+1 Oct - early March are my happy months. |
|
I absolutely cant stand Winter, and the cold.. I keep shivering all the time outdoors no matter how many layers I have on.
But the minute I step out in the 95 degree heat I cannot stand it even a second. I will take Winter over Summer. |
The nice thing about Winter is no matter how cold it is, you can always warm up. Summer, it’s so much harder to cool down. It’s basically an endless cycle of unbearable heat and absolutely freezing air conditioning. There is no in between/comfortable temperature and I hate that. |
Sometimes the only way for me to be warm is on the couch or bed with a thick blanket. That’s not practical for life. Much prefer summer! |
When you walk into any indoor space in winter, it’s not “hot” it’s just normal. whereas you walk into any indoor location in summer and it’s frigid. |
Shhh - the secret place is WNC. Also possibly southwest VA or east TN. Going north doesn't help - NYC is brutal in the summer. The other advantage to WNC (at least south of the Asheville area) is less snow and ice. There is some, but usually better than the same system hitting DC or Boston. Yes, WNC had a bad hurricane 2 years ago, but I lived through dozens of hurricanes in the worst hot weather state in the country (FL). And all the bugs, dreadful humidity and sweltering conditions - just to get to the office or grocery store. In WNC there is not a lot of bugs, summer temps are 10-20 degrees below everywhere from Miami to NYC and little humidity. And it's gorgeous. It sometimes gets over 90, but it's not the same 90 you experience in Charleston or Richmond or Boston. I loved my years in VA before settling in FL to raise kids. But retirement in WNC is a gift I never realized would be so sweet. |
Like Asheville? Blpwing Rock? |
Except WNC is the middle of nowhere and you should be concerned if you are retirement age because you will have to travel a good distance for decent medical care. So tradeoffs. Similar to how I feel about New Hampshire-also has really nice cool summers, even gets chilly! But the tradeoffs are too great. |
Indoor spaces in the winter are often still quite cold. I have to use space heaters at home and at work. And then the dry air makes my skin itchy prone to cracks. It also dries out my sinuses and makes my throat itch. |
Blowing rock is going to have a harsher winter but a beautiful summer. Asheville is fine for vacations, but I would not want to live there and a lot of locals have the same feeling. Unless my retirement home was $2M-$3M+ and I could stay away from the downtown riff-raff. Too much to get into here. I hate going to AVL for shopping and dining and avoid it. The ideal cities to me that have a beautiful summer and a not-as-difficult winter are Hendersonville, Flat Rock and Brevard. Hendersonville/FR have better hospitals (Advent & Pardee). Brevard (and Asheville) are stuck with the dreaded Mission system. If you have extra $$, there is Toxaway, Cashiers and Highlands, but many aren't aware of how isolated they are from shopping and breweries/wineries and outdoor rec. And they all are stuck in the Mission hospital system if there is an emergency. Otherwise, everyone just drives to Hendersonville for serious medical care. Many retirees start out in Toxaway/Cashiers/Highlands then realize it's too far out, and they then move to Hendersonville/Brevard/FR. Same with a large development 20-30 minutes outside of Brevard called Connestee - it's just too far from a downtown and regular shopping. If one is on more of a budget or doesn't mind living off to themselves, in an area with no quaint downtown, there is Fletcher, Mills River, Arden, Saluda NC. If you are on a strict budget but want WNC adjacent, look to upstate SC near I26 which is the foothills of WNC. Close enough to visit WNC for waterfalls, hiking, biking, etc, but not quite as cool summers yet very nominal winters (but also flatter). Waynesville and Franklin have quaint downtowns. All the cities like Banner Elk, Boone, Blowing Rock, Burnsville, Black Mountain, Maggie Valley are beautiful. But when a winter system comes through, they are going to get hit harder and longer. It's more about elevation than north/south. If you plan to ski, these cities might be good for retirement and you just hunker down for a week if snow and ice hits. Another thing to consider is the nearest airport, if you will be traveling or hosting visitors. AVL is probably closer to Hendersonville than Asheville, so it's in a good location. Another note about Hendersonville, while it does have a quaint downtown, it's very large and sprawling so it's not the same cohesive small town feel as Brevard, Flat Rock, Waynesville or Black Mountain. Lots of apple orchards and wineries, and there is more crime, although not on the scale of DC, Myrtle Beach or Orlando. The other NC cities I've mentioned have very, very little crime, other than individual drug use and domestic violence. We could leave our doors unlocked 24/7 and the chances of property crime is close to nil. Mountain folk respect private property and know many (most?) homeowners have a shotgun to deal with pesky wildlife. It's been a mental reset to go from having my and my family's personal safety always simmering on the back burner. I no longer am on "alert" when out and about, which I now realize I always was when going to most areas of Central FL. Our WNC local evening news feature the local town festival or a nearby rodeo. When I visit family in larger cities, it's shocking that their local news is 20 minutes of murder, rape, murder, assault, violence. Oh and here's a local community event. I just got back from visiting Ft. Lauderdale and was floored by the oppressive heat and humidity in early May. So glad to get back to WNC and it's cooler temps, lower humidity and just beautiful scenery. So soothing for the soul. We've considered moving to VA but it would have to be the Shenandoah region. I haven't lived there since I was in school, so I can't compare all the pros and cons vs WNC. |
|
For emergency hospital care, Advent and Pardee are respected in WNC. For a serious, ongoing condition, Charlotte is 2 hours away with top medical centers.
The consideration in WNC smaller towns is where you would go if it's a 911 situation. Most of us want to avoid going to Mission (except their heart center), so that factors into which town we choose. |
And if you walk for 2 minutes you can warm up -- PP point is when it's HOT you really just have to suffer or get blasted by AC |
The heat doesn’t make me suffer. It feels good. I love walking out of the (too cold) AC and into summer! |
hmm then it’s weird you are on this thread since it doesn’t apply to you. |