Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Florida is a true dump, and anyone urging anyone to move there for "green space" is out of their mind. Miles and miles of round up sprayed astroturf lawns is not "green space"
You have no idea what you're talking about. Most of the lawns in Florida are not astroturf. They are primarily St. Augustine grass or Bermuda grass. Learn something instead of spouting off about subjects you know nothing about--you sound super ignorant repeating this nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vermont - there’s enough small towns, lots of green, walkable and close enough to Montpelier or Burlington.
Vermont is green for a few months, then turns white and only walkable for bears/moose.
You forgot brown for mud season and private leach fields.
I never took green space to be literal. I think it just means outside space dedicated to nature. Parks, valleys, etc… where you can have trees vs. buildings.
Most people who say "lots of green" mean literal greenery- trees and plants and such. Why would you take it to mean anything else?
In the same way we say crunchy or granola to mean someone who enjoys natural living. That person may not actually eat granola but it’s a term used to describe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vermont - there’s enough small towns, lots of green, walkable and close enough to Montpelier or Burlington.
Vermont is green for a few months, then turns white and only walkable for bears/moose.
You forgot brown for mud season and private leach fields.
I never took green space to be literal. I think it just means outside space dedicated to nature. Parks, valleys, etc… where you can have trees vs. buildings.
Most people who say "lots of green" mean literal greenery- trees and plants and such. Why would you take it to mean anything else?
Anonymous wrote:Florida is a true dump, and anyone urging anyone to move there for "green space" is out of their mind. Miles and miles of round up sprayed astroturf lawns is not "green space"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Los Angeles
Not green (Florida isnt that green either)
Florida is very green. Don’t know that I recommend it as a place to live…but it’s very green, if by green you mean lush and lots of green grass, trees, plants. Don’t know what the pp was talking about saying florida isn’t that green?
It's green in the way of Round-Up sprayed golf courses, but that's about it. Most people in Florida live far from the woods or deep greenery
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vermont - there’s enough small towns, lots of green, walkable and close enough to Montpelier or Burlington.
Vermont is green for a few months, then turns white and only walkable for bears/moose.
You forgot brown for mud season and private leach fields.
I never took green space to be literal. I think it just means outside space dedicated to nature. Parks, valleys, etc… where you can have trees vs. buildings.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Vermont - there’s enough small towns, lots of green, walkable and close enough to Montpelier or Burlington.
Vermont is green for a few months, then turns white and only walkable for bears/moose.
You forgot brown for mud season and private leach fields.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Florida.
1st,2nd,3rd and 5th choice.
Will be moving as soon as the job here is done.
But everyone will think less of you, and that you are trashy.
Anonymous wrote:Florida.
1st,2nd,3rd and 5th choice.
Will be moving as soon as the job here is done.