Anonymous wrote:Then I would go to Boulder. Close to Denver. The features of the city nearby but the life in a college town
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I remember that April 22nd snow in '93! Good times. I love winter and I love Ithaca, but it might be too far removed from a big airport (we hope to travel a lot) and quality healthcare (a priority as we get older).
Thanks for pointing this out! For some reason, people on this thread seem to worry about being close to partying students and are totally oblivious to the fact that they might need cancer treatment down the road..for that you do want to be near a good big-city hospital.
Anonymous wrote:I remember that April 22nd snow in '93! Good times. I love winter and I love Ithaca, but it might be too far removed from a big airport (we hope to travel a lot) and quality healthcare (a priority as we get older).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ithaca, NY
Nice town....Very nice in the summer, but brutal winters. However, if you can handle the cold, it would be a great place to retire to.
Gorgeous winters! They plow the streets! And if you are retired, and not forced to head out to work, stay home with you food from Wegman's and get the fireplace going!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ithaca, NY
Nice town....Very nice in the summer, but brutal winters. However, if you can handle the cold, it would be a great place to retire to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oxford, Mississippi. I have a condo right off the square that I can't wait to retire to! Amazing blues music & art galleys, southern dining (city grocery, boure, big bad breakfast, snack bar) one of the nations largest indepentant book stores (square books), its the home William Faulkner I could go on and on.
The blues festivals in that area are awesome. There used to be this fire trap called Hoka, hosting many independent movies and blues events. Wonder what happened to it.
Oxford can be isolated, both travel-wise and culture-wise.
Anonymous wrote:Oxford, Mississippi. I have a condo right off the square that I can't wait to retire to! Amazing blues music & art galleys, southern dining (city grocery, boure, big bad breakfast, snack bar) one of the nations largest indepentant book stores (square books), its the home William Faulkner I could go on and on.