Pacific Northwesterners! A little info please--we're moving out of Jersey

by ashitaka 21 Replies latest jw friends

  • DIM
    DIM

    $6000 a year for car insurance? where in Jersey do you live? I lived right on the Philly border and it was only $1500 a year for two newish cars w/ full coverage....bad driving record? Philly area has one of the highest rates in the country, so i'm not sure that sounds accurate...

    washington vs. pa....weather is nicer out here, not as much humidity. the taxes are more in your face, but the actual cost of living is much much less. No high energy bills, no yearly car inspection. the rent out here for apartments is nice, but houses cost alot more - your $200,000 house in PA or NJ would probably cost $300,000 or so out here. our car insurance is cheaper by about $200 a year, gas is a few cents higher....

  • ashitaka
    ashitaka

    Thanks guys. I'll PM you guys with more questions. We're definitely leaving....

    DIM, I'll drop you a PM right now.

    Thanks again.

    ash

  • Carmel
    Carmel

    Don't believe those wimps who yack about the rain west of the Cascades. Coming from SE Alaska, Oregon on the coast is "PARADISE"!! Clean air and unupstructed view all the way down to the unemployment center. Can't see the end of the line either...............

    carmel

  • Princess
    Princess

    I just saw on the news that we are at 30% of our normal rainfall for the year. That would be scary except we all know we will be caught up by mid-November.

    It does rain but this has been a very dry year. The last time it rained here was June 21...the day I did a 70 mile bike ride. We were very wet and muddy by the end! The next day was beautiful.

  • Buster
    Buster

    Intersted in an extra perspective from a transplanted Northeastener (Boston)? We live in Vancouver Wash. It is just over the river from Portland Oregon. We, my wife and two kids, moved here five years ago.

    The Pacific NW is a big area and it varies quite a bit. Along the coast you will get a lot of cloudy days, many of them with rain or drizzle. But as far as we're concerned, its beats the hell out of shovelling snow. Speaking of snow, in the western side of the states, we get very little snow. But when we get so much as an inch, it paralyzes these poor people. But it melts away almost immediately. Acutally, you get more rain than we do. Its just that the eastern rain will pour for a day or two then that is it. People here think nothing of a month without sunshine.

    Jobs can be a bit difficult to come by out here though. We lead the nation in unemployment. So make sure you know how you will support yourself before you get here.

    One neat thing about Vancouver is that I go over the river to Oregon for large purchases and avoid the sales tax.

    We moved here to Vancouver partially because my wife has family here. But I have driven a lot of the area. If I were deciding wihout regard to anyone else, I think I would like to live in Spokane. Perty country out theya, pardner. It also has more of the seasons you are used to. It has more snow, more heat and humidity. Plus you are in the country just 20 minutes out of the city. Just don't expect any great museums or Broadway experiences.

    Okay, people. They look the same, but they ain't. You can expect to take a couple years before you completely stop using the all that east coast sarcasm - it really puts 'em back. You get that 'what did I ever do to you' look. And driving? ... worst bunch of rubberneckers on the planet - it'll make you nuts. Just wait until you realize that they expect you to make eye contact and pratically come to a mutual agreement for a highway lane change. They think directional signals are a request. I still get flipped off once a week (it used to be every day).

    Another important point: The west side, I think because of all the rain and mold and pollen and ... , is really tough on allergy sufferers. This doesn't get mentioned much. But if you have any severe plant allergies, you may find large parts of the year almost unbearable. My wife takes more allergy medicine than the entire city of Philadelphia (Of course I am just estimating).

    Summary: We love it here and we ain't goin' nowhere.

  • liquidsky
    liquidsky

    I live south of seattle in the tacoma/puyallup area. Property taxes are pretty low, but I pay around 300.00 a month for car insurance (2 cars). Jobs are pretty easy to find around the seattle area. Traffic sucks no matter where you go in Washington. The weather here is pretty mild, plants and trees are nice and green, Mt rainier is awesome, and there is plenty of stuff to do and places to visit on the weekends.

  • Ravyn
    Ravyn

    www.FindYourSpot.com

    ok well I lived in Spokane area for 4 yrs and I loved it up thee, but a few things really bugged me. First I was 6 hours from the ocean. Next it got to about 30 degrees below freezing in the Winter. And believe it or not, there were no maple trees to turn red in the autumn! All aspens, which are pretty---but only gold. I can't believe how that bugged me. And as far as Washington and Oregon---they were not as cheap as people claimed. Cheap yes compared to california, which is where most of the peopl who live there came from...which was my biggest problem with Pac NW---Californians are a different breed and very very prejudiced against East coasters. I know this because I lived in Ca for 9 yrs. I was past up for jobs, and treated like total crap by the JWs. But the JWs were products of the environment and the environment is that they ridicule your accent, your way of dressing, everything. But I still did enjoy myself for 4 yrs. Coeur d'Alene Idaho is paradise, and British columbia rivals europe for natural beauty. I miss picking apples in WA. WA and OR on the coast--is expensive and humid and rainy and big cities with tiny little towns in between. If you can live with that, then you will love it there, but for me it was all the aggravations of NJ climate without the familliarity, it was so foreign to me.
    TX--I hear there are some very nice areas. I have alot of friends there. It is so big that you can get everything from coastal to ranchland. What you need to remember there is that other than TN, TX is the BIGGEST population of fundys. If you are a fundamental christian that is good, if you are not--it is at times even dangerous. They are not above taking you out and lynching you for your beliefs--and again there will be a problem with you being from NJ. I speak from experience. If my last name was not Giuliani after 911 my husband would have lost his job and he did have to go to work a couple of times with a sheriff escort. I hear the cities in TX are not so bad. Alot of Spanish and Mexican culture---which for me is fine, but it feels like I am continually on vacation and never quite at home.
    Politically you will find more liberals in WA and OR and more conservatives in TX. You may not think this matters, but it will sooner or later.
    I am living in Bedford VA right now. About 6 hours from my mom in NJ and 150 miles from DC. It is very lovely here and I am paying $575 a month rent for a 3 bedroom/1 1/2 bath brick ranch on 2 acres(which was appraised at $80,000). I pay no more than $75 a month in electricity and that is with 24/7 central heat or air(I understand that I am lucky tho and it is not all that cheap--depends on who is providing it). My phone bill is never below $100 including lond distance and dial-up ISP. I get cbale free coz my husband works for Nesbe cable here. Work is good right now and improving. I pay $1200 a yr comprehensive auto insurance---and that is with my husband's BAD BAD driving record(three accidents and two tickets). I spend about $100 a week on GOOD food for my husband and myself--can get away with $65 if I shop cheaply. I am here because basically I have been around the world and no matter how happily I left NJ, I just can't change the fact that I am from there and feel more comfortable on the East Coast. I can not tell you what it is like to be 3000 miles from a decent cheese steak sub for years!
    Incidentally Bedford, VA is right between Roanoke and Lynchburg. TX has better food than PacNW. But you will not find a decent sub, pizza or chinese west of the appalachians.
    Well I dont know if it helped or not. but I am being honest. If I had to choose geographically between TX and WA or OR I would probably choose TX. But the religion and politics would hold me back.
    Ravyn

  • cruzanheart
    cruzanheart
    We're also thinking about Texas---maybe.

    Pick Texas! Pick Texas! [*jumps up and down waving her arms*] Okay, let me tell you the PLUS side of Texas weather: the winters are really mild. You will have a lot of fun laughing at how Dallas shuts down when we have our annual ice storm until you try to drive and discover that (1) we don't have snowplows -- nope, not even one; (2) we do have sand trucks but they don't get sent out until the ice is actually accumulating; (3) rednecks only THINK they know how to drive on ice; and (4) look out for the Dodge Rams, especially the ones with the gunrack in the back. But what that also means is that the undercarriage of your car will not deteriorate nearly as fast because there's no salt put on the roads, and after a few years you will actually get excited if there's a chance of a snowstorm.

    I've lived here since 1973, and I love it. Dallas has become a lot more cosmopolitan since 1973 (thank God) and we have a really neat mix of cultures in the city. The cost of living is one of the best in the country. Come on down and check it out!

    Love,
    Nina

  • Savage_Buda
    Savage_Buda

    I'm a native Texan living in Washington - the state that is....

    Allow me to also concur with cruzanheart post regarding Texas and add a few of my own.
    1. Snow - gives us reason to drive faster
    2. Sand trucks - that depends on the pick up truck and how much dust you can kick off it when it ices over
    3. Driving on ice - what ice?
    4. Dodge Ram - what? Ford and Chevy rules Texas and if you listen on a hot summer night, you can hear a Dodge rust
    5. Big Red - the national soda of Texas
    6. Corpus Christi - now thats a beach
    7. Dallas-Ft. Worth - you think thats two cities?
    8. Ants - Fire ants rule!
    9. Spear Grass - If you've lived in Texas then you _know_ what spear grass is
    10. River Walk - now where else can you listen to mariachi music as they go by on a river boat, eat "Real" fajitas at a bar called the flaming Iguana and sit under a 100 yr old Mesquite tree drinking an ice cold beer (ok for those that don't Big Red is just as good)

  • freedom96
    freedom96

    I used to live in the Northwest.

    I don't care for Portland, though it does have some nice areas

    I like the people in Seattle area better. I think the attitudes of people in that area are better.

    Spokane is nice too, but away from water.

    I moved away from there, but still have friends and family and business ties to the area, so I frequent the area fairly often.

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit