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comment by thenewgreen
thenewgreen  ·  2922 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Daydreams of leaving

Montana. Move to Missoula MT.





user-inactivated  ·  2922 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Any particular reason why? Other than the fact that Montana has an overwhelming cow to human ratio and I should be there for the eventual bovine uprising?

steve  ·  2922 days ago  ·  link  ·  

thenewgreen and I have soft spots in our hearts for the Mizz... it's a lovely city with much better weather than you would think.

Oh... and... having spent plenty of time in Wyoming... the only places worth living are the ones that are as expensive as where you are now.

user-inactivated  ·  2922 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    Oh... and... having spent plenty of time in Wyoming... the only places worth living are the ones that are as expensive as where you are now.

. . . what if my Wyoming goal is to live in a van, down by the river? It'd be awesome to have this as a backyard. Yes. Even in winter. Wool socks exist for a reason.

steve  ·  2922 days ago  ·  link  ·  

if you're in to windswept plains with a horizon that just falls away into the distance..... you're a wyoming man at heart.

I don't mean to trash WYO either... I love it. I just know I couldn't pull it off. It really is too cold, too remote, and too... I don't know... both times that I've seriously considered it, there just was something missing for me.

WanderingEng  ·  2922 days ago  ·  link  ·  

The remoteness is what gets me. I think rural New England is what I want. I'm certain I can find a house in Adirondack Park under $100k that's very close to a state highway, less than 30 minutes from I-87 and is about two hours from Montreal and Albany. That's the kind of remoteness I think I can handle.

user-inactivated  ·  2922 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I live 35 mins from downtown yet it is rural as all fuck here. The neighbors' windows are about 70 feet from mine. I'm five mins from the expressway; the entrance to said expressway has three big box stores, one in each quadrant, and if I want to not deal with that I drive 10 mins the the grocery store which has a better meat department. 20 mins in the other direction I can go to an Amish butcher and get better food than you can anywhere outside of a good restaurant for about what you pay at the normal store. Yet, there is a thriving art scene, lots of culture philanthropy, a good symphony, two decent colleges, several hipster-style coffee chains, tons of restaurants, and they just announced we have an unemployment rate of about 5.5% and are worried that there are not enough people to hire in the skilled positions that need to be filled.

According to the Census Tracts, I live in the City, and am technically in the suburbs. My mortgage is, including escrow (taxes and insurance) $502 a month. Car insurance is higher here do to weather being a factor, and some utilities out here are more than I expected, notably electric. I'm not going to see any art movies in a theater, nor are niche music acts going to play every year. But my quality of life is so much better than when I lived in California, the commute is easier, there are places to go and things to do, there are actual honest seasons out here. If I was not in the Ohio Valley, I'd be looking at Upstate New York as well, as upstate seems to be the exact same place I just described, only in New York and not the Ohio Valley.

I hate to sound like a paid shrill, but my opinion is that the coasts and the "hot beds" are becoming over rated and are ready to peak, then burst hard. Paying $72,000 a year to rent a two bedroom apartment is not sustainable. My house may only go up in value 2-3% a year, but I'm also not going to crash 30% like my parents will when the SoCal real estate bubble pops. I'm hoping more young smart people move out here to the second and third tier cities to help push out some of the ancient old people who don't want to deal with the world changing around them. And two people earning $25,000 a year ($12-13 an hour) puts you in the $50K a year category, or in better terms, over the median household income for Kentucky. Remove NYC and that is roughly the median for Update New York as well. A couple can live very well out this way if they are willing to.

WanderingEng  ·  2921 days ago  ·  link  ·  

That sounds pretty great. Where I am in southern Wisconsin, prices for land are pretty high. Starting at Milwaukee, it's high because you're close to the city, then it stays high going west because you're either close to Milwaukee, close to Madison, or sort of close to both. Suburbs are expensive, too. The closest I've found to something I consider affordable is an older part of town that isn't close to downtown. If I stay in town, eventually I'll look for a house there.

In my exploring in Upstate New York, I think once you're that far from the coast the prices stay low. In December I stayed a couple nights in Newcomb, New York. I think this was a former mining town, but I'm not really sure. It's pretty much just buildings along the two lane highway. There were some cross streets, but I don't think there were any streets paralleling the highway. There was no Verizon or AT&T mobile service, and there was just one restaurant twenty minutes away that was open midweek. There's another only fifteen minutes away that's open weekends. It's very affordable, but that's because the economy is so weak. So while you might be able to buy a little house on a couple acres of land for $70,000, it's really hard to find much for work. I look at it as a retirement goal before being a place to relocate to.

The Ohio Valley, though, has more work opportunities for me. I've probably turned my nose up at it, but now I'm not sure why. Each year it feels like there's less holding me to Wisconsin.

steve  ·  2922 days ago  ·  link  ·  

That sounds lovely.

user-inactivated  ·  2922 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Only if you are eating Gov'mint Cheese!

thenewgreen  ·  2922 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Montana is gorgeous. Missoula is a college town so you get the benefits from that with the Rocky Mountains, the Blackfoot River, Glacier National

park only a couple hours away, Flathead lake. Some of the best hiking and camping in the US. Plus it's inexpensive. LOTS of people living "off the grid."

Great music, art and food despite the seclusion.

elizabeth  ·  2922 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I've hear it's the faster growing startup city in America at the moment but then again, I heard that on the internet so it might be BS.

I know a couple of my favorite YouTube people are based there, they say it's good value and a fun enough city where you can live really well if you make money on the internets.