Friday, December 30, 2005

Podcast 1

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Well we have recorded our first audio "podcast". Click the link above to play the file or use the RSS button on the right to add the feed to your podcast client and have the files downloaded automatically.

I am afriad its not very good and I hope we get better and laugh less - there are two edits where giggles got the better of us. Feedback is welcome - even if you just tell us to forget it!

For more information about podcasting check out:

Wikipedia definition
Podcast Alley or
Ipodder

Living the Good Life

chicken bedtimeIf you read this site you may be forgiven for thinking that we have just woke up one day and thought "I know - lets move to Nova Scotia" but that is far from the truth.

Although in some respects the move to Nova Scotia is the beginning of our journey it is also the end of another one as it has taken us a long time to come to the conclusion that this is the right thing for us to do.

Without going back to the beginning of our lives (or even our life together which began almost 15 years ago) I will start at the point a few years ago where we came to the conclusion "there must by more to life than this". I wonder if this is a thing that happens to a lot of people in their 30's? I think we spent quite a while in our 20's trying to sort things out - pay off student debts, buy a house, get cats, try to succeed at work, acquire the trappings of life we felt we ought to have.

We have always been keen on the garden and being outside. It was the large garden in our 1930's suburban semi in Leeds which persuaded us to buy our house 10 years ago. We have been keen on growing things all this time - potatoes, courgettes, beans, tomatoes, sweetcorn. The nicest thing about the garden is the time we spend in it during the summer. Lying under our oak tree you would never guess you were only 2.5 miles from the centre of Leeds, a city of about 750,000 people.

As we started to get more interested in producing our own food we made the decision to get some chickens. We had thought about it for a while but it wasn't until we visited friends in Wales and met their chickens and realised they were fairly easy to look after that we took the plunge. Four chickens were added to the family in August 2004 and have been a big hit. They are a hell of a tie and luckily our good neighbours have helped us and looked after them so we have been able to have holidays.

I am sure you can imagine how many "Good Life" jokes we had.. just smile and pretend its the first time you have heard it.

The arrival of the chickens was probably the start of the inevitable. Interest in producing things, living simply, enjoying doing things together and being happy started to look far more attractive than working longer hours, having more stress, earning more money and buying more crap we didn't need. We have never been "house" people and I suppose a lot of people put their energies outside work into their homes, clambering desperately up that property ladder to buy bigger, more luxurious houses in more exclusive areas. I have seen people I know do this and realised it was not for me. To me that just involved a bigger mortgage and more stress, less freedom, being more trapped by work and longer commutes and less time to enjoy life.

We did look at seeing if we could buy somewhere in the UK, either near here to carry on working (even with a longer commute) or the ultimate dream of giving up work. We realised that to do this was uneconomical. We would be saddled with far too large a mortgage and I would be trapped in work for ever more with longer commutes and less time to enjoy together and enjoy any sort of "new life". The sort of mortgage we would need would not permit reducing working hours or doing a less stressful job. Now this would be fine if the wish to live a simpler life was only the ambition of one of us. Commuting to the office and leaving AJ at home would have allowed us to buy a smallholding or an old farm but I am convinced my life expectancy and certainly quality of life would have suffered - sorry but I am not prepared to make the ultimate sacrifice. I am sure I would have been an unpleasant stressed up nasty after slogging home day after day and many weekends of working too.

So this is where Nova Scotia comes in. Cheap housing was the first attraction. A way to live a simple life but no mortgage? Now that opened up more possibilities for working in different ways and different patterns. Without a mortgage (which lets face if was going to be about £1,000 a month if we moved anywhere in the UK) we would have far more freedom and opportunities. But would we like it? When we first seriously started thinking about it - January 2005 - my first thought was - lets go - lets go see it. If we don't like it we need to think again. So in January we booked to visit my sister in Toronto and fly to NS for a few days. And thevideoss on this site show our thoughts on that visit.

Thursday, December 29, 2005

Video - Matt on the fourth day in NS

Matt on Day 4
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Sounding far more positive and a bit giddy I reckon. Perhaps thats what driving around in the sunshine in a convertable does for you - or perhaps I had sunstroke.

Wednesday, December 28, 2005

Smallholder's 12 Days of Christmas

play
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For more information about the ACL 12 Days of Christmas, click here.

In the country.. no-one can hear you scream....

scary trees?What is it about horror films we have watched recently that makes them all look like they are set in Nova Scotia?

Woods, lakes and seclusion - just the lovely things we are after are also the things of horror films.

I suppose its like before flying you suddenly think I should stop watching these "black box" programs on Discovery about the 1 million ways a plane can go wrong and suck you out of your seat and through the engines.

I think it started when we watched a film called "Dream Catcher" with log cabins, snowmobiles, and yucky alien things that jumped out of the snow and gave a man peeing a nasty accident. Check out the photos from the film and you will get the idea of the locations. Turns out its filmed on the other side of Canada in BC but still.

Of course since thinking about it every scary film we watch has elements of our new life. Luckily some are more ridiculous than scary such as "Wrong Turn" where young people are chopped up by scary inbred wood dwelling folk. This time it was filmed a little closer in Ontario. Luckily you know that the sub-human inbred cannibal family are things of pure Hollywood fantasy but the feeling of isolation in the film reminds you that in the city we take for granted having someone only a scream's hearing away at all times - not that it may do you any good if they hear the scream.

Last night we watched an excellent and scary film "The Descent" which was actually mostly filmed in Scotland. An excellent film and highly recommended. A group of women go caving and there is a real feeling of claustrophobia at times as they crawl along the narrow passages of the unexplored U.S. cave system. There are moments of complete heart pounding suspense and a couple of moments I admit to jumping about 4 foot off the sofa. There was one incident where I admit I screamed - not a girly scream you understand but a manly "from the diaphram" scream of masculine horror. I have not done that watching a film since the days of Aliens I reckon. Anyway we wont be going caving in Nova Scotia - in fact I don't think I would ever go caving again after watching The Descent.

I think Stephen King is often to blame in liking the country settings for his horrors, like another one we saw starring Johnny Depp, Secret Window. Again it's a sort of "in the country, no-one can here you scream" sort of affair.

So what am I trying to say? I think perhaps I just wanted to comment on the current fad to make nature scary in films. The lovely seclusion we are aiming for does have a few downsides. I think the horror films pray on my worries and insecurities about such a big move and although mainly silly, do make you think about some practicalities like ensuring we each know where the other is and perhaps investing in a GPS and walkie talkies in case we fall down the abandoned mine shaft in our own wood.

Tuesday, December 27, 2005

Video - AJ on the fourth day in NS

AJ on Day 4
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On the fourth day of our visit to NS in June we went East from Annapolis Royal where we were staying to the University Town of Wolfville. On the way we checked out all the places to see where we would fancy living and where we wouldn't be so keen on.

Monday, December 26, 2005

Video - AJ on second Day in NS

AJ on Day 2
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This posting is more like a travelogue than about our future plans but it shows how we are starting to really fall for Nova Scotia - even in the wind and rain.

The weather does get better during our visit as you will see later.

Sunday, December 25, 2005

Merry Christmas

Leeds ChristmasIf all goes to plan, this will be our last Christmas in the UK. This has resulted in some quite mixed emotions today. Although of course pleased that we will be starting our new life in 2006 there is also a sense of sadness about some of the things we will leave behind. The most important of these of course being friends and family.

Saying that we have spent this Christmas day just the two of us and have already spoken on the phone and on the net to family and friends in Wales, Suffolk, Cumbria, Nova Scotia and Toronto - so I expect next Christmas we will feel as close to everyone as we do now.

This morning we listened to carols from Montreal on CBC Radio - what is the betting next year we are listening to Radio 4 and carols from Kings College or something.

Watching the reviews of the year on TV is quite an emotional experience too - the Tsunami, earthquakes, hurricanes, famine and terrorism - not a good year globally.

Lets hope 2006 is a better year for us, and the planet and people in general.

Saturday, December 24, 2005

Video - Matt on first day in NS - June 2005

MG Video 1
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Sorry about the sound quality - the wind didn't help but that's the problem of being next to the sea.

I sould less positive than AJ at this point - I think I was still weighing things up. Coming into land I was really worried about the landscape of Nova Scotia.

Friday, December 23, 2005

Video - AJ on first day in NS - June 2005

Video 1
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Click the photo above to play the video or right click and "save target as" or "save link as" to download the file to your computer. This was filmed on our first day in Nova Scotia in June 2005 - our first visit to the province.

If you use the RSS link on the right and cut and paste it into any podcasting software you have - you will get video and audio files automatically downloaded to your PC.

The RSS feed will also keep you up to date on postings if you cut and paste the link into your RSS newsreader software.

Wednesday, December 21, 2005

AJ

AJHi, I'm AJ. I'm currently an employment adviser for a disability charity and I'm 36. Like everyone, I've had my share of ups and downs. I had good days where I could buy whatever I want and not so good days where I had to scrap at the bottom of my savings just to make both ends meet, just like any other average joe.

So, recently I've been travelling home on the bus from work and I've realised just how much I miss living in the country. I tend to sit on the top deck and for one brief moment you can see right across the Aire Valley, and then all I can see is buildings. Imagine my usual trip home if you will; sat next to me we have a sniffing, coughing woman playing her MP3 player so loud that I could hear it above mine, sat behind me we have a bunch of loud, smoking, chavvy kids whom no one dares challenge. No-one makes eye contact, no-one talks and I really truly yearn to run away from it all.

So we have settled on Nova Scotia as a potential new home - "The walking Province". Nova Scotia is about 53,000 square kilometres (25,000 square miles), which makes it about twice the size of the American state of Massachusetts and just a bit smaller than Ireland. In January 2002, Nova Scotia was home to 940,000 people. Leeds has a population of 750,000!

Why Nova Scotia - well I would love to say that I have thoroughly investigated each province and its pros and cons, but I think it's because it reminds me of the Isle of Man (where I grew up), that, and the fact that because it's a smaller part of Canada, it seems less scary a move. I'm not going to psychoanalyse my motives, it's a lovely looking place and the natives seem very friendly... oh and its damned cheap.

You know that little voice inside you that seems to nag away - you know what I mean, that Jiminy Cricket that tells you to stop being ridiculous and put a suit on, sort out the pension and shave off the beard (maybe not the last bit, maybe that's just me). Well, it seems of late that all my internal objections to leaving this country are being taken away from me.

Perhaps my subconscious is now tuned to all things Canadian and Nova Scotian, but there have been quite a few co-incidences over the last 12 months that a superstitious person would find spooky. Perhaps I'm reading far too much into these coincidences, but it still makes me smile that perhaps all these things really do mean that sometime, next year, our new home will be a little farm half way around the world.

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Matt

MattHello, I am Matt. I am 37 years old and currently work for a housing charity as an Assistant Chief Executive.

I suppose I came to the downshifting later. It was AJ who started looking at self-sufficiency and mentioned Nova Scotia some years ago. It isn't as though he has worked on me and changed my mind. I am quite a methodical person and I have been weighing the pros and cons for a while. It started to look like a good idea and early 2005 I thought we should have a more serious look at whether we wanted to do it. I suggested an exploratory visit to Nova Scotia in June to see what we thought of the place.

I am on 6 months notice period at work and so have already resigned from my job. I don't finish until May 2006. Actually resigning was quite a scary step. I know I am going to miss many things about my job and particularly some great colleagues.

I am interested in computers, the internet and would quite like to work from home in NS. I don't mind getting my hands dirty but don't think I will be good at making us jams or pickles or soap. I think I will be OK with a chainsaw and probably have to keep the finances in order.

Please send us messages, post questions or email us an mp3 audio comment.

Matt

downshiftme.com

Welcome to downshiftme.com

This site is about a couple of thirty something blokes from Leeds in the UK who have decided to change their whole way of life, quit good jobs and relocate over the Atlantic in Nova Scotia Canada.

"Using audio, video, photos and text, we will tell our story of our adventure in downshifting.

The plan is to move in June or July 2006 so the next 6 months will talk about the preparations and what we hope to get out of our new simpler life in Canada. We will tell you a bit more about ourselves and share some of the photographs, video and audio from our exploratory trip to NS in June of 2005"

Matt and Ayjay