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notyou2 wrote:Just north of San Diego
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
KoolBak wrote:Out of curiosity, why california? Purely objectively speaking, West Linn (OR) is about the best community in the pac nw....10 miles from portland.....check it out ;o)
COPY:
n 2011, the City of West Linn was the Top-Ranked Oregon City on the CNN/Money Magazine 'Best Places to Live 2011' List. Citing 'breathtaking views of the Cascades and relatively low local taxes,' the Number 69 listing includes a photo of Central Village, and also mentions the Music in the Park concert series, the historic Willamette area, the farmer's market, and the Street Dance. The City of Sherwood is the only other Oregon city to make the 2011 listing, coming in at Number 100. In 2009, the City of West Linn was included on the 'Best Places to Live 2009' list. Oregonians move to the hilltop homes here for a breathtaking view of the Cascades and relatively low local taxes. With Portland just 25 minutes away, most residents commute into the city during the week. Weekends are spent enjoying waterfront recreation: West Linn sits at the junction of two rivers. On summer evenings, residents enjoy picnic dinners over concerts in the park. Locals also flock to a revitalized downtown area, Historic Willamette, which offers a farmer’s market and, occasionally, dancing in the street.
In 2012, the City of West Linn was named Tree City USA Community by the Arbor Day Foundation for its commitment to urban forestry. It is the 19th year West Linn has earned this national honor from the Arbor Day Foundation, the nation’s largest nonprofit organization dedicated to planting trees. “We all benefit when communities like West Linn place a high priority on planting and caring for trees, one of our nation’s most beautiful resources,” said John Rosenow, chief executive and founder of the Arbor Day Foundation. “Trees shade our homes and add beauty to our neighborhoods, and they also provide many environmental, economic and social benefits. We applaud West Linn’s elected officials, volunteers and citizens for providing vital care for its urban forest.”
DoomYoshi wrote:Santa Monica is marvelous. It's a 50 min bus ride to LA and its theatre district, but you are basically at the modern epicenter of civilization.
jay_a2j wrote:hey if any1 would like me to make them a signature or like an avator just let me no, my sig below i did, and i also did "panther 88" so i can do something like that for u if ud like...
jonesthecurl wrote:So, just supposing an ancient Brit were considering moving to the Pacific side of the US, where exatly should he live? And what would be a dreadful choice? A major factor would be a good High School too.
Phatscotty wrote:jonesthecurl wrote:So, just supposing an ancient Brit were considering moving to the Pacific side of the US, where exatly should he live? And what would be a dreadful choice? A major factor would be a good High School too.
California is the dreadful choice, being one of the broken states that is in the process of closing many schools down, hospitals too. But maybe that is right up your alley given you seem to like the policies that is causing the closures.
Many Californians are fleeing the state cause their policies worked too good. California even lost a few seats in the House of Representatives, and they are set to lose a couple more. Along with some of the highest tax rates in America...I can see why you would choose Cali.
I have respect for you though. It's the ones who build all the 'progress' and then when it crashes in their face and ruins everyone else's life they move to another state only to start building their same progressive utopia all over again that I have a problem with.
notyou2 wrote:Phatscotty wrote:jonesthecurl wrote:So, just supposing an ancient Brit were considering moving to the Pacific side of the US, where exatly should he live? And what would be a dreadful choice? A major factor would be a good High School too.
California is the dreadful choice, being one of the broken states that is in the process of closing many schools down, hospitals too. But maybe that is right up your alley given you seem to like the policies that is causing the closures.
Many Californians are fleeing the state cause their policies worked too good. California even lost a few seats in the House of Representatives, and they are set to lose a couple more. Along with some of the highest tax rates in America...I can see why you would choose Cali.
I have respect for you though. It's the ones who build all the 'progress' and then when it crashes in their face and ruins everyone else's life they move to another state only to start building their same progressive utopia all over again that I have a problem with.
Complain about taxes and then complain they are dropping services. Which side you on Scotty? Pick one and stick with it.
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
jonesthecurl wrote:KoolBak wrote:Out of curiosity, why california? Purely objectively speaking, West Linn (OR) is about the best community in the pac nw....10 miles from portland.....check it out ;o)
COPY:
n 2011, the City of West Linn was the Top-Ranked Oregon City on the CNN/Money Magazine 'Best Places to Live 2011' List. Citing 'breathtaking views of the Cascades and relatively low local taxes,' the Number 69 listing includes a photo of Central Village, and also mentions the Music in the Park concert series, the historic Willamette area, the farmer's market, and the Street Dance. The City of Sherwood is the only other Oregon city to make the 2011 listing, coming in at Number 100. In 2009, the City of West Linn was included on the 'Best Places to Live 2009' list. Oregonians move to the hilltop homes here for a breathtaking view of the Cascades and relatively low local taxes. With Portland just 25 minutes away, most residents commute into the city during the week. Weekends are spent enjoying waterfront recreation: West Linn sits at the junction of two rivers. On summer evenings, residents enjoy picnic dinners over concerts in the park. Locals also flock to a revitalized downtown area, Historic Willamette, which offers a farmer’s market and, occasionally, dancing in the street.
In 2012, the City of West Linn was named Tree City USA Community by the Arbor Day Foundation for its commitment to urban forestry. It is the 19th year West Linn has earned this national honor from the Arbor Day Foundation, the nation’s largest nonprofit organization dedicated to planting trees. “We all benefit when communities like West Linn place a high priority on planting and caring for trees, one of our nation’s most beautiful resources,” said John Rosenow, chief executive and founder of the Arbor Day Foundation. “Trees shade our homes and add beauty to our neighborhoods, and they also provide many environmental, economic and social benefits. We applaud West Linn’s elected officials, volunteers and citizens for providing vital care for its urban forest.”
Thanks, Koolbak. I did look , prompted by your post. I'm afraid the climate looks a bit too British there. And the winter nights too long. That's my favourite part of being further south. But we're not wedded to the idea of Cali, most of the things we do for money aren't bound to one place.
I have to say property looks a lot more affordable up there, which might even sway us when all factors are weighed up.
And thanks everyone for your answers. Keep em coming. I also got a suggestion from a fellow-comic that I trained with in NYC, and he says he grew up in Yorba Linda, which he sings the praises of. He lives nearby now in Irvine, so I guess he likes it there too. Any opinions?
Some places I have already eliminated purely on the performance of the High Schools. The curlette is bright and deserves a good school, so that has to be a major factor.
So where should I definitely avoid for any other reasons (crime, overcrowding, charmless, etc)? particular towns, cities, or portions of them... although we're more likely to be near a big city than actually in it.
TA1LGUNN3R wrote:jonesthecurl wrote:KoolBak wrote:Out of curiosity, why california? Purely objectively speaking, West Linn (OR) is about the best community in the pac nw....10 miles from portland.....check it out ;o)
COPY:
n 2011, the City of West Linn was the Top-Ranked Oregon City on the CNN/Money Magazine 'Best Places to Live 2011' List. Citing 'breathtaking views of the Cascades and relatively low local taxes,' the Number 69 listing includes a photo of Central Village, and also mentions the Music in the Park concert series, the historic Willamette area, the farmer's market, and the Street Dance. The City of Sherwood is the only other Oregon city to make the 2011 listing, coming in at Number 100. In 2009, the City of West Linn was included on the 'Best Places to Live 2009' list. Oregonians move to the hilltop homes here for a breathtaking view of the Cascades and relatively low local taxes. With Portland just 25 minutes away, most residents commute into the city during the week. Weekends are spent enjoying waterfront recreation: West Linn sits at the junction of two rivers. On summer evenings, residents enjoy picnic dinners over concerts in the park. Locals also flock to a revitalized downtown area, Historic Willamette, which offers a farmer’s market and, occasionally, dancing in the street.
In 2012, the City of West Linn was named Tree City USA Community by the Arbor Day Foundation for its commitment to urban forestry. It is the 19th year West Linn has earned this national honor from the Arbor Day Foundation, the nation’s largest nonprofit organization dedicated to planting trees. “We all benefit when communities like West Linn place a high priority on planting and caring for trees, one of our nation’s most beautiful resources,” said John Rosenow, chief executive and founder of the Arbor Day Foundation. “Trees shade our homes and add beauty to our neighborhoods, and they also provide many environmental, economic and social benefits. We applaud West Linn’s elected officials, volunteers and citizens for providing vital care for its urban forest.”
Thanks, Koolbak. I did look , prompted by your post. I'm afraid the climate looks a bit too British there. And the winter nights too long. That's my favourite part of being further south. But we're not wedded to the idea of Cali, most of the things we do for money aren't bound to one place.
I have to say property looks a lot more affordable up there, which might even sway us when all factors are weighed up.
And thanks everyone for your answers. Keep em coming. I also got a suggestion from a fellow-comic that I trained with in NYC, and he says he grew up in Yorba Linda, which he sings the praises of. He lives nearby now in Irvine, so I guess he likes it there too. Any opinions?
Some places I have already eliminated purely on the performance of the High Schools. The curlette is bright and deserves a good school, so that has to be a major factor.
So where should I definitely avoid for any other reasons (crime, overcrowding, charmless, etc)? particular towns, cities, or portions of them... although we're more likely to be near a big city than actually in it.
Oregon's okay, I guess, lots of natural beauty and all that. Weather can alternate pretty quickly between nice and absolute shit.
DO NOT come to the western half if you have seasonal allergies or hay fever, or are otherwise allergic to grass pollen. The willamette valley pretty much has the highest grass pollen count in the world (right up there if not the highest), and wreaks havoc on you. I'm in hell from like mid-February to late June.
-TG
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