A mistery for Asian, is this clever or stupid?

City folk worried about Y2K bug head for the hills in Virginia

May 22, 1999
Web posted at: 9:58 AM EDT (1358 GMT)

FLOYD, Va. (AP) -- John Hammell believes Miami will be a dangerous place to live if 
the Year 2000 computer bug plunges civilization into chaos.
So the big-city political consultant and sailor has headed for the hills of Floyd 
County, where he is learning to live off the land.
Careful preparation kept Hammell alive through numerous hurricanes and storms at sea. 
Now, with the 21st century about to arrive, he is stockpiling food, water and chopped 
wood and lighting his spartan trailer with kerosene lamps. He is getting organic 
vegetables from a community garden and planning to buy solar panels and a woodstove he 
can cook on.
"I wanted to be in a place that had a history of self-sufficiency, where my neighbors 
are prepared and not panicking," said Hammell, who is 41 and single.

Dozens of Y2K refugees have moved to Floyd County, a sparsely populated area of the 
Blue Ridge Mountains about 230 miles southwest of Richmond that has welcomed social 
dropouts for generations, including the hippies of the '60s and the New Agers of the 
'90s.
The land is fertile and cheap, taxes and crime are low, and the water is abundant and 
unpolluted because Floyd County has the highest mean elevation in Virginia. But it's 
the attitude more than the altitude that compelled the likes of Hammell to join the 
13,200 residents of Floyd County.

"A lot of people who come here are interested in getting out of the system and trying 
to become self-sustaining," said Bill Truitt, who raises chickens and eats what he 
grows in a greenhouse and organic garden.
There are at least a dozen small communes where people share the work and earnings. 
Most of the communes grow their own food and are not connected to the commercial 
electrical system, Truitt said. There is also an established barter system for 
obtaining necessities.
Truitt, 68, moved in before the Y2K scare but has since become the county's point man 
for the Cassandra Project, a nationwide grassroots clearinghouse for Y2K preparedness. 
In Greek mythology, Cassandra had the gift of prophecy, but her warnings of misfortune 
were always disbelieved.
The Year 2000 problem stems from computer programs that use only two digits to 
designate the year. A two-digit program recognizes 99 as 1999. Some experts fear that 
when 2000 arrives, computers will think it is 1900, causing power systems and 
communications to fail.

"I don't think the event is going to be apocalyptic, but there will be greater 
disruptions than the government would lead us to believe," Truitt said. "The 
government is hoping to avoid panic."
Around the country, some people are preparing for the worst, moving out to the 
countryside to simplify their lives. The largest concentration of refugees in Virginia 
is in Floyd County.
Bill Nye, a Hollins University sociology professor who lives in Floyd County, said the 
tradition of finding sanctuary in these hills goes way back. During the Civil War, 
deserters came to Floyd County, he said.

"There seems to be an attractive attitude here as opposed to a rural area like 
Franklin County, which is less tolerant to divergent lifestyles," Nye said. "Franklin 
County is known for its moonshine. Floyd County is known for its pot growing, if that 
tells you anything."
Some 1960s arrivals were lured by advertisements in Mother Earth News, others by the 
psychic visions of Edgar Cayce, who said Floyd County would be one of the few safe 
places in the event of nuclear war. Now it's the Internet that is drawing people.

Computer programmer Ken Griffith bought 437 acres in Floyd County and advertised on 
the Internet that he is establishing a self-sustaining community called Rivendell for 
people who believe in home-schooling their children and need a safe port during the 
Y2K storm. Rivendell takes its name from the refuge and learning center in J.R.R. 
Tolkein's "Lord of the Rings."
Hair salon owner Carl Mandell of Toledo, Ohio, is building a solar-heated home in 
Rivendell, where about 20 of the 28 lots have been sold.
"I pray that we're wrong, but this thing has the potential to really disrupt our 
civilization," said Mandell, 52.
If nothing else, the Y2K scare has been good for business in Floyd, a one-stoplight 
county seat with an old-fashioned farmer's supply store around the corner from a 
health food emporium. Business is booming at both stores, where clerks scramble to 
keep up with bulk orders for such survival items as Mason jars, canning equipment, 
hand grinders, rice and grain.
"I just got off the phone with a woman who wanted to know when we would have more wood 
cook stoves and kerosene lamps," said Derek Weeks, a hardware store clerk. "I asked 
why, and she just said, 'Y2K."'



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