Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Boston is on average 6 degrees cooler than DC every month of the year. I don't consider that to be "much colder." The average high in July in DC is 87...in Boston it is 82. And having lived in both places it doesn't feel "nuts".
Not PP but I agree with them. Lived in Boston for six years as an adult. Winter starts in Boston in October and ends in April. One January in snowed pretty much every day and the city is windy in winter. When we lived in Boston, July was the only month we needed ac. The cooler weather has some advantages but it is way different than DC. To pretend otherwise is just silly.
+1 what sucks about winter in Boston is that it is unrelenting for months. In DC there will be days in Jan. in the 50s, and Spring arrives in March-- that's just not true in Boston. (Leaving aside that in downtown Boston the wind off the water makes everything feel colder).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Boston is on average 6 degrees cooler than DC every month of the year. I don't consider that to be "much colder." The average high in July in DC is 87...in Boston it is 82. And having lived in both places it doesn't feel "nuts".
Not PP but I agree with them. Lived in Boston for six years as an adult. Winter starts in Boston in October and ends in April. One January in snowed pretty much every day and the city is windy in winter. When we lived in Boston, July was the only month we needed ac. The cooler weather has some advantages but it is way different than DC. To pretend otherwise is just silly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Again though- the weather seriously holds me back
Funny - the weather *here* held me back from moving here (although eventually I did). Summers are brutal.
I would take harsh winters and glorious summers (with easy access to ocean and lake beaches) over harsh summers and mild winters here.
Anonymous wrote:Boston is on average 6 degrees cooler than DC every month of the year. I don't consider that to be "much colder." The average high in July in DC is 87...in Boston it is 82. And having lived in both places it doesn't feel "nuts".
Anonymous wrote:Arlington has good schools, red line access, Arlington center, cheaper than Brookline. Nice vibe. Somerville is funkier, has Tufts, Davis Sq. Commute not as great to BU but I don't know that area so well. Somerville schools probably worse than UP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about Newton?
Lucky-you...we'd go to Boston IN A HEARTBEAT!
NP here. This thread is interesting. I'm trying to make myself have the "want" to move to the Boston area to be close to family now that I have kids growing up. I've never lived there though! My sibling relocated to that area so I have visited quite a bit but don't know if I could handle cold winters and cold oceans at the beach! But I do like that there seems to be decent options in housing, not amazing bang for the buck, but pretty comparable. I like it here, but I'm not married to the place- the pull of family is getting stronger as I get older too.
Having lived both places, Boston and its western suburbs are definitely pricier than DC.
+1
For good reason.
Really? Interesting. I am the quoted PP. I wonder if the areas you are comparing are both above my market anyway though. It wouldn't really matter if a 1 million house here would go for 1.5 in comparable burbs in Boston, since they aren't what I would look at. Does that make any sense? I wonder if it shifts at all by stata of homes?
We would be looking in the 500-600 K range. I have friends from college who hail from Weston (sp?) and the surrounding burbs and I know that is ridiculous as far as prices go, but I wonder what apples to apples would look like for us.
Again though- the weather seriously holds me back
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about Salem? Now, the schools are pretty rotten but if you're open to private, you can do that. It's a cute downtown right on the water and the commuter train is doable for both parents going into Boston to work. Housing is pretty decent for the price.
Salem is 16 miles away from Boston. Equivalent to Reston, VA vis-a-vis DC. Not what OP is looking for.