Eagle
WKR
If you want to avoid kalifornication, I really think WY is your only hope. MT/ID/CO are all slowly being taken over by liberals from CA/OR/WA.
I’ve done more less the same researching as you.
I’m coming from CA though.
My first requirement, like you, is NO liberal politics, and unfortunately CO fails there. Though the outlying rural areas have very conservative holdouts the majority of the population is in the major (liberal) cities. I have several friends that moved there and i warned them and sure enough they want out now.
Montana, by statistics, is the most conservative state in the US (last i checked, last year).
But the snowfall for you might be a dealbreaker
Politics alone is a pretty poor reason to dismiss CO. Only you can define how liberal is too liberal, but I can tell you CO is not even close to NJ or CA.
Plenty of good options out there, ideally you would be able to take extended vacations in these places before moving.
You are correct. I realized later i was thinking of Wyoming being the most conservative state, which it still appears to beMontana isn't really that conservative sadly. We've had a democrat governor forever and Bozeman is becoming the most yuppy liberal hellhole I've ever seen. It's changing fast and I think in the next 10-15 years will probably be a swing state. We just don't have enough populace in the rural areas to make up for the coastal liberal transplants. If you want a solid red state Wyoming is the place to be. That being said, my wife and I just relocated from Bozeman to Laurel, just west of Billings. Nice little town with that Montana feel to it and still pretty close to Billings. Roundup kinda has the same feel to it. I wish more of the transplants here were people like you that don't want to bring the coastal elitist ignorance with them but sadly most are hellbent on ruining what we have.
Yes. I’d like to hear more on WY. How do the bigger cities compare to one another?A bunch of guys are saying Wyoming. My question is where would you suggest? I know nothing of the state other than route 80 on my way to Steamboat Springs.
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Wyoming 2 biggest cities are Cheyenne and Casper with ~60k people each, the third largest is half that, and it dwindles down drastically from there. The only targets are in Cheyenne and Casper, and there are no Costco's in the state. Wyoming has extremely varied terrain, the I-80 does not give a good representation of the entire state and it is one of my least favorite drives in the country especially in the winter. Depending on if both of you work, I'd narrow down cities that you like and apply for jobs in all of them. It can be extremely difficult for people moving out west to get jobs in certain areas. So it would be better to have the jobs lined up then move vs moving and trying to get a job. Or if you don't mind a career change there are a lot more opportunities.
Are you retaining or building new clientele? My wife has been in your industry for 20+ years. She probably has some insight about it around the Denver and more populated areas of Colorado. Send me a pm if ya got questions.
Could you/would you speak on how Fort Collins compares to Colorado Springs. Perhaps, if one was trying to avoid Denver and too much congestion.I have to make one more sales pitch for CO.
Even if there is some sticker shock - lateral move $ wise, for what would be viewed as a lesser home - can you put a price tag on quality of life? Do you really need a big, nice house as empty nesters? Also there is next to no chance the property value will not grow faster in CO, plus the property taxes are a fraction of what they are in NJ.
That last statement most likely applies to almost anywhere in Montana or Idaho as well, but I don't know first-hand. Demand to live in CO is nit going away any time soon.
Could you/would you speak on how Fort Collins compares to Colorado Springs. Perhaps, if one was trying to avoid Denver and too much congestion.
And don't listen to people saying Californian migrants are changing things, it has nothing to do with California.
Yep I see probably 10% cali plates driving around the front range.Bullsh!t
Our governor is from California
But CA has soooo many people, you'll see CA migrants everywhere (it's not limited to CO). You're never going to find a place that people from CA haven't moved too and it's not CA politics getting dispersed (it's American citizen politics getting dispersed). WY, MT, NM, CO, (wherever), doesn't have any more right to say what should be the law than someone from CA. While I may not agree with them, I feel they should have the right to feel/think however they want and to move to whatever state they want within the US.Yep I see probably 10% cali plates driving around the front range.