Westexas, I've come to the same conclusion a couple of years ago about cutting back. I've sold my apartment building in a rapidly appreciating area in Chicago - which is now slowing down, cut back on my hours at work , and bought a ten acre farmette two hundred miles south of the city. I've always wanted a small farm as I'm a life long gardener and avid outdoorsman. I’m a cabinetmaker/carpenter so I have skills that are very useful in a less energy intensive society. As luck would have it I might have oil on my property. The geologists were out Saturday placing orange flags where they are going to take seismic readings later this month.

Bruce from Chicago

Please keep us updated on your most remarkable, entertaining, and unbelievable story. When you first posted about that "knock on the door" I ROFL! So much for independent living in a pristine area that is away-from-it-all! Are you hoping they 1-find it, or 2-don't find it???

I have conflicted feelings about the possibility of having oil on my land. I purchased my land after a year long search for property that was isolated, suitable for farming, and within reasonable driving distance to Chicago. I knew within two minutes of viewing the parcel that this was the one. Last week a UPS delivery man commented that I was in the middle of “God’s country”. It is gorgeous and I would hate to see it ruined by oil exploration. My research into modern drilling practices, however, indicate that the footprint of modern wells is not as invasive as it once was. Every one of my neighbors, except for the retired engineering professor who has 100+ acres of dense woodland next to my plot, appear to have given permission for seismic testing on their land. I’m hoping that if oil is found that any infrastructure would be placed on adjacent properties rather than mine.