• There were many reasons for the change of the site software, the biggest was security. The age of the old software also meant no server updates for certain programs. There are many benefits to the new software, one of the biggest is the mobile functionality. Ill fix up some stuff in the coming days, we'll also try to get some of the old addons back or the data imported back into the site like the garage. To create a thread or to reply with a post is basically the same as it was in the prior software. The default style of the site is light colored, but i temporarily added a darker colored style, to change you can find a link at the bottom of the site.

Why We Live Where We Do

born in mo. but lived in ny from age 4+ but won't retire in ny, i prefer keeping my money and want early spring
and late fall to keep riding. long island is not really made for riding, that is what upstate ny is for.
 
So we now reside on the border with Mexico which is also on the Pacific coast and if California fails we're off to Baja.....:roflblack:

Of all the places in "SoCal", I think we like San Diego and area the best. LA has some neat stuff but is just... too much.
Daughter lived in Pasadena for about a year and was glad to move back to Phoenix.

Speaking of San Diego, I am going to be there in a couple of weeks for 3 days for work. Any recommendations for a nice dinner?
We are staying within walking distance of the USS Midway.
 
I do miss the ocean, specifically the left coast. Grew up in the PNW with it's wild coastline and isolation. Spent a year in Laguna Beach, SoCal. Loved riding PCH and the canyons of Malibu, all the way to Santa Cruz.

Used to ride the "back way" from San Jose to Santa Cruz at least twice a month. Nice little trip off the main highway.
 
Born in S. Cal, raised in S. Oregon, and now live in W. Washington. I've also lived in D.C. for a number of years in my past due to (ex) in military. I've traveled various areas of the world and US for work and play. I enjoy the differences in culture, food and seeing new things. Particularly have enjoyed in the US Utah, Montana, WY, Colorado.
I like where I live now, good job, mild winters (no ice!)...all be it damp/chilly/cloudy. When I retire in the years ahead, I will not stay here. Too $ and too many people.
 
Navy Brat --> Wanderlust

My father was in the Navy, so... my mom, two sisters and I were in the Navy, too. Born in Charleston, SC, and in rapid succession lived in Newport, RI; Norfolk, VA; Pascagoula, MS; Norfolk again; Charleston again; Rota, Spain; Monterey, CA; Athens, GA; Yokosuka, Japan; Norfolk again, Virginia Beach, VA, Yokosuka again, Virginia Beach again, then off to Houston, TX for college. Lived in Houston for most of my adult life because of the mild winters and generally warm economy, with stints in Chicago (where I met my back seat ryder), New Orleans (pre-Katrina) and Austin (tech industry). We did a mid-life detour into the mission field in Little Rock, AR and Budapest, Hungary, both of which are places we continue to visit every chance we get, and have settled back in Austin owing to children migrating here and a job that alternately drives me crazy and gives me great joy.

All that moving around made me pretty passive about location -- hard to explain, but the notion that one could exert a preference as to where one lived was just a very foreign concept to me. Having had some wonderful experiences in places actually pursued/chosen over the past few years, I'm getting more comfortable with the idea, however. Grandchildren will hopefully influence our future wanderings, but I always enjoy reading about how various folks on here snowbird or at least migrate periodically, and anticipate doing something like that while we can still can.

Great topic idea, and appreciate everyone who has shared their travelogue.
 
...All that moving around made me pretty passive about location -- hard to explain, but the notion that one could exert a preference as to where one lived was just a very foreign concept to me. Having had some wonderful experiences in places actually pursued/chosen over the past few years, I'm getting more comfortable with the idea, however. Grandchildren will hopefully influence our future wanderings, but I always enjoy reading about how various folks on here snowbird or at least migrate periodically, and anticipate doing something like that while we can still can.

Great topic idea, and appreciate everyone who has shared their travelogue.

While I was in California, I moved something like 9 times in 11 years. I understand exactly what you are saying.

Now we stay put for the kids and grand-kids.
 
California

Didn’t have a choice. My parents were both from the Mid-West and got married in California. They settled in Santa Rosa, California in the “North Bay”. My Grandfather owned a Turkey Ranch in the Valley of the Moon. We stayed there until I was in the 5th grade. My Dad had gone into banking and was relocated to Fresno. Spent just a few months and we moved to Reedley, the self proclaimed “Fruit Basket” of the World. If you have eaten fresh peaches, or nectarines, or plumbs, or raisins, they very likely came from Reedley. Left home to go to College in Irvine California at UC Irvine! Home of the fighting Anteaters! If you saw the first “Planet of the Apes” movie, that was filmed on our campus. After college I started selling Pharmaceuticals for Upjohn Phamaceuticals in Whittier California, birthplace of Tricky Dick Nixon! From there it was off to the San Joaquin Valley and Visalia California the “Gateway to The Sequoias”. Then off to the coast and Santa Barbara. Loved it there! Very expensive and oil spills left tar on the beach and on your feet and shoes, but it was 72 degrees every day of the year. Then to Long Beach, and lastly for the last 30 years in the Capital Sacramento! The great thing about California if there is a certain type of terrain or climate you love in your state, we have it in California! Oh, with the possible exception of extreme overwhelming humidity. We have rugged Coastline, beautiful warm tropical beaches, rolling foothills, the Majestic Sierra Nevada mountains, deserts for miles and miles, flat and fertile farm land forever. We have great cities like San Francisco, and Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose and Sacramento. I certainly don’t agree with all of the politics out here, but man we have the best of all worlds out here, and I didn’t even talk about the weather, but we do ride 12 months a year! I have traveled to 29 other states and have yet to find one that has the diversity of terrain and climates. I think I am going to stay put! But I can also say that I loved all of the other states that I have traveled too, and always enjoy the visit!
 
The year that we spent on the road, traveling with the Spyder in our toyhauler, we saw a lot of great places to live.
Our original open ended plan was to scope out possible retirement locations; possibly even keep traveling in the RV. But in the end we ended up returning to CO, because I think while there are great places to visit, you live where your tribe is. By that I mean your support network, friends, roots. I grew up on the west coast of Canada, where my relatives and most of my childhood friends are, but it's not "home". Home is where you develop your adult life relationships, your career, your social circle .. your tribe.
 
Born and raised in southern WI. Love it here. I did spend 7 years in N.C. for my job. I was offered a great opportunity to move there at 20 yrs old and it worked out great. AS far as living there....mehh...I honestly missed the winters of WI. After 7 yrs of it I moved back to WI and remain here to present. I still work for the same company 31 yrs later. I really love the terrain here. Rolling hills, open fields and dairy farms all over. Northern WI has more forestry and less crop lands and dairy. It makes for some beautiful riding up there in the fall. I still have about 12 yrs to work before I can retire....after that, who knows?
 
Born and raised in southern WI. Love it here. I did spend 7 years in N.C. for my job. I was offered a great opportunity to move there at 20 yrs old and it worked out great. AS far as living there....mehh...I honestly missed the winters of WI. After 7 yrs of it I moved back to WI and remain here to present. I still work for the same company 31 yrs later. I really love the terrain here. Rolling hills, open fields and dairy farms all over. Northern WI has more forestry and less crop lands and dairy. It makes for some beautiful riding up there in the fall. I still have about 12 yrs to work before I can retire....after that, who knows?

Spent four years in Madison. Your just down the road. Prefer the northern WI forests--but southern was okay too.
 
Grew up on a farm in SW OH. Moved to Columbus for college. 18 years later, moved to Atlanta for work. Still there

Love the mild winters but hate the traffic. Cost of living isn’t too bad compared to other cities of similar size but did I say I hate the traffic? SWMBO wants to move closer to the grandkids but that means Seattle and lots of people (and traffic) so I drag my feet, hoping that reality kicks in because the house in Atlanta costs half of what a similar house in the far eastern Seattle burbs will cost. And then there’s the traffic again.
 
Spent four years in Madison. Your just down the road. Prefer the northern WI forests--but southern was okay too.

We're about 30 miles west of Madison, in an armpit town of 800 called Arena. Wife works in Madison at the UW Hospital, I work in Cross Plains for a company called Plastic Ingenuity Inc....Someday I'll go "up the road" to AK.:yes:
 
We're about 30 miles west of Madison, in an armpit town of 800 called Arena. Wife works in Madison at the UW Hospital, I work in Cross Plains for a company called Plastic Ingenuity Inc....Someday I'll go "up the road" to AK.:yes:

Based on your screen name, I was thinking Mazomanie. Look me up if you head our way.
 
Born and raised in Merseyside, UK. I miss the sense of humor and family, but not the endless grey days.
At 33 years of age I emigrated to CA, US of A in 1979 ( emigration best done in your 20's - just sayin' )and settled in the Sacramento area.

I have the occasional complaints (don't we all ?) about the endless summers, pot holed freeways and politicians :sour:;) - but - after many years riding a huge chunk of the USA, Canada, and visits to the motherland, I still enjoy returning home to CA.
Summers are long, only blistering hot for 2-3 weeks, and we don't encounter many of the natural disasters that plague other States.

Oh - retired 17 years ago and still lovin' it :D
 
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Based on your screen name, I was thinking Mazomanie. Look me up if you head our way.

Well, actually our plant is in Mazomanie, and I'm an EMT and Asst Fire Chief in Mazomanie. It's about 6 miles from Arena. I'd love to think I'll be heading your way.....not looking too likely though...LOL
 
Black Hills

About 35 minutes to either Sturgis or Mt. Rushmore from my house. 10 minutes and I’m riding in the Hills. Enough said...
 
My wife is a native of Arizona and has never been to a place with 4 seasons. I will be taking her to the Finger Lakes and Rochester and the whole upstate area in the next few years.

I am also an Arizona native but have lived in many other places including Rochester. I have some observations:

She will probably love the Summer. Much cooler than Phoenix, a bit of rain in the afternoons and many very pretty places to visit within a couple of hours drive (Finger Lakes, wineries, farms of all kinds and roadside stands everywhere selling antiques and everything edible). I spent several hours almost every evening water skiing on Long Pond and canoeing on the old canals can be very relaxing.

She will probably hate everything else. Winters are terribly cold and snowy (especially if you go east or west). There isn't much to do during winter unless you like hockey or ice fishing. Phoenix has a world-class variety of restaurants - Rochester.....not so much although the "garbage plate" is reputed to be gastronomically exceptional according to my son's hockey team. Rochester, like the rest of Noo Yawk is expensive. Their native beer is terrible and their roads suck. You have a choice in Noo Yawk: two-lanes or toll roads. Neither are well maintained. There are more railroad tracks in the City of Rochester than anywhere on Earth (think Grand Avenue times 100). Both major employers have collapsed in the past decade (Kodak and Xerox) leaving Rochester financially destitute and with some severe "diversity" issues. Rochester's crime rates an 'F' by several agencies and appears to be worsening.

Just my 2 cents. Your mileage may vary.
 
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