luvflyin
Touchdown! Greaser!
We haven't had a good State Bashing session lately. And my sanity hasn't been questioned publicly in awhile, so. Really, I am emigrating to California.
We haven't had a good State Bashing session lately. And my sanity hasn't been questioned publicly in awhile, so. Really, I am emigrating to California.
Other than tax rates and a few odd rules it's not as bad as others make it.We haven't had a good State Bashing session lately. And my sanity hasn't been questioned publicly in awhile, so. Really, I am emigrating to California.
Other than tax rates and a few odd rules it's not as bad as others make it.
Edit: Also, our major natural disasters (earthquakes) are less frequent and less impactful than places with tornadoes or hurricanes.
They're disasters, but most aren't natural.Dude you have like major wildfires every year for the whole summer.
the hellscape pictures of fires from the news ought to be taken with a grain of salt, or just completely ignored. It's the news after all...
From Wikipedia, 2022 CA wildfire season:
Wildfires killed nine people in California in 2022, destroyed 772 structures, and damaged another 104.
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It'll be an easy move in. The highways are only jammed with traffic moving the other direction.
I moved to CA from New England back in 2009 ...
If it weren’t so expensive I’d definitely go back - which is the dilemma. It’s so expensive because lots of people see how much is there.
the hellscape pictures of fires from the news ought to be taken with a grain of salt, or just completely ignored. It's the news after all...
From Wikipedia, 2022 CA wildfire season:
Wildfires killed nine people in California in 2022, destroyed 772 structures, and damaged another 104.
According to NOAA we've already had 31 people die of tornadoes this year alone
I'm all for bashing aspects of a state, but critiquing CA based on natural disasters is a non starter off the bat, it's a massive state with huge forests and the tallest mountains in the contiguous US. It's going to have it's share of weather issues by default.
From a Pilots 'n Paws flight in the Centurion a few weeks ago.. so much death and destruction abounds. Oooh the humanity!
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I'm also in San Diego, which is less like your typical "CaLiForniA" stereotype
Don't forget the landslides, drought, and constant blizzards/record setting snowfall.Dude you have like major wildfires every year for the whole summer.
I struggle with the notion of accepting a life of house poverty for the sake of pleasant weather. It's not like there's a legal prohibition against travel and part year-living in the US.
i don't speak from the cheap seats on that one, as I'm a brain drain economic refugee from bona fide paradise (Caribbean) myself. If money were no object, i would have never left home, i was quite content with that weather growing up.
In the end, my preferences bend toward low population density, more so than weather, though I'm still a warm weather leaning person.
For the record, the climate code for Mediterranean climate that most covet, only occurs in a sliver of coastal land area, which is why California continues to struggle on the housing front (well the second reason, the main one being hypocritical bipartisan upper middle nimbyism, but we don't talk about fight club around those who resemble the remark).
There's plenty of land in California none of the usual suspects have any interest or desire in occupying. So that's not just a flyover country problem/dynamic in the least.
Until it wipes out an entire town.
From the wiki:
Eighty-six people died in the Camp Fire, tens of thousands were displaced, and 18,804 buildings were destroyed. Only 5% of buildings in the town remained without serious damage after the fire.
Sure beats flying around the same boring flat crap in New England
I'm sorry but dealing with tornadoes, snow storms, rain, and severe temp swings sucks. I spend 90% of my time festooned between 65 and 75*F
-sailing, hiking, skiing, desert, forests.. all within 3 hrs or less
They're disasters, but most aren't natural.
I often regret leaving the state of Washington, but I don't regret living in California.Mrs. P and I are both SoCal born and raised. It was a great place to grow up, but the handwriting was on the wall by 1995, and we voted with our feet. Ironically in the context of this thread, we moved to Vancouver WA. No regrets.
It's primarily the mountain forest communities that are at risk in the fires. People also have some responsibility of choosing where to live, every area comes with its risk, that's true anywhere not just California. Buy an ocean front house don't get upset when a hurricane and storm surge floods your home. The OP is moving to California, if he's going to move into the forests up in the Sierras, yeah, he'll have some risks. If he's moving to Carlsbad on the other hand..Until it wipes out an entire town.
Strokes for folks. New England is not for me. But while on the topic of cool places to fly and since Washington was raised up thread, Washington and the San Juans were by far the prettiest place I've flown yet.. Bozeman to Skagit late afternoon / sunset was unreal. As far as NE is concerned, I skied and hiked all over New England and while Stowe, Cannon, Okemo, Sugarbush, Jay, Washington, Franconia Notch, all of VT are pretty in their own right they don't compare to the Sierras in the skiing or the hiking..Ditto for New England, except the desert.
it's true.. I quoted that movie to someone the other day "kill the gophers" and they didn't get it. Sad.baby Ruth
Yeah I agree, it is. California politics will always appeal to a certain demographic, the others will just continue to flee to wherever better fits their ideologies. Same song and dance as it’s always been, granted I do feel the politics have shifted further left than they were the last few years but I have no evidence of that.But I always found state nationalism or bashing kind of silly.. live whereever makes you happy. If that's Chicago, Texas, FL, that's all cool. Luckily this country has enough variety to offer almost everything to most people
Piling on: rolling brownouts/blackouts
Every place I've lived or visited has had something to like about it.It's primarily the mountain forest communities that are at risk in the fires. People also have some responsibility of choosing where to live, every area comes with its risk, that's true anywhere not just California. Buy an ocean front house don't get upset when a hurricane and storm surge floods your home. The OP is moving to California, if he's going to move into the forests up in the Sierras, yeah, he'll have some risks. If he's moving to Carlsbad on the other hand..
Strokes for folks. New England is not for me. But while on the topic of cool places to fly and since Washington was raised up thread, Washington and the San Juans were by far the prettiest place I've flown yet.. Bozeman to Skagit late afternoon / sunset was unreal. As far as NE is concerned, I skied and hiked all over New England and while Stowe, Cannon, Okemo, Sugarbush, Jay, Washington, Franconia Notch, all of VT are pretty in their own right they don't compare to the Sierras in the skiing or the hiking..
But I always found state nationalism or bashing kind of silly.. live whereever makes you happy. If that's Chicago, Texas, FL, that's all cool. Luckily this country has enough variety to offer almost everything to most people
Does that mean Ventura? I’m moving to Santa Barbara.Where are you moving to? Look us up when you get here. I am in the Commonwealth of Ventucky.
Every place I've lived or visited has had something to like about it.