Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/04/29

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Subject: [Leica] Re: American small towns
From: lrzeitlin at optonline.net (Lawrence Zeitlin)
Date: Sun Apr 29 06:31:27 2007
References: <200704290937.l3T9aYdL055196@server1.waverley.reid.org>

Most Europeans and Asians assume that the USA is characterized by the  
few big cities (New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, etc.) shown in the  
movies and in TV. In fact the USA has a very low population density  
when compared with most countries in Europe and Asia. Australia  
excepted, of course. About 80% of the US population lives in cities  
along the coastline and major waterways. Most of the rest of the  
country is sparsely populated. The actual population density of the  
entire country is 79 people per sq. mile in comparison to India's 898  
people per sq. mile, Denmark's 328 per sq. mile, Japan's 867 per sq.  
mile, France's 283 per sq. mile or the UK's 640 per sq. mile. Even  
Kiribati has 340 people per square mile.

Once you travel a short distance out of any big city in the US, even  
New York, you are in rural countryside. I live about 40 miles north  
of New York in a small town in the Hudson Valley. We have weekly open  
air Farmer's markets just like those shown in Sonny's picture. I  
cannot see my neighbor's house from any window and I have to drive  
several miles for the closest shopping. That's the case over most of  
the non-urban US. I grew up in the rural Midwest where the closest  
neighbor was six miles away.

The concept of a country with vast open spaces is hard for most  
people in this overpopulated world to accept. When I lectured in  
India and the UK it was hard to convey the image that the US was not  
a vast urban metropolis. GeeBee has the remarkable facility of  
photographing a portion of the generally crowded UK as a bucolic  
country largely without people. But it is as much of an illusion as  
characterizing the US as a vastly expanded Los Angeles. I lived for a  
number of years in North Wales, hardly a densely populated part of  
the UK, but it was far more crowded than my home town in the US.  
Living in New Delhi was like a perpetual ride in a New York subway  
car. When we had visitors from India, their first comments at getting  
off the airplane at Kennedy Airport was "Where are all the people?"  
The only time they felt truly at home was visiting New York City at  
the height of the rush hour.

Larry Z


> Philippe,
> We have many such towns scattered in all fifty states.  You need to  
> come to
> this country and just wander about.
>
> On 4/28/07, Philippe Orlent <philippe.orlent@pandora.be> wrote:
>>
>> Are there many more idillyc villages like yours in the US?
>> Thanks for showing,
>> Philippe
>>
>>
>>
>> Op 28-apr-07, om 21:20 heeft Sonny Carter het volgende geschreven:
>>
>>> I went down-town today to the first green market of the season and
>>> had some
>>> of David's home-made icecream with fresh strawberries in it.
>>>
>>> I took a few pictures, and chatted up some friends.
>>>
>>> Then I bought some shelled purple-hulled peas, and a  free-range
>>> chicken,
>>> already smoked.
>>>
>>> I'm gonna slice up some tomatoes and make a pan of cornbread, and
>>> supper
>>> will be fine.
>>>
>>>
>>> http://www.sonc.com/green_market_1_2007.htm
>>>
>>> --
>>> Regards,
>>>
>>> Sonny
>>> http://www.sonc.com
>>> Natchitoches, Louisiana
>>> USA


Replies: Reply from lists at mcclary.net (Harrison McClary) ([Leica] Re: American small towns)