Farmer sends message to neighbors with car fence

JJR512

New Member
Tue Aug 5, 6:57 AM ET

attachment.php

Hooper, Utah, resident Rhett Davis poses next to his car fence

HOOPER, Utah - A farmer has erected a backyard fence 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 property.

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

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

Davis said he offered to pay for 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.

Davis said 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 stressed that it's important for new residents to realize that Hooper is a farming community.

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

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

"These can come out just as easy as they went in," Davis said.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/odd_car_fence;_ylt=Ak73RHLIS1uL0sD3qS30EEojr7sF
 
I bet the newbies are from California. For some reason, they like Utah. My dad sold his house to a newbie for a whole lot more than it was worth. The newbie thought it was "picturesque" --- I wonder what happened when the new-comer got a whiff of the dairy that was just up the valley. hehehe

I have news for them --- the horses and cattle that look so "pretty" draw flies and mosquitoes. The animals also have to eat.

So, if you don't like it, go back to California.
 
Very same problem here- people move out here so they can "get away from it all", but they bring it all with them. What I don't understand is, they keep their jobs in the city. Why commute farther than you have to? Some of them are okay, but most are very rude. We locals here drive too slow for them, so they honk and give you the finger as they fly by on their way to work. They move out here and then complain, "there's nothing to do around here", so they go back to the city on the weekends for their entertainment. Nothing wrong with city folk- to each his own, but if you despise the country so much, why move here?
 
I like to be on the outer fringe of a medium sized city. That being said, I live in a bedroom suburb of a huge city but most of my life occurs within a 10 mile radius.

I'm an East Cobber :eek:
 
That just makes sense- live as close as possible to where you "live"! My house is exactly one mile from the office. I can (and often do) walk or bicycle. Shop the local stores. The higher energy costs rise, the more sense it will make.
 
When you move from your local area to somewhere new, it is YOUR job to assimilate, not the job of those people pre-existing there to conform to your standards. *poke*
 
Davis said he offered to pay for 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.

That was quite a decent offer on his behalf, but I bet his new neighbours just want him to stop being a farmer so they can have everything :rolleyes:
 
haha, i love this sort of thing! this particular type of nose-thumbing renews my faith in mankind :) (well, at least for a minute or two!)
 
Newcomers getting stuff closed down (or trying) happens everywhere. There used to be a great 1/5-mile race track in Atascadero... natural clay surface, didn't even need a water truck. But with ownership issues and people moving closer... well, now there's a house where the stands used to be and another where the pits used to be.
 
Back
Top