Hah! I am old and tired but far from a Trump believer. In fact, I think the Trumpiest parts of America are the crapiest. I happen to love NE but recognize that parts of it do have ugly sprawling strip malls too. OP clearly didn’t go to the quaintest parts of Boston and missed the cute NE towns that many people have noted. |
| OP is depressing. I’ve never heard of such close mindedness. |
Montreal might be more of what you seek. |
Or New Orleans or old San Juan. There are parts of New England that might look a bit like rural England, I guess. But I’m guessing that’s not what you think of as Europe. |
When people say the berkshires are nice they are almost always talking about Lenox. Or maybe Amherst. Northampton is also nice, maybe great Barrington, maybe Sturbridge but those aren’t all berkshires proper. |
Not OP, but this is great! |
Seriously? I have hundreds of examples of a bigger close mindedness. OP sounds depressed though. PP you must have not been around much
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Ignore the op it is amazing |
You need to go to Cape Ann before Labor Day. After that, things change significantly, especially Rockport. Gloucester is depressing. It's an industrial fishing village (that was for a long time the port of choice for most US heroin importers) desperately trying to revitalize. Not sure why you would think to go there in the fall. I grew up there and love its grittiness, but I wouldn't tell anyone to visit there outside Memorial Day to Labor Day. |
And yet millions of people risk their lives every year to get here. Sigh, those poor people. |
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OP, I'm not quite sure what to say about your disappointment in NE-well I do agree some of it is tired looking, but there is so much natural beauty especially in fall. It doesn't look European-it looks colonial.
There is a bavarian looking city in Georgia called Helena? I saw it on tv but wasn't paying attention. Maybe that would be a place you'd enjoy. |
umm the nasty communist housing in Berlin? that sort of Europe? we relocated to Milwaukee - the Eastside is pretty European as is Wauwatosa, the public museum has these adorable recreations of the village homes that the European immigrants who settled the city came from that have original donated artifacts. I think you'd like it and the fall is gorgeous here, there's also a genuine old European church on Marquette grounds. If you really want a European vibe- hit up quebec for old times and Montreal for contemporary Europe. Yikes or drive to those brand new apartments that all look eerily the same in nova/gaitherberg. They remind me of the housing new housing estates in Surrey, some of them even look like the horrid colorful apartments in Vienna on the modern side of the Danube. |
It is, they do this huge street festival with tons of costumed actors and booths selling witches hats. It's fun. I have a friend who got married up there in October and I thought the towns north of Boston looked like something out of a picture book. |
And on the list are Old Town Alexandria, Washington DC and…. Boston! |
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I think OP missed some significant parts of Boston:
"There's history on every corner of Boston—especially Acorn Street. It's one of the most photographed places in the city, as it gives visitors a taste of old England. The brick buildings, cobblestones, and lanterns all are reminiscent of the most charming parts of Britain." https://hips.hearstapps.com/hmg-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/images/acorn-street-boston-royalty-free-image-1645118841.jpg?crop=1xw:1xh;center,top&resize=980:* Might want to go back and try again! |