Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.oregonlive.com/travel/2020/05/crowds-return-to-cannon-beach-as-oregon-coast-town-begins-to-reopen.html%3foutputType=amp
“Crowds return to Cannon Beach.” Lol.
That’s not a crowd.
um, are you under the impression that crowded beaches are an amenity?
Sometimes yes. Sometimes I am in the mood for something secluded such as Corolla or Ocracoke, other times I enjoy the liveliness and fun of a crowded beach with lots of shops and a boardwalk. Luckily on the east coast we have plenty of both to choose from!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There's absolutely no comparison between DC and West Coast when it comes to weather. In many places on the west coast, you can be outdoors year-round, whereas we have months in DC when you could literally die from a heat stroke. It's kind of sad to think that being limited to going out at 6am and dusk are anyone's idea of a city with great access to outdoor activities and nature. I'll say it again - people who live here literally don't know what they are missing.
This whole thread makes me laugh.
I lived in Silicon Valley for five years. Yes, the weather is amazing year round. But I could not wait to get back to the mid Atlantic! I love having four seasons. I love the cities and energy and people and nature and beaches and bays and trees and activities and history and all of it.
I'm glad I lived in California for a few years when I was younger. I know some people love it and can't imagine living anywhere else. I hope those people continue to love it!
In the meantime, I'm sitting on my deck looking at the river, and can't imagine living anywhere else either.
I mean yeah, if you’re wealthy enough to have a view of the potomac from your house, I’m sure it’s nice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m white and don’t get why white people want to bake in the sun past age 20. It’s so uncomfortable and you have to cover up and constantly reapply sunblock. Then you still end up looking old and damaging your skin
Ever heard of hats? Tents? Umbrellas? Going back to the beach house for lunch? We don't "bake in the sun," we are under three umbrellas. Are you a time traveler from the 1980s with oil and a foil sun reflector?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There's absolutely no comparison between DC and West Coast when it comes to weather. In many places on the west coast, you can be outdoors year-round, whereas we have months in DC when you could literally die from a heat stroke. It's kind of sad to think that being limited to going out at 6am and dusk are anyone's idea of a city with great access to outdoor activities and nature. I'll say it again - people who live here literally don't know what they are missing.
This whole thread makes me laugh.
I lived in Silicon Valley for five years. Yes, the weather is amazing year round. But I could not wait to get back to the mid Atlantic! I love having four seasons. I love the cities and energy and people and nature and beaches and bays and trees and activities and history and all of it.
I'm glad I lived in California for a few years when I was younger. I know some people love it and can't imagine living anywhere else. I hope those people continue to love it!
In the meantime, I'm sitting on my deck looking at the river, and can't imagine living anywhere else either.
Completely agree. And the bleak. brown summers of SoCal can never compare to the lush verdant glory of east coast summers! I was so thrilled to move back!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There's absolutely no comparison between DC and West Coast when it comes to weather. In many places on the west coast, you can be outdoors year-round, whereas we have months in DC when you could literally die from a heat stroke. It's kind of sad to think that being limited to going out at 6am and dusk are anyone's idea of a city with great access to outdoor activities and nature. I'll say it again - people who live here literally don't know what they are missing.
This whole thread makes me laugh.
I lived in Silicon Valley for five years. Yes, the weather is amazing year round. But I could not wait to get back to the mid Atlantic! I love having four seasons. I love the cities and energy and people and nature and beaches and bays and trees and activities and history and all of it.
I'm glad I lived in California for a few years when I was younger. I know some people love it and can't imagine living anywhere else. I hope those people continue to love it!
In the meantime, I'm sitting on my deck looking at the river, and can't imagine living anywhere else either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.oregonlive.com/travel/2020/05/crowds-return-to-cannon-beach-as-oregon-coast-town-begins-to-reopen.html%3foutputType=amp
“Crowds return to Cannon Beach.” Lol.
That’s not a crowd.
um, are you under the impression that crowded beaches are an amenity?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There's absolutely no comparison between DC and West Coast when it comes to weather. In many places on the west coast, you can be outdoors year-round, whereas we have months in DC when you could literally die from a heat stroke. It's kind of sad to think that being limited to going out at 6am and dusk are anyone's idea of a city with great access to outdoor activities and nature. I'll say it again - people who live here literally don't know what they are missing.
This whole thread makes me laugh.
I lived in Silicon Valley for five years. Yes, the weather is amazing year round. But I could not wait to get back to the mid Atlantic! I love having four seasons. I love the cities and energy and people and nature and beaches and bays and trees and activities and history and all of it.
I'm glad I lived in California for a few years when I was younger. I know some people love it and can't imagine living anywhere else. I hope those people continue to love it!
In the meantime, I'm sitting on my deck looking at the river, and can't imagine living anywhere else either.
[/quote
I love the west coast, but I also love DC summers. Who is literally dying from heat stroke? What a bizarre, melodramatic perspective. I barely use the a/c in summer and love the hot weather. That's actually my main complaint about CA weather - no proper summer heat! In LA it's okay away from the beach, but the coastline is never hot enough. And SF doesn't get summer at all.
Anonymous wrote:Oregon sure has a cult of personality.
My parents live in Virginia Beach, oceanside in the north end (I know, gross according to DCUM). This is what they, their neighbors and us (when we visit).
Before 10am you can take your dog on the beach as well as surf in the water in the North End (otherwise you have to go down go 5th street to surf between 10-6). Are the waves huge, no, but there are plenty of local surfers there (my son included). People will run on the beach in the morning, super peaceful.
All other times you can paddle board, kayak or wind surf (there are tons of wind surfers, where you basically strap a harness to a parachute and have your feet strapped into a small board and just surf on the water and air). I see so many men and women wind surfers (my friend who lives down there does it almost every day, big problem is only walking back from where you started). The early morning is the best time to see dolphins.
Anyone can boogie or sand board all day long.
There are two large state parks in Virginia Beach (the one on the bay and ICC and the one that divides Virginia Beach from Corolla). There is the marine museum, ice cream, the indoor sky diving place, you can charter a boat, you can go on a dolphin tour, you can fish downtown on the pier, you can go crabbing in the bay, rent jet skis, ride your bike everywhere (its bike friendly), etc.
There are plenty of things to do, including water sports. Oregon doesn't have a "lock" on being water sports people. GMAB with that. You can even find tons of sports and other activities in one of DCUM's favorite destinations to trash, Virginia Beach.
Anonymous wrote:I’m white and don’t get why white people want to bake in the sun past age 20. It’s so uncomfortable and you have to cover up and constantly reapply sunblock. Then you still end up looking old and damaging your skin
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I spend four hours sitting under an umbrella while my kids dig in the sand, make sand castles, body surf in the waves, throw footballs and frisbees, walk down the beaches to scout crabs, shells, neat castles and sand sculptures, etc. then we pack up, go back to the house , and the kids fall asleep after two bites of dinner, and are out for the night. I stay up watching movies, sipping wine on the porch, or maybe playing cards or games with the adults.
That’s an east coast beach vacation.
You do that every day for 7 days, unless it rains then you sit inside and watch TV. Boring.
NP. What, you're the Wicked Witch of the West, who melts in water? I don't mind a rainy walk in the beach, or reading on the enclosed deck in a cozy thunderstorm.
Boring people get bored. I'm never bored, because I know how to enjoy whatever a day brings my way.
You're boring and you don't know it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There's absolutely no comparison between DC and West Coast when it comes to weather. In many places on the west coast, you can be outdoors year-round, whereas we have months in DC when you could literally die from a heat stroke. It's kind of sad to think that being limited to going out at 6am and dusk are anyone's idea of a city with great access to outdoor activities and nature. I'll say it again - people who live here literally don't know what they are missing.
This whole thread makes me laugh.
I lived in Silicon Valley for five years. Yes, the weather is amazing year round. But I could not wait to get back to the mid Atlantic! I love having four seasons. I love the cities and energy and people and nature and beaches and bays and trees and activities and history and all of it.
I'm glad I lived in California for a few years when I was younger. I know some people love it and can't imagine living anywhere else. I hope those people continue to love it!
In the meantime, I'm sitting on my deck looking at the river, and can't imagine living anywhere else either.
Anonymous wrote:
There's absolutely no comparison between DC and West Coast when it comes to weather. In many places on the west coast, you can be outdoors year-round, whereas we have months in DC when you could literally die from a heat stroke. It's kind of sad to think that being limited to going out at 6am and dusk are anyone's idea of a city with great access to outdoor activities and nature. I'll say it again - people who live here literally don't know what they are missing.