by Byron100 » Tue 27 May 2008, 16:57:20
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')n the flip side you have the deep south, like Georgia.
Ever see old film clips of the south? Bunch of people just hanging around all day, talkin' slow, movin' slow, jes beeeein' slow, y'aaaall.
They're like that because it's 95 F and 90% relative humidity.
Oh, come on, you know those old film clips are just stereotypical Hollywood bunk. Atlanta is just as progressive as any other major metro area in the country, if not more so, and if you don't care for the big city, go for something like Athens, a wonderfully delightful college town, or a mid-size city like Birmingham, Alabama.
Yeah, drought's been a bit of a thorn in our side these past few years, but if there's one thing you can count on about climate, is that it's constantly changing. This year, we're averaging very close to normal rainfall levels (about 50 inches a year per annum), and we still haven't hit 90 yet this season.

The really hot, nasty weather only lasts about 10 weeks or so, and what part of the country doesn't get nasty hot for at least part of the summer? Anyone remember the Chicago heat wave of the late '90's?
And when it comes to winter....ahhhhh. I LOVE winter here. Bright, sunny, refreshing days, perfect weather for biking, tennis, yard work, you name it. And the falls and springs....envision weeks on end of "open window" weather, when heat nor AC is needed. There no need to own a snow shovel here, or even an ice scraper. If I properly insulate the house like I should and install a compact Franklin stove like I'm planning, I should have absolutely rock-bottom gas bills, no matter how high natural gas gets. Sure, having to run the AC in summer kinda bites, but perhaps some solar panels along with painting the roof white might be of help along that front. And if I can get used to keeping it at 78 or 80 like I ought to be doing, it really doesn't need to be run all that much, and electric rates are lower here than in most areas of the country, using coal and nuclear as our primary power source.
Also, the cost of living is very low here compared to most urban areas in the US...try finding a house on 3/4 acre of land 13 miles from downtown, and yet close enough to walk to bus lines and shopping for well under a quarter million...just try it, anywhere in the US. Here in Atlanta, it's not hard at all to find something like that, at least not for me...hehe.
So yeah, you can keep dissing Georgia all you want, we have 5 million folks packed in the Atlanta area already, so that's fine with me...

But for me, myself and mine, it's working out just fine...certainly a world's difference than living in Florida. If I do move away from here someday, it'd prolly be Canada, which is a whole lot more equipped to deal with Peak Oil than the States, with free health care to boot.

Nowhere to run, nowhere to hide...
...and the meek shall inherit the Earth!