Ecampbell25
WKR
Agreed!Perfect? Definitely not.
Better than others? Definitely yes.
But it’s super hard with having kids in the mix because they want to be around their cousins and other family members…
But you never know until you go!
Agreed!Perfect? Definitely not.
Better than others? Definitely yes.
I couldn't disagree more. My family homesteaded in the very small, very rural town that I was born in (in along with my children and 5 generations before me). Generations before me lived and died there. I wanted to die in there but state politics forced us to move. There is a very real community that is irreplaceable when you and your neighbors have been going to the same church together for generations.Its a big country. Last thing you want to do is to live in the same place all your life. Everyone should experience different parts of our country before deciding where they want to live forever.
I like what you wrote because it speaks truth. It would be like trying to tell someone only strawberry ice cream tastes best. Everyone has different preferences, values, likes and dislikes.Alls I know is not a single person on the planet can tell you the best place to live. Not a single one of us wired the same. I hate it for the folks not happy where they at, stoked for the folks who are happy where they are.
I’m never moving again after the 7 states I’ve lived in.
Traveling to hunt, explore and recreate that area doesn’t scratch the itch? What do you mean about “planting your own roots somewhere”?Been in NW Oklahoma the entire 28 years of my life. Born in Odessa, but moved here before I could remember.
This place is heaven on earth for sense of community, world class Rio and whitetail hunting, 8 deer tags, more coyotes than I could ever hunt, pigs, great quail hunting, and live right between what I would consider the best two walleye lakes in Oklahoma. I live in a town of 200 people, and 30 minutes from the in-laws. Everything is 30 minutes away, but it's peaceful.
I would love to move to Wy or NW Co, but the wife couldn't fathom being further from her family than the short 30 minutes we are now. Feel like we are following in the generations before us and bound to die out here without ever planting our own roots somewhere else, which I'm fine with, but I believe life is to short to stay the same as the status quo.
I'm not the OP youre responding to but...Traveling to hunt, explore and recreate that area doesn’t scratch the itch? What do you mean about “planting your own roots somewhere”?
Traveling to hunt, explore and recreate that area doesn’t scratch the itch? What do you mean about “planting your own roots somewhere”?
No. School, crime, politics, pollution etc etc can be researched with 100% accuracy with google searches. Weather. Google search. Tag availability, Google search. Public land availability, google search.I like what you wrote because it speaks truth. It would be like trying to tell someone only strawberry ice cream tastes best. Everyone has different preferences, values, likes and dislikes.
However...
There are still objective measures that allow us to compare one locale against another. Things like pollution, school test scores/dropout rate, poverty level, average commute time, crime rate, proximity/time to health care, unemployment rate, median income, median home price, etc. Depending on our likes and dislikes, as well as our personal circumstances, we have to make choices about the extent we compromise on those objective measures -- some obviously more than others -- while a few factors become a red line in the sand that we simply can't compromise on. Relocating is all about compromise because there is no such thing as a perfect place, even when only viewed through the lens of our personal likes and dislikes. Consequently, these discussions where people share their perspectives about relocation push/pull factors, what pushed them out of one place and what pulled them to another, can be enlightening and help all of us as we wrestle with this issue of compromise.