Anonymous wrote:Between the governor, the sticky heat, and the volatile weather, what's the appeal? Enlighten me.
Anonymous wrote:I could never live in Florida.
I visited there a few years back & it was only in March yet you could cut the humidity in the air w/a knife!
I visited Disneyworld + a week after I left, it was in the news that a little boy had been killed by an alligator 🐊 at the same hotel resort I had visited.
So now I am deathly afraid of alligators and would never ever approach any body of water there.
Plus the political climate in that state is so far removed from my own state (CA.)
I could never exist in a state run by someone so stupid whose thinking is so far backward.
Anonymous wrote:Between the governor, the sticky heat, and the volatile weather, what's the appeal? Enlighten me.
Yep!Anonymous wrote:I think it’s a fun place to visit but couldn’t imagine living there. I like four seasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Between the governor, the sticky heat, and the volatile weather, what's the appeal? Enlighten me.
Within a 10 minute drive, we have beautiful beaches, great kayaking and fishing, hiking and mountain biking trails, and 25 public clay tennis courts.
We have a pool and glorious gardens in our backyard if I don’t feel like driving anywhere.
We spend huge amounts of time outside and in/on the water. Far more than when we lived in DC.
I can’t remember the last time I wore long pants or closed toe shoes.
The biggest problem: which Gulfside restaurant should we choose for fish tacos tomorrow night?
DeSantis can f*ck right off, but I enjoy this place.
I mean almost any coastal area has those same amenities, though only the wealthiest have clay tennis courts.
You can pretend you can swim year round, but from May-Oct, the heat, humidity is relentless and afternoon thunderstorms every day. The ocean in Miami is 100F! There is no outdoor relief.
There are really two Floridas — walkable to the beach and the scrub. Most of Florida is the scrub, but if you can isolate yourself from it and it’s residents, you can build a nice life. That means gated community (25 clay courts, that’s a giveaway), private school, probably having someone do your shopping and errands
PP here. Not a gated community. The tennis courts are public!
One kid in private, the other in a diverse public magnet.
July-August heat is unpleasant, but still play tennis and swim almost every night.
While I believe that one can make a good life anywhere, FL makes it easier than most places.
Public clay courts are far from the norm. Are you in Naples near Ashe? Clay courts are crazy expensive to maintain.
In general public facilities and services in Florida are terrible. That’s part why you are in private id you don’t make a magnet.
You just be part lizard to think July- August is only unpleasant heat. That just doesn’t make any sense — I grew up there and last months of school were torture.
The bugs, the snakes, the humidity, there’s a reason it was empty until AC was invented. Don’t fool people. With humidity it doesn’t really cool off at night, so your night tennis is still in the 80s with 90% humidity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Between the governor, the sticky heat, and the volatile weather, what's the appeal? Enlighten me.
Within a 10 minute drive, we have beautiful beaches, great kayaking and fishing, hiking and mountain biking trails, and 25 public clay tennis courts.
We have a pool and glorious gardens in our backyard if I don’t feel like driving anywhere.
We spend huge amounts of time outside and in/on the water. Far more than when we lived in DC.
I can’t remember the last time I wore long pants or closed toe shoes.
The biggest problem: which Gulfside restaurant should we choose for fish tacos tomorrow night?
DeSantis can f*ck right off, but I enjoy this place.
I mean almost any coastal area has those same amenities, though only the wealthiest have clay tennis courts.
You can pretend you can swim year round, but from May-Oct, the heat, humidity is relentless and afternoon thunderstorms every day. The ocean in Miami is 100F! There is no outdoor relief.
There are really two Floridas — walkable to the beach and the scrub. Most of Florida is the scrub, but if you can isolate yourself from it and it’s residents, you can build a nice life. That means gated community (25 clay courts, that’s a giveaway), private school, probably having someone do your shopping and errands
PP here. Not a gated community. The tennis courts are public!
One kid in private, the other in a diverse public magnet.
July-August heat is unpleasant, but still play tennis and swim almost every night.
While I believe that one can make a good life anywhere, FL makes it easier than most places.
Public clay courts are far from the norm. Are you in Naples near Ashe? Clay courts are crazy expensive to maintain.
In general public facilities and services in Florida are terrible. That’s part why you are in private id you don’t make a magnet.
You just be part lizard to think July- August is only unpleasant heat. That just doesn’t make any sense — I grew up there and last months of school were torture.
The bugs, the snakes, the humidity, there’s a reason it was empty until AC was invented. Don’t fool people. With humidity it doesn’t really cool off at night, so your night tennis is still in the 80s with 90% humidity.
Anonymous wrote:I know what news channel you watch. Try actually going there and enlighten yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Between the governor, the sticky heat, and the volatile weather, what's the appeal? Enlighten me.
Within a 10 minute drive, we have beautiful beaches, great kayaking and fishing, hiking and mountain biking trails, and 25 public clay tennis courts.
We have a pool and glorious gardens in our backyard if I don’t feel like driving anywhere.
We spend huge amounts of time outside and in/on the water. Far more than when we lived in DC.
I can’t remember the last time I wore long pants or closed toe shoes.
The biggest problem: which Gulfside restaurant should we choose for fish tacos tomorrow night?
DeSantis can f*ck right off, but I enjoy this place.
I mean almost any coastal area has those same amenities, though only the wealthiest have clay tennis courts.
You can pretend you can swim year round, but from May-Oct, the heat, humidity is relentless and afternoon thunderstorms every day. The ocean in Miami is 100F! There is no outdoor relief.
There are really two Floridas — walkable to the beach and the scrub. Most of Florida is the scrub, but if you can isolate yourself from it and it’s residents, you can build a nice life. That means gated community (25 clay courts, that’s a giveaway), private school, probably having someone do your shopping and errands
PP here. Not a gated community. The tennis courts are public!
One kid in private, the other in a diverse public magnet.
July-August heat is unpleasant, but still play tennis and swim almost every night.
While I believe that one can make a good life anywhere, FL makes it easier than most places.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Between the governor, the sticky heat, and the volatile weather, what's the appeal? Enlighten me.
Within a 10 minute drive, we have beautiful beaches, great kayaking and fishing, hiking and mountain biking trails, and 25 public clay tennis courts.
We have a pool and glorious gardens in our backyard if I don’t feel like driving anywhere.
We spend huge amounts of time outside and in/on the water. Far more than when we lived in DC.
I can’t remember the last time I wore long pants or closed toe shoes.
The biggest problem: which Gulfside restaurant should we choose for fish tacos tomorrow night?
DeSantis can f*ck right off, but I enjoy this place.
I mean almost any coastal area has those same amenities, though only the wealthiest have clay tennis courts.
You can pretend you can swim year round, but from May-Oct, the heat, humidity is relentless and afternoon thunderstorms every day. The ocean in Miami is 100F! There is no outdoor relief.
There are really two Floridas — walkable to the beach and the scrub. Most of Florida is the scrub, but if you can isolate yourself from it and it’s residents, you can build a nice life. That means gated community (25 clay courts, that’s a giveaway), private school, probably having someone do your shopping and errands