Loco, all the best riding in the world couldnt get me to move to that craphole state even if you didnt live there. I cant wait til mexico takes it back.loco said:Don't come to Texas.
Loco, all the best riding in the world couldnt get me to move to that craphole state even if you didnt live there. I cant wait til mexico takes it back.loco said:Don't come to Texas.
stinkyboy said:Flag in the Summer, Phoenix in the winter.
Diversity? Pffft.LordOpie said:I've heard good things about the outdoor life of Flag and I spent a couple days there some years ago, but what about non-sports life?
How's the job market there?
How's the culture?
Seems like a small town without much diversity for food, entertainment, music. Am I wrong?
I don't want you to forget... jews don't have hornsBurlyShirley said:Diversity? Pffft.
I wasn't insulting the town, just suggesting it's tiny.greenchris said:opie your wrong.
you're making the point... you mention ONE restaurant. Again, not insulting, but I come from Miami and that's no where near as diversified in culture, music, food... as Chicago, NY, LA, etc.greenchris said:The food is amazing especially at Beaver Street Brewing Company.
Within 30 minutes of me, you get the same thing every night of the week in the various cities of and around Denver.greenchris said:Sunday nights during the summer they show kid movies projected onto a huge brick wall in the square bringing families on sleeping bags all enjoying the nice weather.
Other than the once a year aircooled VW gathering, I never knew Jerome was a vacation destination.stinkyboy said:That's why summer weekends in Flag/Sedona/Jerome, etc. are awesome.
Yup. Flag kicks a$$, but it *is* small. I lived there for 3 months and missed the mountains too much to stay.LordOpie said:<snip>
I hear Flag is awesome, but it IS small, yeah?
I think even Texans really know Texas sucks.SkaredShtles said:I can't believe there are Texans in this thread telling people not to move to Texas..........WTF??
Shush! Dang. It's actually below freezing in Colorado all year round, even in the summer.LordOpie said:In the four year I've been here, that was a rarity. It's been in the 50s for a couple weeks and nearly 60F today.
Yeah! I don't know WTF Opie is talking about..........Full Trucker said:Shush! Dang. It's actually below freezing in Colorado all year round, even in the summer.
You didn't ask for a nice place to live. You asked for a good (best) local for year round RIDING. With that said I would have to place SoCal in the top five. Even on the hottest day of the year here you can ride (take lot's of water!!!), and you can most certainly ride on the coldest day. There is riding of all types everywhere here, except for DH and we are within driving distance to lift assisted riding if that's your thing. It only rains like 10 days a year which can leave things dusty but you'll rarely cancel a ride due to too much dust. Can't say the same for rain or snow. Plus we have hot chicks, awsome mexican food, and we're not Texas. What's not to love about the RIDING.BurlyShirley said:For some reason, I just cant accept that SoCal is a nice place to live.
Full Trucker said:Shush! Dang. It's actually below freezing in Colorado all year round, even in the summer.
Skookum said:i talk to people on the trail who've moved from Colorado and California, and although they like the places they've come from, they understand the superior riding is here. i can't qualify this however since i've never lived at the other places, and it's really unfair since there are too many factors to consider when mulling over all the intangibles.
But i would think it's fair to say that you could pit the year-round riding in the area in the Pepsi Challenge with anywhere in the states, and if not win, then come fairly close in my estimation.
That's all i have to say about that....
You live in the wrong part of Virginia. I have 3 places to ride within a 20 minute drive. Drive an hour and I have more trails than I know what to do with.peter6061 said:Spending most of my life in Arizona, I'm going to have to give another nod that direction. Sure, Phoenix is hot in the summer, but the local riding is great and there are numerous places to go. There are all types of riding from easy XC to 'gnar' DH and in the summer Sedona, Prescott, and Payson are all only an hour or so away. sh*t, here in Virginia, I drive an hour each way to ride both days on the weekends just to get to a halfway decent trail. I'd move back in a heartbeat.
Besides that, you have Tucson at 1.5 hours, Flagstaff at 2.5 and Sunrise at 4, not to mention if your wife likes the beach, San Diego is only 5 hours away.
*And for road trips, you can be in Moab in under 10 hours and Colorado in a bit more.
NO DOWNSIDE. If it's too hot, ride at night or take a trip up north.
I agree with you about living in the wronf part of VA, however, other factors that make this decision easy include close proximity to 'real' mountains for skiing/snowboarding in winter and a lack of rain out west that makes riding easy throughout the year.Westy said:You live in the wrong part of Virginia. I have 3 places to ride within a 20 minute drive. Drive an hour and I have more trails than I know what to do with.
Nope. My definition of the PNW does not include ID. That's part of the Rocky Mountain region...........narlus said:oh, missed that.
does that include ID too?
Yes. NM should be in the list. But you can remove CO. CO sucks.narlus said:and what about NM? for BS's criteria, you would need the following:
mountains
moderate to hot climate (ie, no snow in those mountains, at least for the year-long or close to it riding he's talking about)
states which have these features:
WA, OR, NM, AZ, CA, UT, CO, TN, SC, NC
is that about it? i guess it depends on what elevation your mountain must be.
SkaredShtles said:Yes. NM should be in the list. But you can remove CO. CO sucks.