Better Fences Make Better Neighbors

Started by MountainDon, September 04, 2008, 11:03:16 PM

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MountainDon



HOOPER, Utah —  A farmer has erected a fence in his backyard made of three old cars sticking up in the air to send a message to new neighbors that he can do whatever he wants on his farm.

"This is just a fun way for me to say, 'Hey boys, I'm still here,'" said Rhett Davis. "This is my redneck Stonehenge."

• Click here to see photos of the "Redneck Stonehenge."

Davis came up with the idea after neighbors who recently moved into homes next to his hayfield complained about his farm.

"The people who bought the homes say, 'Well, we love looking into your yard and seeing the horses and the cattle, but we don't like the flies, and we don't like the mosquitoes,' and when I cut my field to bale it, they say, 'We don't like the dust in the air,'" Davis said.

Davis said he offered to pay half the cost of a fence between his property and the others and to build it. He said his neighbors declined the offer, saying it would block their view.

Neighbors declined to comment to the Standard-Examiner of Ogden.

Davis said after the neighbors declined his offer, he used a backhoe to dig three large holes on the edge of his property, then took three cars that had competed in demolition derbies and planted them nose-first into the ground.

He said the cars were planted out of humor rather than spite. He said it's important that new residents moving into the area realize that Hooper remains a farming community.

The area has grown recently with new residents who desire a country atmosphere but don't want the smells and noises of farm life, Davis said.

"I respect that they're here and spent a lot on their homes, but on the other hand, give me a little bit, too. I've been here since I was 7 years old," he said.

Davis said he doesn't intend to keep the cars up permanently.

"I've talked to my neighbors and worked things out. I really just thought this would be a funny thing to do," he said. "These can come out just as easy as they went in."

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,397625,00.html

Video here...
http://www.myfoxutah.com/myfox/pages/Home/Detail;jsessionid=CDE32A90985F2FA26E96FA97687C59C8?contentId=7131449&version=1&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=VSTY&pageId=1.1.1&sflg=1
Just because something has been done and has not failed, doesn't mean it is good design.

glenn kangiser

Fresno county gave a friend of mine orders to put up a fence so he did it with car hoods.  He's gone now but the fence may still be there.
"Always work from the general to the specific." J. Raabe

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Mad Dog

It's like the damn people that buy property next to an airport, then complain about the noise from the airplanes.  d*
I refuse to tiptoe through life, only to arrive safely at death.

Homegrown Tomatoes

I read about this here a while back... I love it.  His imbecile neighbors shouldn't have built a subdivision in the country if they didn't really want to be "in the country".  Idiots.  If I were him, I'd leave my stonehenge up.  Way nicer guy than most... I can't believe he offered to build and pay for half the fence.  Why is it that city people want to get out of the city, so they move to a rural or semi-rural area and try to make it just like the doggone city????  That's one of my biggest pet peeves.  We had issues with that in Wisconsin... something about dogs and chickens and gardens that <<gasp!>> are for growing food rather than for growing decorations. ::)

desdawg

That is an ongoing problem around here. Feed lots and dairies that have been in place for years get encroached upon by developers looking for more land. The city or county planners require the builders to disclose the potential problems but the buyers come and complain later and eventually win out. The land the beef are occupying becomes more valuable and the dairymen & feedlot operators take their substantial profits and move further out to some less expensive property. Then the process repeats some years later. Eventually Phoenix and Tucson will become one large metropolitan area joined at the hip.
I have done so much with so little for so long that today I can do almost anything with absolutely nothing.