Posts Tagged ‘Lemmon SD’
Can we turn a desert into an oasis?
January 12th, 2010
At ReImagine Rural, we talk a lot about the transformation of rural communities because we believe that our rural economies have to be something different than
they were in the ‘50s and 60’s. We often focus our energy around how we can turn our rural communities into places where young people want to live. And sometimes, we look to urban resources to learn what’s most attractive.
But while working on another project, I was recently reminded that there are dangers lurking for communities who try to become something they are not. In her book, Dakota: A Spiritual Geography, Kathleen Norris writes:
Making the Plains a home means accepting its limitation and not, as many townspeople do even in drought years, watering a lawn to country club perfection. Making this all we need means accepting that we are living in an arid plains of western South Dakota, not in Connecticut (which has the rainfall to sustain such greenery) or Palm Springs (which doesn’t but has the money to pretend other otherwise).”
As Norris explains, we once tried to become something we were not by transforming the unbroken sod of the Great Plains into 160 acre farms, which the reality of our arid climate would never sustain. It’s a lesson in geography that more community leaders need to understand if they hope to lead wisely.
But does that mean small, rural communities can’t change? By trying to learn from urban principles that are popular with young people, are we trying to turn a desert into an oasis?
I don’t think so, and I don’t believe that’s what Norris implies. Change is possible, but we must first understand ourselves as well as the places we call home. Otherwise, we’ll end up as something that conflicts with the realities of our cultural geography.
And that’s part of what Norris’ book can help us accomplish. Norris taps into her experience as a newcomer to the small, rural community of Lemmon, SD to write this book. In it, she provides insights into how small rural communities operate that often get missed by those who have lived in small towns their whole lives. It’s something we can all learn from.
Photo Credit: Larry Page - Flickr (Al’s Oasis in Chamberlain is South Dakota’s most famous oasis.)
Tags: brain drain, Gen Y, Kathleen Norris, Lemmon SD, people attraction strategy
Posted in Community Development, Rural | Comments (0)


