My List of Places to Move To
Well, looks like California has gone far enough over the edge to push me out. Early retirement is looming. Planned to get in 3 more years but it's looking like I'll have to cut it short and work where I'm going for a while, instead. I have a list of locations that interest me for various reasons and I hereby welcome your opinions if you've experienced any of these places:
1-Colorado Springs area (Woodland Park looks good)
2-Oro Valley, AZ
3-Prescott, AZ
4-Flagstaff, AZ
I have a few locations in NV that I already know fairly well that are on our list. I have a close friend in Colorado Springs area. She recommended Woodland Park.
I'm shocked at how eager lawmakers here are to keep up this constant fight against basic liberties. Can't take it. Won't subject my kids to it.
1-Colorado Springs area (Woodland Park looks good)
2-Oro Valley, AZ
3-Prescott, AZ
4-Flagstaff, AZ
I have a few locations in NV that I already know fairly well that are on our list. I have a close friend in Colorado Springs area. She recommended Woodland Park.
I'm shocked at how eager lawmakers here are to keep up this constant fight against basic liberties. Can't take it. Won't subject my kids to it.
Tucson and Phoenix, forget them!
The reason that CA has such pleasant weather is that it is one of the handful of places in the world with a "Mediterranean Climate", but if you are in SoCal and not near the ocean then the summer months are too hot to do anything outdoors. I love the outdoors and it is increasingly onerous to not be able to do anything after work in the summer months here in LA. Carson City it technically in the border of the Med Climate Region, and I am waiting to see what the weather is like there in the summer - whether one can hike and ride during the afternoon in July and August. (Since there are people here on this list with more knowledge of the area, I would like to hear back). It is certainly COLD in the winter in CC - 37 today vs 71 here in SoCal.
CA may not be a great place to live, but it is a good place to visit and living in Texas would make that hard. (I had pretty much decided on Austin at one point, but have now recanted. Austin is now a prime contender for Amazon campus, which will certainly alter the area.) From NV, at least I can visit my CA friends.
Yes, a Mormon population does seem to be a good buffer against leftist migration. I am not religious, but I have gotten along well with Mormons in the past - and Carson City seems to have a population thereof.
NV lacks a seacoast, which is really bad. That is the major advantage that TX has: if TSHTF, then Texas has both resources and coastline.
Just some thoughts.
Jan
Its all BS.
My past 27 years have been working in Washington State. No state income tax.
I recently retired. . . so the state income tax is no longer a big deal . . .
Climate and "interesting places to hike and see" with affordable housing are topping the list.
- Stayed in and drove through Flagstaff AZ March 7-8... Terrible snowstorm -- they have a high elevation - get lots of snow.... drove 2 hours to Page AZ... beautiful blue sky and just plain nice.
- Spent a day and a half in Sierra Vista AZ ... about 12 miles north of the border with Mexico.
My friend that moved from from WA state says summers get up to 93F (unlike 114F for Phoenix) ... and there are loads of hiking trails, hills, low population density and home prices are reasonable... Sierra Vista is on my list.
- Driving out of Death Valley through Panamint Springs then onto US 395 heading North ... going through Lone Pine, Independence, Big Pine and Bishop ... nice little towns ... beautiful views of the mountains to the West . . . I will need to drive through there again this summer and make inquiries.
- St. George Utah -- great location ... only seven hours (max) drive from all the Utah Natl Parks, plus Grand Canyon and sundry other wonderful trekking locales. And although I am a member of no religion, I do tend to like Mormon Country and a few of my closest friends are Mormons.
- Nowhere Oregon ... lots of wide open spaces remain in S.E. Oregon ... I was at a hot springs there many years ago -- Alvord Hot Springs. Spoke with one of the natives. She had a place (would not divulge the location) and had been living off the grid for a few years. Lots of open country to disappear into.
- Default -- Remain in Eastern Washington for the relatively mild winters, lovely spring plus warm summer and fall.
In all likelihood, I will stay put with E. Washington as my home base as I explore over the next two years... someplace in Southern Nevada or Arizona would be my target in term of my current outlook.
Busy turning it into the mess they attempted to escape from.
Southern Utah and the Arizona Strip are lovely also.
Oklahoma City is on the junction of I-40 and I-35, so road travel East, West, North, or South is easy. Will Rogers airport is a well developed travel center, and Amtrak has a line between Fort Worth and Oklahoma City, so rail travel is available.
I've been using it for over 10 years in searches for places to go to escape where I was at the time. I have come down to Prescott and Prescott Valley as the place that gives me my particular combination of necessary characteristics. Of course, I live in the Santa Fe area now (don't ask), so almost any place is better, if I only measure politics. BestPlaces gives way over a hundred metrics and is highly user friendly.
Hiding in plain sight would require that you make yourself and the people in your tribe indistinguishable from other people in the area in which you are living . Children have a mind of their own and would have a tendency to "blow your cover" accidentally.
Leftists desire being elected because they thirst for control. I think the whole nation is subject to a slow transition in that direction...leftist control. If I can just get my kids to adulthood the way I want the battle is done and won.
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