I'd like to introduce Cheryl Magyar, a US ex-pat who decided with her family to ditch the crazy rat race and opt in to a life worth living. Join me as Cheryl tells us all about her life in Romania.
TB: Well, Cheryl, why don't we start with your life here in the states and tell us a little about yourself.
You wouldn't know from looking at me or from hearing me speak (after 15 years abroad, no one can guess where my accent is from) that I grew up in the suburbs of Chicago.
Yet, my family always made it a point to be out in nature, whether it was climbing the magnolia tree in the backyard, wandering around The Morton Arboretum or hiking in numerous state parks.
My grandparents owned fifty acres in Wisconsin that we visited regularly. My sisters and I trekked through the forest in search of arrowheads and drank fresh water from the bubbling source.
I was also in Girl Scouts till the end of high school, which led me on many adventures in nature - camping in caves, canoeing for days down the Rock River and more.
Fast forward to earning a degree in Horticulture from Iowa State University, then moving out west to the Portland, Oregon area to become a greenhouse manager at a large tree nursery - where I met my husband nearly 20 years ago!
We drove down to Las Vegas to get married, moved to the Seattle area where we loved hiking, but much less so the weather, which led us to a move abroad where we decided to start homesteading in 2006.
Ópusztaszer, Hungary was our life lesson for eight years and where our wonderful daughter, Csermely, was born. Her name is Hungarian for "creek".
Hungary is where we started raising animals (goats, turkeys, guinea fowl, Mangalica pigs and ducks) and where our sustainable life began.
There is no return to the city when you fall in love with a quieter, slower, rural pace of life.
As for hobbies, I rather like to think about them as things that I do either for enjoyment, production, or just living a self-reliant life. I knit, sew, spin, weave, garden, can and preserve food (we still have more than 200 jars to finish in our pantry), hike, forage and write poetry.
In the future, I wish to learn blacksmithing, leatherwork and pottery.
TB: Wow, you're right; I would never have guessed you are originally from Chicago.
It sounds as though all that travel helped you find the perfect spot for you and your family. What made you decide to get into homesteading? And from a lot of your writing, it appears you're living off-the-grid. Is that the case?
Quite simply, we got tired of working hard for a living. What we both desired was a living that was worth working for.
Though I have a long line of farmers in my family, Roland grew up in Arad, Romania, while the country was still under Communist rule. Although Roland grew up in a village, it turned out we still had a lot to learn!
Once we bought our 13-acre farm in Hungary, along with - albeit crumbling - cob buildings, it was just what we needed to get started on creating the peace and comfort of a slower lifestyle lived in harmony with nature.