Our nearest neighbour was a mile away. I grew up near Mildura, on 115 acres of Mallee scrub. My school friends were mostly the children of wheat, grape and orange farmers so no-one had a lot of money. My father brought home early copies of ‘Grass Roots’ magazine when I was young, so I grew up with that as a strong influence, reading about people who were moving to the country to live their dream of sustainable, frugal, off-grid living. And the inevitable stories of people returning to the relative ease of suburban living once they realised how difficult it is to live with little income, no town water or services and not a lot in the way of community sympathy for their style of living. “Bloody hippies, the lot of ’em!!”

Living in Melbourne throughout my 20’s gave me a wonderful opportunity to meet lots of really diverse people from around the world and to broaden my world view. I studied Environmental Science at Deakin Uni whilst working as a nanny and for a revegetation group called TreeProject, based in the city.
I moved to Geelong in 2002, shortly before my first child was born and settled in East Geelong, where I still live, with my four children, a collection of chickens, a duck, a dog, a couple of cats and lots of bees. It seemed a very natural thing to plant lots of fruit trees and vegetables, to home-educate my children and to continually learn new skills so I could provide more of what we need. I am constantly surprised that people think this is an odd way to live.
Continue reading “Retrosuburbia, Meg.” →