Anonymous wrote:Life long Coloradoan, from the Denver Metro area. I have also lived in VA and MA, but now back in the Boulder area. What you're looking for is not here. I'm not saying this to be rude, but trust me that you will not find yourself "chatting up the granola guy in the brew pub" or "meeting cute in the dog park." You are about 25 years too late for that kind of culture around here. You won't "ski out" your trauma, you will just gain more trauma from the challenges of ski culture in the West. Not to mention the amount money you'll need to do it well. I'm not even talking about I-70 traffic - that is a whole other trauma.
Bring money, and a lot of it, if you want to move here and have anything resembling the carefree outdoorsy life you seek with a cute man to match.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Life long Coloradoan, from the Denver Metro area. I have also lived in VA and MA, but now back in the Boulder area. What you're looking for is not here. I'm not saying this to be rude, but trust me that you will not find yourself "chatting up the granola guy in the brew pub" or "meeting cute in the dog park." You are about 25 years too late for that kind of culture around here. You won't "ski out" your trauma, you will just gain more trauma from the challenges of ski culture in the West. Not to mention the amount money you'll need to do it well. I'm not even talking about I-70 traffic - that is a whole other trauma.
Bring money, and a lot of it, if you want to move here and have anything resembling the carefree outdoorsy life you seek with a cute man to match.
Is it worth moving for the weather? We’ve been trying to find a place with low humidity and four seasons and Denver keeps showing up as the best bet.
Anonymous wrote:Life long Coloradoan, from the Denver Metro area. I have also lived in VA and MA, but now back in the Boulder area. What you're looking for is not here. I'm not saying this to be rude, but trust me that you will not find yourself "chatting up the granola guy in the brew pub" or "meeting cute in the dog park." You are about 25 years too late for that kind of culture around here. You won't "ski out" your trauma, you will just gain more trauma from the challenges of ski culture in the West. Not to mention the amount money you'll need to do it well. I'm not even talking about I-70 traffic - that is a whole other trauma.
Bring money, and a lot of it, if you want to move here and have anything resembling the carefree outdoorsy life you seek with a cute man to match.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in a Denver suburb and I love it. There is nowhere in the US I’d rather live. It has grown quite a lot but there are some great tight knit communities and I find people to generally be laid back, kind, and friendly.
That said, wherever you go- there you are. You’ll still have to work through the trauma you experienced.
Is there any way you could do something like an extended trip and get a real feel for if you like it and could see yourself living here?
Which burb (general area if you are not comfortable saying)? I don't find Denver per se appealing at all. It feels very cold and visually dull. But the closeness to mountains is appealing. Boulder is beautiful but I heard a weird culture.
Boulder is not a suburb of Denver.
OP, Littleton has great light rail into Denver, easy access to mountains, and you can definitely make a life centered on Littleton. If you’re looking at listings for Littleton, keep in mind the address boundaries are pretty big, so zoom out to understand where you’re looking (it sounds like you would like to be closer to downtown)
Meetup.com is a big way for meeting people and with the massive influx of new people, it’s easier to make friends than it used to be. Outdoor culture is big, but there are lots of quieter things to do. You don’t have to be into climbing and extreme sports. Hiking, snowshoeing, xc skiing etc. Denver also has a pretty great arts scene for a city it’s size, and all the major sports teams.
Ty, my family is in Littleton so I would have ample housing to start out with there near to downtown (walking distance). I'm a big city or small town person , not so much the burbs, so I'm hoping littleton would check the latter community wise. The times I've visited it's seemed pretty fun! I'd love a group of wise women friends and I get along well with men too ... Just not sure who I'd meet. I just like to have a laugh, and some mental stimulationnot pretentious people, but smart and nice, sure!
If you want to be on the south side, Littleton close to downtown is likely the best fit for you. If you’re flexible about which side of town you’re on, or if you are open to other parts of the Front Range, I could make some other suggestions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in a Denver suburb and I love it. There is nowhere in the US I’d rather live. It has grown quite a lot but there are some great tight knit communities and I find people to generally be laid back, kind, and friendly.
That said, wherever you go- there you are. You’ll still have to work through the trauma you experienced.
Is there any way you could do something like an extended trip and get a real feel for if you like it and could see yourself living here?
Which burb (general area if you are not comfortable saying)? I don't find Denver per se appealing at all. It feels very cold and visually dull. But the closeness to mountains is appealing. Boulder is beautiful but I heard a weird culture.
Boulder is not a suburb of Denver.
OP, Littleton has great light rail into Denver, easy access to mountains, and you can definitely make a life centered on Littleton. If you’re looking at listings for Littleton, keep in mind the address boundaries are pretty big, so zoom out to understand where you’re looking (it sounds like you would like to be closer to downtown)
Meetup.com is a big way for meeting people and with the massive influx of new people, it’s easier to make friends than it used to be. Outdoor culture is big, but there are lots of quieter things to do. You don’t have to be into climbing and extreme sports. Hiking, snowshoeing, xc skiing etc. Denver also has a pretty great arts scene for a city it’s size, and all the major sports teams.
Ty, my family is in Littleton so I would have ample housing to start out with there near to downtown (walking distance). I'm a big city or small town person , not so much the burbs, so I'm hoping littleton would check the latter community wise. The times I've visited it's seemed pretty fun! I'd love a group of wise women friends and I get along well with men too ... Just not sure who I'd meet. I just like to have a laugh, and some mental stimulationnot pretentious people, but smart and nice, sure!
Anonymous wrote:Definitely don’t move to Denver to chat up hot guys. You’ll be disappointed in our dating market of Peter pans and swingers/ENM folk.
-highlands ranch
Anonymous wrote:How old is your child? Uprooting after 12 or do is tricky, so if they are close to that age, you'll only want to move once.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cleaner air in CO = win
I'd love to agree with you, but I'm actually into air quality and DCs is surprisingly pretty good. Apart from seasonal allergens . Denver has wildfires and bad traffic , though Id stick mostly to the township, not cross cross the city daily - OP
Denver actually doesn't have great air quality--lots of red flag days (or whatever the term is) during the summer.
I don't think anyone gave any thought to transportation planning for growth in the Denver metro area. We live in Colorado Springs but are up there frequently for our kids' sports and it's fine if we go early in the morning on weekends but any other time ugh.
Littleton is nice, if DH had ended up working out of the Denver office when we moved we would have looked there or in Golden. Not a fan of Highlands Ranch, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Life long Coloradoan, from the Denver Metro area. I have also lived in VA and MA, but now back in the Boulder area. What you're looking for is not here. I'm not saying this to be rude, but trust me that you will not find yourself "chatting up the granola guy in the brew pub" or "meeting cute in the dog park." You are about 25 years too late for that kind of culture around here. You won't "ski out" your trauma, you will just gain more trauma from the challenges of ski culture in the West. Not to mention the amount money you'll need to do it well. I'm not even talking about I-70 traffic - that is a whole other trauma.
Bring money, and a lot of it, if you want to move here and have anything resembling the carefree outdoorsy life you seek with a cute man to match.
Anonymous wrote:Thought of making this move, have family in Denver. But I realized I’m just not “Coloradan”. It’s a state of mind I just don’t have. Would always feel like an outsider.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I live in a Denver suburb and I love it. There is nowhere in the US I’d rather live. It has grown quite a lot but there are some great tight knit communities and I find people to generally be laid back, kind, and friendly.
That said, wherever you go- there you are. You’ll still have to work through the trauma you experienced.
Is there any way you could do something like an extended trip and get a real feel for if you like it and could see yourself living here?
Which burb (general area if you are not comfortable saying)? I don't find Denver per se appealing at all. It feels very cold and visually dull. But the closeness to mountains is appealing. Boulder is beautiful but I heard a weird culture.
Boulder is not a suburb of Denver.
OP, Littleton has great light rail into Denver, easy access to mountains, and you can definitely make a life centered on Littleton. If you’re looking at listings for Littleton, keep in mind the address boundaries are pretty big, so zoom out to understand where you’re looking (it sounds like you would like to be closer to downtown)
Meetup.com is a big way for meeting people and with the massive influx of new people, it’s easier to make friends than it used to be. Outdoor culture is big, but there are lots of quieter things to do. You don’t have to be into climbing and extreme sports. Hiking, snowshoeing, xc skiing etc. Denver also has a pretty great arts scene for a city it’s size, and all the major sports teams.
not pretentious people, but smart and nice, sure!