Anonymous wrote:What about Boca?
Anonymous wrote:Another vote for Jacksonville area for you.
Anonymous wrote:In Florida, the rule is that the farther north you go, the further south you are. Your people are in Jacksonville, not Miami or Boca.
Anonymous wrote:Ponte Vedra
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are middle-aged - younger than retirees but no liner with kids - looking into moving to the Florida east coast year round. We are from the south and would prefer to move somewhere with there are also some southerners and not with people who only come down from the north for the winter or vacation. Any ideas?
There are a lot of upper middle class retirees from DMV in the jacksonville/ St. John’s/ noCatee/ Ponte Vedra area. Super nice there, not very liberal. Has a southern feel. Flagler and Volusia are very diverse but some areas poor and other areas wealthy. Snowbirds stick to specific neighborhoods, local/ rednecks to others - so if you talk to à realtor explain (in so many worlds) you want o avoid those two types of neighborhoods and you can find lots of options.
Anonymous wrote:Everywhere in FL has NY and NJ represented and the locals don’t like it. Southern charm no longer exists. We live in FL and are surprised at how many folks from the middle of the country are here. It’s a melting pot with all states represented. As far as politics FL is definitely purple but the Trumpers make a lot of noise. Don’t you think most states have lost their flavor due to the many reasons why people can live where they want?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are middle-aged - younger than retirees but no liner with kids - looking into moving to the Florida east coast year round. We are from the south and would prefer to move somewhere with there are also some southerners and not with people who only come down from the north for the winter or vacation. Any ideas?
There are a lot of upper middle class retirees from DMV in the jacksonville/ St. John’s/ noCatee/ Ponte Vedra area. Super nice there, not very liberal. Has a southern feel. Flagler and Volusia are very diverse but some areas poor and other areas wealthy. Snowbirds stick to specific neighborhoods, local/ rednecks to others - so if you talk to à realtor explain (in so many worlds) you want o avoid those two types of neighborhoods and you can find lots of options.
Anonymous wrote:We are middle-aged - younger than retirees but no liner with kids - looking into moving to the Florida east coast year round. We are from the south and would prefer to move somewhere with there are also some southerners and not with people who only come down from the north for the winter or vacation. Any ideas?
Anonymous wrote:We are middle-aged - younger than retirees but no liner with kids - looking into moving to the Florida east coast year round. We are from the south and would prefer to move somewhere with there are also some southerners and not with people who only come down from the north for the winter or vacation. Any ideas?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don't mind the gulf:
Cedar Key, Steinhatchee, anywhere along the big bend has a lot of former southerners
That's not the east coast, tho
Plenty of places on the Gulf coast that aren't very New York-y. Just avoid Sarasota and you'll be fine.
I've lived in Sarasota for two years, I was born and raised in the DC area. People I've met who live in my community are from NY, NJ, Canada, Sweden, Michigan, Ohio, Iowa, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Illinois, Texas, Indiana, I could go on but you get the idea.
There might be a lot of NYers in the Tampa area due to the Yankees spring training facility being there. There might be a lot right here in Sarasota but how is that affecting anyone's quality of life?
On the other hand, it is probably a good idea to deflect anyone and everyone from moving here because we are totally full at this time, check back again later.