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THE US West Coast (merged)

A forum for discussion of regional topics including oil depletion but also government, society, and the future.

THE US West Coast (merged)

Unread postby Bob13 » Sun 30 Dec 2007, 02:20:53

Which one do you think is better located to endure peak oil? I am thinking Santa Barbara will require less a/c and heat. I am not sure of their water situation. I am not sure if the Oregon coast is too wet to grow crops. Also, is the Oregon coast livable without heat?
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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby thuja » Sun 30 Dec 2007, 02:28:55

What kind of situation on the Oregon Coast? Town, back country?

It stays wet and cool year round and it gets into your bones so you need lots of warmth. It is also traditionally economically depressed...but...

its beautiful, lots of firewood, elk, fish, rain, you can grow crops...dairy farms, low pop. density...

I would never live in Santa Barbara for one main reason... worsening drought...
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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby mmasters » Sun 30 Dec 2007, 02:51:28

While the Pacific Northwest is one of the more popular places mentioned on the board I don't think enough consider the fact that it's geologically one of the world's most dangerous places. Cali isn't much better off either...
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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby joeltrout » Sun 30 Dec 2007, 03:00:47

I would have to pick the Oregon coast. I live in Los Angeles and all of southern California has the same problem including Santa Barbara, lack of water and expensive real estate.

My grandfather lives in Medford, OR which is located in the southwest part of Oregon. They receive cold weather but not anything like the surrounding mountains that most people think of Oregon. Medford is lucky if they receive snow and in the summer it can get hot and dry. He lives in a farming community and there are many fruit trees, vegetables, etc... grown year around. Some of the best strawberries ever.

As long as you dont live in the mountains of Oregon, you wont freeze. And if you move inland a few hundred miles you dont even have to worry about too much rain. If anything you have to worry about to little rain during the dry months. Oregon is a great place to live and more people know about farming, hunting, etc.. than in southern california. If you have to be on the coast, Brookings or Gold Beach are great little towns near the California border.

Good luck.

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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby timmac » Thu 03 Apr 2008, 18:17:41

What about Eastern Oregon, any one ever consider this area, land is low priced, how ever does it get very cold in this area..
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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby dunewalker » Thu 03 Apr 2008, 18:49:17

Santa Barbara was a veritable garden of eden back in the Jesuit Mission days. However, the main consequence of peak oil is hordes of desperate people. Santa Barbara not only has an abundance of people, but is on one of the main routes of escape from the Los Angeles basin, home to possibly 10 million or so. An excellent illustration of this horrible concept is "The Parable Of The Sower" by Octavia Butler, the story of refugees making their way north from LA after things get rough. I'd choose the Oregon coast over Santa Barbara, but only if those were the only two choices.
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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby bobaloo » Thu 03 Apr 2008, 19:58:29

The Oregon coast (southern) is great if you don't have any need to make money. It's pretty much a 3d world environment, a few business owners making big bucks selling trinkets to the tourists, lots of people working temporary part time minimum wage jobs working for them. Like most places with few people, there's a reason there's few people, unfortunately. The Coast Range would be a great place if you didn't need to work, mild year round climate and 12 months of gardening. Rainfall varies from spot to spot, depending on the rain shadow. One place might get 60 inches of rain and 2 miles away they might get 120 inches per year. There's areas that get over 200 inches per year.

Eastern Oregon is great if you can handle the cold weather, but it's mainly country where you need 40-80 acres to run one cow. It's high desert, sage and juniper. Very, very low population density because it takes a LOT of land to make a living off it. There are areas that get more rain and have pine trees and grass, but you have to really research the area. Lots of land in Christmas Valley for sale on Ebay. That land was homesteaded in the early 1900's, the homesteaders lasted a couple of years and then moved away because even with free land they couldn't make a go of it. That area gets 8 inches or so of rain per year, not enough to grow any crops, and the subterranean water table is dropping like a rock. Even if you buy land, you don't necessarily get the right to drill a well and use the water, you need a water right which you probably won't get.

We ended up on the edge of the Willamette Valley, in a fairly remote area. Plenty of water, nice climate, but too expensive these days. We bought 20 years ago for maybe 10 percent of what land goes for now. Wish we weren't so close to population centers, but on the other hand I can walk out my back yard into woods and pretty much stay in forest all the way to the Canadian border, it's pretty wild once you get out of town. On the other hand, I am able to find a good job and make a living, which I could not as easily do in the other areas.
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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby Stratovarius » Thu 03 Apr 2008, 21:13:26

Is there a mountain range that divides Oregon? I'm guessing you should simply stay away from the leeward side of the mountains since it will be very dry which is never a good thing.
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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby dunewalker » Thu 03 Apr 2008, 21:24:05

I agree with pstarr about the current situation of Humboldt Bay area, having lived there for more than 20 years. However, post-peak is an entirely different story. So much for the deep harbor/large fishing fleet when the fish stocks are decimated. Feed 75,000? Nice dairy farms yes--feed 75,000? Agricultual potential? Potatoes do well, so do snow peas. Feed 75,000? Community organization is excellent though, especially on the north end of the bay (60's by the sea). Just too many people/too little food potential.
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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby Ludi » Thu 03 Apr 2008, 22:28:40

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '
')Where I live on Humboldt Bay will be a great place post peak..


Except for that darn old nuke plant...
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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby dunewalker » Fri 04 Apr 2008, 01:20:28

pstarr, I admit to not being an expert on "agroeconomics". However, I am aware, as you are, that the industrial level of food production you refer to at present is possible with cheap oil energy. I suppose that with 75,000 folks turned out in the fields, barns, gardens, shores, it still would be possible. We'll see.
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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby Ludi » Fri 04 Apr 2008, 10:41:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'T')hey found the missing rods.

Most of them :razz:

:lol:
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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby vision-master » Fri 04 Apr 2008, 11:55:54

The median price of a single-family home on the South Coast of Santa Barbara County has reached the $1 million mark the highest in California.


I guess you can live about anywhere you wish...........
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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby Ferretlover » Fri 04 Apr 2008, 12:45:31

I've lived in CA-San Diego, Mountain View, and in WA-Whidbey Island and Seattle.
I would definitely pick Oregon over CA for post-peak if I had the chance.
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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby skyemoor » Fri 04 Apr 2008, 13:21:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('timmac', 'W')hat about Eastern Oregon, any one ever consider this area, land is low priced, how ever does it get very cold in this area..


Eastern Oregon is drier and sunnier, though drier also leads to questions of the severe drought experienced there last year and the future water situation.

Oregon contains 7 climate types, some of which include desert. Study the area you have in mind to determine if it meets your expectations.
http://www.wrcc.dri.edu/narratives/OREGON.htm
http://www.worldbook.com/wb/Students?co ... ate_oregon
http://www.carfree.com
http://ecoplan.org/carshare/cs_index.htm
http://www.velomobile.de/GB/Advantages/advantages.html

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Re: Santa Barbara or Oregon Coast ??

Unread postby Tyler_JC » Fri 04 Apr 2008, 21:31:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('vision-master', 'T')he median price of a single-family home on the South Coast of Santa Barbara County has reached the $1 million mark the highest in California.


I guess you can live about anywhere you wish...........


I had the exact same though.

My sister goes to UCSB and if she wanted to buy a house there...forget it!

If you bought your house in Santa Barbara more than a couple of years ago you should sell, take the equity, and buy a house outright somewhere less expensive.

But I don't know what you do for a living, how much debt you have, children/wife?, and so on.

There is no place that is a perfect for everyone. It all depends heavily on personal factors that I don't know because you haven't given us any information.
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