Anonymous wrote:Checking out parks is a good idea but IME this is very block by block and can also change quickly. It is sort of luck when houses turn over and/or happen to have kids close in age.
Anonymous wrote:Sumner and Westmoreland Hills are amazing neighborhoods.
Very young and social. On our street alone there are 7 couples all in their 30s and 40s with young kids
Anonymous wrote:Checking out parks is a good idea but IME this is very block by block and can also change quickly. It is sort of luck when houses turn over and/or happen to have kids close in age.
Anonymous wrote:I'm so glad we did this: map out and go to the playgrounds nearest your prospective houses(s) on a weekend morning and get a feel for the crowd, or at least the playground equipment! Doing this steered us away from pockets of Bethesda where there were no kids, and toward the NWDC where even on cold days, kids and parents were out and chatty. It was a better fit for what we wanted, given the HOURS you spend at a playground with small kids, even if you have a nice back yard.
Anonymous wrote:Highly recommend Somerset neighborhood in close in Chevy Chase, MD.
There is a neighborhood pool and swim team that is only for the kids in the neighborhood and it’s so nice to meet other families. There is walkable elementary school, Somerset Elementary.
Anonymous wrote:Checking out parks is a good idea but IME this is very block by block and can also change quickly. It is sort of luck when houses turn over and/or happen to have kids close in age.