwithdolly · 09/04/2025 18:05

Sorry to go back to H&G but I feel irrationally angry and disappointed with it. I've been waiting for more than 10 days for it to arrive, attached is an example of one of their 'new collections'. Just in case anyone is thinking this is a rustic Handmaid's Tale, it's a beekeeping outfit. Not only is it £1000+ (not including the bespoke willow woven mask which is probably about £2.5k), but they have the audacity not to even give any explanation as to why someone was inspired to make such a monstrosity. And I think beekeepers are supposed to wear gloves, rather than carry mushroom brushes? Shame on you H&G!

Have the designers even seen a bee before?

Or do they have CL Bees which never, ever get a cob on and decide the monster approaching is clearly some kind of marauding bear and congregate in around the wrists, ankles and their arses through the inadequately finely woven headgear? After all, there are TikTok bees that are quite happy to have somebody simper away about saving them when they're busy ripping the entire comb out of the wall of a house with their bare hands instead of turning into a fifty thousand angry arsed cloud intent upon murder.

meditatingwithdolly · 09/04/2025 20:33

NeverDropYourMooncup · 09/04/2025 20:26

Have the designers even seen a bee before?

Or do they have CL Bees which never, ever get a cob on and decide the monster approaching is clearly some kind of marauding bear and congregate in around the wrists, ankles and their arses through the inadequately finely woven headgear? After all, there are TikTok bees that are quite happy to have somebody simper away about saving them when they're busy ripping the entire comb out of the wall of a house with their bare hands instead of turning into a fifty thousand angry arsed cloud intent upon murder.

Get with the program dahling. Design before practicality. Always

OP posts:
Baital · 09/04/2025 23:06

ChardonnaysBeastlyCat · 09/04/2025 19:30

Oh to be able to join the badger watch!

It would be the highlight of my earthly career.

Does anyone remember the episode of To The Manor Born when Penelope Keith and what's his name went badger watching?

meditatingwithdolly · 01/06/2025 17:00

UPDATE

H&G was a pile of over priced cack so I cancelled my subscription. I am remaining loyal to Country Living (who keep giving my £1 per issue offers!) SO PLEASE FEEL FREE TO REACH OUT TO ME COUNTRY LIVING. THIS MIGHT BE YOUR LAST CHANCE!!!!

OP posts:
meditatingwithdolly · 02/06/2025 15:18

talk about living in squalid conditions “the first Christmas we all slept in cardboard boxes… next to the 15k Aga”

@Heronwatcher I recently mustered up the strength to look at Marina Fogle's instagram account again, and one photo was her teen dd doing her homework, whilst sitting in the dog's bed beside the Aga. If one didn't know any better it would have been a great advert for an NSPCC appeal.

OP posts:
Longsummerdays25 · 02/06/2025 15:43

meditatingwithdolly · 02/06/2025 15:18

talk about living in squalid conditions “the first Christmas we all slept in cardboard boxes… next to the 15k Aga”

@Heronwatcher I recently mustered up the strength to look at Marina Fogle's instagram account again, and one photo was her teen dd doing her homework, whilst sitting in the dog's bed beside the Aga. If one didn't know any better it would have been a great advert for an NSPCC appeal.

😂

Heronwatcher · 02/06/2025 21:11

meditatingwithdolly · 02/06/2025 15:18

talk about living in squalid conditions “the first Christmas we all slept in cardboard boxes… next to the 15k Aga”

@Heronwatcher I recently mustered up the strength to look at Marina Fogle's instagram account again, and one photo was her teen dd doing her homework, whilst sitting in the dog's bed beside the Aga. If one didn't know any better it would have been a great advert for an NSPCC appeal.

Exactly! Change the situation to a council estate in Coventry and a child playing on a game boy in a Doberman’s plastic bed from pets at home in front of an electric fire and social services would be round quicker than you could say double standards…

Heronwatcher · 02/06/2025 21:19

Incidentally in the quite naice village near me there is a lady who organises a toad patrol in Feb/ March, basically some fool
built a road between where the toads live and a massive pond where they breed, so every year locals spend their evenings walking up and down the verge with buckets in high vis jackets ferrying toads across the road and back when they have DTD. They have signs and everything. Proper country living stuff (“Of course Jonty and I can’t watch TV regularly as our evenings are devoted to the toad patrol, I keep telling him I plan to kiss a few and run off into the sunset hahaha, but it’s quite the social event in the pre-Easter period”).

Only issue is at the moment it’s standard high viz jackets and orange buckets, they really do need someone to design and weave a wicker toad basket and crochet a gilet in naturally dyed alpaca hair or something, the look really isn’t cutting it…

NeverDropYourMooncup · 03/06/2025 17:03

Heronwatcher · 02/06/2025 21:19

Incidentally in the quite naice village near me there is a lady who organises a toad patrol in Feb/ March, basically some fool
built a road between where the toads live and a massive pond where they breed, so every year locals spend their evenings walking up and down the verge with buckets in high vis jackets ferrying toads across the road and back when they have DTD. They have signs and everything. Proper country living stuff (“Of course Jonty and I can’t watch TV regularly as our evenings are devoted to the toad patrol, I keep telling him I plan to kiss a few and run off into the sunset hahaha, but it’s quite the social event in the pre-Easter period”).

Only issue is at the moment it’s standard high viz jackets and orange buckets, they really do need someone to design and weave a wicker toad basket and crochet a gilet in naturally dyed alpaca hair or something, the look really isn’t cutting it…

Back to design over practicality - you'd at least look trés elegante when squished like one of the amorous amphibians because the alpaca blended in perfectly with the surrounding vegetation and the 4x4s come thundering around the corner to get to their little cottage (only 9 times the size of a mere mortal's two bed terrace in the town centre with just 3 acres of land plus paddock and stables, so very modest, really).

Soukmyfalafel · 03/06/2025 17:27

I think the only people who really care about these lifestyle choices OP are the people themselves. The rest of us think it's a load of old wank, but it can make you dream of a simple life with no real money issues.

Thepollenjar · 03/06/2025 17:36

OP are you a writer? Can you launch a writing career from draughty hay shed? Because honestly if you wrote a book I would buy it.

Longsummerdays25 · 03/06/2025 21:16

Country Living looks brash in comparison to the genteel real life that weaves in and out of the cows parsley of Gloucestershire, discreet dining rooms burst with candle light and titles.
Polo ponies line the fields, and children scamper in and out with the dogs and help.
Tranquil quarters indeed, all hidden from view. Tradition lives on quietly and unobtrusively.

Elsvieta · 04/06/2025 18:45

Haha, great spoof. They always keep fairly quiet about the rich husband or other family money that funds it all.

GoodGollyMissDolly · 04/06/2025 18:51

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

WiddlinDiddlin · 04/06/2025 19:23

Elsvieta · 04/06/2025 18:45

Haha, great spoof. They always keep fairly quiet about the rich husband or other family money that funds it all.

The one I keep coming across (I don't look for their content!)...

Appear to imply that they fund their barefoot chickens and ponies and baking and adorable children (eldest in boarding school naturally) lifestyle... by making and selling wicker tiny tots basket saddles and sheepskin saddle pads...

Which they don't in fact make themselves, they just re-sell..

Nothing wrong with that as a business idea but the idea you can support that lifestyle on selling two very very niche, tiny market products is utter bullshit. Obviously one or both of them has some other vast income from something else (and possibly inherited oodles of cash and property too).

I'd be willing to bet the talented crafts people who do actually make the products they sell (and many many others besides) don't live anywhere near such an idyllic lifestyle!

GETTINGLIKEMYMOTHER · 04/06/2025 19:33

Bigearringsbigsmile · 18/03/2025 21:12

I remember years ago a Christmas edition where this woman was describing the way she went to s church furnishers and bought boxes of beeswax candles for her house, wrapped all her presents in sheet music and had holly snd ivy draped everywhere. The pictures were so beautiful and dreamy. I still think sbout it every Christmas and I wonder if she ever succumbed to tinsel.

I always remember the 🎄one in the perfect Georgian rectory, where the perfect 🎄Day included everyone ‘going to the linhay to open presents’. 😂

abracadabra1980 · 04/06/2025 22:10

lol I also used to subscribe to Country Living, when it was on offer - and bizarrely used to get two copies delivered per month for a year or so. I am currently living the dream with my black Labrador who gets me into so much trouble, we are not quite in with the gundog set, but I have the correct attire for walking her, and can talk a bit of shite about bloodlines. It's total escapism and the properties within are fantastical-I too used to get excited when it dropped on the mat - what's not to love 😁

meditatingwithdolly · 04/06/2025 23:34

Heronwatcher · 02/06/2025 21:19

Incidentally in the quite naice village near me there is a lady who organises a toad patrol in Feb/ March, basically some fool
built a road between where the toads live and a massive pond where they breed, so every year locals spend their evenings walking up and down the verge with buckets in high vis jackets ferrying toads across the road and back when they have DTD. They have signs and everything. Proper country living stuff (“Of course Jonty and I can’t watch TV regularly as our evenings are devoted to the toad patrol, I keep telling him I plan to kiss a few and run off into the sunset hahaha, but it’s quite the social event in the pre-Easter period”).

Only issue is at the moment it’s standard high viz jackets and orange buckets, they really do need someone to design and weave a wicker toad basket and crochet a gilet in naturally dyed alpaca hair or something, the look really isn’t cutting it…

^It took a tragedy to completely transform 29 year old computer analyst Giles' life. "I was simply exhausted from working 16 hour weeks in front of a computer screen," he explains, with a solitary tear discreetly rolling down his beef dripping'ed cheek. The final straw came when my retina almost detached whilst analyzing a spreadsheet and I left my desk....for good". Whilst out on a decompression walk one overcast February, Giles was horrified to see his 54 year old neighbour Judi, bent over at the side of the road, shouting that there was a dead body. "I initially thought it was just a person, but my heart nearly stopped when I realized it was a toad. I had fallen in love with them as a child on a wicker basket canoeing holiday in Vietnam, and my heart literally broke into a million pieces at the thought of one being murdered by a car so close to my home", he sobs. "I felt repulsed by drivers, road users....even myself" he explains, whilst gazing towards his fully erect linhay. "I had to undergo 63 sessions of sheep meditation before I felt able to go on". The pain is etched in Giles' face - the organic artisan beef dripping procured by his other neighbour Twiggy cannot obscure this - "but I knew i had to make a change for the better" he says. "I am a survivor, giving up is not an option for me" he says stoically.

Giles set to work immediately - designing a custom made bespoke workshop from which to build a network of willow bridges for the migrating toads. "I've always had a passion for those less fortunate" he says, "and I simply couldn't have forgiven myself if the same thing happened again" he explains. "No amount of psilocybin dosing has been able to erase that image of that dead toad out of my mind" he says. Paired with 54 year old Judi, who retired from her tapestry cushion business 30 years earlier, they have pioneered the "No toad left behind" movement. "The copulation process simply leaves them exhausted, and they can't manage that ghastly road" Jackie explains, with a glimmer of youth flushing over her face. "I often think they remind me of my husband Peter, two thrusts and they fall off, ready for a 6 week sleep!" she hoots. "It took three years to customize the workshop" Giles explains - "it had to be perfect, and whilst frustrating I had to keep reminding myself that Rome wasn't built in a day".

Giles and Judi walk me out to the end of Judi's 1.4km driveway, where they proudly show me the safe haven they have built for their post coitally exhausted amphibious friends. The workmanship is incredible - the willow perfectly woven in waves that were modelled on the waves in Padstow that Giles fondly remembers from his childhood summers in Cornwall. "This has been a labour of love" he explains, going on to tell me that he enrolled as a wicker weaver apprentice on a Scottish croft that was inaccessible for 11 months of the year. "It was tough being away from my 5 children for so long, but when I see the final results, I realize it was worth it" he says, lovingly caressing the knarly twigs. "In the last 5 years we have saved 3 toads, so I keep telling my children that ultimately their sacrifice has reaped the rewards. It is down to them that the population has grown by -0.1 to the power of 15. Some people find a cure for cancer, some people embroider cushions with foraged herbs, some tackle climate change - but they have made the difference, and they should never forget that"^

OP posts:
meditatingwithdolly · 04/06/2025 23:42

Thepollenjar · 03/06/2025 17:36

OP are you a writer? Can you launch a writing career from draughty hay shed? Because honestly if you wrote a book I would buy it.

Yes indeed I am a wonderful writer who unfortunately has slipped past the eye of the editorial team of Country Living et al. I'm willing to start at the bottom and work my way up, REACH OUT TO ME RACHEL, I will make lovely cups of tea for you in a hand painted mug and whip up a batch of fresh, mouth watering cheese and oregano muffins on my lunch break. You will regret this for the rest of your life!

OP posts: