Arizona, New Mexico and the Colorado mountains are places that I believe have many retirees.I know from watching Seinfeld that Florida is a popular retirement destination. What are the other US locations that attract retirees? I would assume Hawaii might be popular?
Many Canadians (called Snowbirds) spend Winter in Florida and a bit in Arizona.What are the other US locations that attract retirees? I would assume Hawaii might be popular?
Interesting to learn the (military) origin of the term "snowbird."Many Canadians (called Snowbirds) spend Winter in Florida and a bit in Arizona.
@jasoncapecod claims otherwise!No mtn biking worth doing.
So you'll sell the Rockland County house and live between Cape Cod and Florida?My wife will be getting a nice condo there.
Where is there mtn biking in Florida?@jasoncapecod claims otherwise!
My father lived in Florida for a more than decade, then moved to South Carolina. That's how I learned the term "halfback."Arizona, New Mexico and the Colorado mountains are places that I believe have many retirees.
MTB..a subject i'm well versed on...I have biked coast to coast. Florida has some of the gnarliest biking in the country..yep I said Florida.. I have had my worst crashes and injuries biking there. Yes the biking is relatively flat , but the builders do some incredible things with the terrain they have.Where is there mtn biking in Florida?
On the occasions that I find myself in Florida, I am usually in the Delray to Boca area. Is there anything in that region?MTB..a subject i'm well versed on...I have biked coast to coast. Florida has some of the gnarliest biking in the country..yep I said Florida.. I have had my worst crashes and injuries biking there. Yes the biking is relatively flat , but the builders do some incredible things with the terrain they have.
Here are the main systems. Santo's and Alfia in Central Fla just north of Orlando. There are actual hills there. In South Fla the main place is Markham Park..
Hawaii is probably the most expensive state in the US to live. Even for vacationers, I think most of them are from the West Coast. I'll guess that Arizona is next most popular to retire after Florida.I would assume Hawaii might be popular?
YesOn the occasions that I find myself in Florida, I am usually in the Delray to Boca area. Is there anything in that region?
My mother decided to move to central North Carolina from NYC back in the early 1970s. She was ahead of the migration of retirees from the northeast and midwest to NC. Those numbers started increasing in the 1990s. The relatively long spring and fall seasons were a factor. She also appreciated having four seasons, which can't be said of FL. I moved with her and my father joined us after he retired several years later. I've been in the NC Triangle ever since.I suspect summers in the Carolinas are as obnoxious as Florida except for the western mountain microclimate that is cloudy nearly all the time. I'm inclined to think that since the summers suck all along the East Coast at least as far north as NYC, there some logic in going all the way south to where the 6-7 cooler months are nicest. I do believe that the DC to Carolina climate has much longer pleasant springs and autumns than NY/NJ. It seemed that some NJ springs/falls when I was there lasted about a week.
Florida is #1. Apparently in 2023, South Carolina was #2.I know from watching Seinfeld that Florida is a popular retirement destination. What are the other US locations that attract retirees? I would assume Hawaii might be popular?
Don't hold back Tony, LOL.since the summers suck all along the East Coast at least as far north as NYC
I would guess the pandemic shifted both the departure and arrival states a bit. Wild fires in the last 5-6 years are a factor for people leaving California.Don't hold back Tony, LOL.
It's not really any better for lots of the Midwest either for what that is worth.
MarzNC, Very weird looking list IMO. Id bet if that were a 5 or 10 year look vs just one that it would look somewhat different than that.
I'm sure I've mentioned before that within a year of moving to CU Boulder in 1982 (where at the time almost a quarter of the student body was from California) I realised that people who lived in sunny regions often engaged in a type of group bonding/performance art -- complaining at length about how HORRIBLE and INTOLERABLE weather was outside of the sunbelt. To be fair, in many cases the most vociferous ones were transplants, who'd regale you chapter and verse about what a fabulously smart choice it was to move to CO, AZ, CA, FL, etc. and that they only went home for funerals or other major life events.Don't hold back Tony, LOL.
I wasn't there and can't fact-check your personal experience/perception; however, that ^^ has not been my experience here across two decades and suspect that this may be a performative tall tale.some NJ springs/falls when I was there lasted about a week.
Spring of my senior year was very nice, one of the few times I dabbled with golf. It was about 6 weeks and I had the gut feeling that was a long time vs. the prior 3 years.this may be a performative tall tale
I did not understand why Liz' mother enjoyed those summers in Waynesville until I spent a July week there myself. From my perspective I just saw the altitude 2,000 feet and thought that's not nearly enough to put a dent in the heat and humidity. But I was wrong. The cloudy microclimate keeps the average highs in the low 80's. I was also surprised the lows were in the low 60's. Maybe some of that cooler air in the mountains flows down into the Piedmont at night.Summers in NC are NOT like summers in FL. In the Piedmont, as central NC is called, it's much more likely to cool down in at night even when daytime temps are in the 80s or 90s.
Sounds like my 2013 week in NYC. I'm sure the worst place to be in high heat/humidity is a big city with urban heat island added in. For truly insane urban heat/humidity try Shanghai. I think the temperature range was 95/77 when I was there in 2008.Worst summer nights I've experience on the east coast were in Boston.
It's not the sun per se. The cloudiness tends to go hand in hand with the humidity, which makes both warm and cold extremes more unpleasant. Note that the cloudiness is a huge positive factor for the Smoky Mountain summer climate I described above. It's fairly simple I think. Is it comfortable to be outside, whether exercising or just taking in a ball game or concert?Personally, 300+ sunny days a year gets old quick
If you can afford it and don't mind that it's 5 hour flight anywhere else. Much of Hawaii is remarkably comfortable in summer on the leeward sides of their large mountains with less rain and humidity. I was there a week in August 2011 in a Waikiki highrise and we never needed the A/C due to the trade winds.I would assume Hawaii might be popular?
Don't get me wrong. I personally have zero ambition to move to a beach type location. But I guess I'm not the norm.If you can afford it and don't mind that it's 5 hour flight anywhere else. Much of Hawaii is remarkably comfortable in summer on the leeward sides of their large mountains with less rain and humidity. I was there a week in August 2011 in a Waikiki highrise and we never needed the A/C due to the trade winds.