nickymaria
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2008
- Messages
- 240
We lived in Galveston for three years in the mid-80s. At the end my mom told my dad she was moving back up north and he could come if he wanted. We ended up in Ohio, and now they're back in NY. My parents were (are) both pretty died-in-the-wool Yankees and Texas was not a good fit for them, Galveston especially.
Now I have a sister-in-law in Dallas and several friends in Houston and Austin. All interesting but different places to live. Texas is a very unique and special state (even though it can be hotter than Hades!). Depending upon what sort of community you're most comfortable in and what you look for in a home it may or may not be a great fit. Obviously with the economy the way it is now it would be very, very hard to turn down any good job. That said, Austin is going to be the most "northern" (more hills, trees, liberals, etc.) feeling place in the state, if that's what you're looking for. But it's still very much Texas!
Now I have a sister-in-law in Dallas and several friends in Houston and Austin. All interesting but different places to live. Texas is a very unique and special state (even though it can be hotter than Hades!). Depending upon what sort of community you're most comfortable in and what you look for in a home it may or may not be a great fit. Obviously with the economy the way it is now it would be very, very hard to turn down any good job. That said, Austin is going to be the most "northern" (more hills, trees, liberals, etc.) feeling place in the state, if that's what you're looking for. But it's still very much Texas!
While Galveston isn't my favorite beach in Texas, it's not bad on the gulf side of the island (get out of the resort areas to the state parks) and the tar is miniscule really and gone from what I've seen. It came along with boats and not from the oil well directly last year. And it's certainly not 100 miles from Houston. Or Humble.