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Hyzerflipflop333 t1_jc4usyn wrote

NH is pretty cold. If you think WV or wherever you said in that long story is cold, NH may not be for you.

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[deleted] OP t1_jc4wz90 wrote

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FlyingLemurs76 t1_jc542sm wrote

We have cold and wind

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[deleted] OP t1_jc556wx wrote

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dogownedhoomun t1_jc5t51o wrote

Not that windy. Good lord even during a northeast storm. Your wind is the wizard of oz! Yikes!

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HumboltFog t1_jc67iee wrote

Grew up in MN, it gets chilly in NH, but I have never blinked here and had my eyelashes freeze together here. You will do fin in NH.

It’s a little backwards for the NE, look at taxes for the area you are considering, we are childfree and chose a high tax area with a good school for resale but if you homeschool I’d look for a cheaper area.

Politics here are pretty quiet, we have right wing idiots up here that like to fly flags on trucks and some of the idiots still have Trump signs up, but 95% of the NH folks I have meet since 2014 are decent.

Good luck!

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FlyingLemurs76 t1_jc55sx8 wrote

-108°F windchill and 234 mph would be our records, the rest you should check and verify with data instead anecdotal evidence from an internet stranger.

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Hyzerflipflop333 t1_jc65coe wrote

NH is cold and windy. You can probably Google to find exact temps, but if you’re trying to escape cold than this isn’t the place. We are having a blizzard today and it’s mid march. If you want land and privacy, you’ll have to move north which is even more extreme.

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Mynewadventures t1_jc6e1cn wrote

If you've never been to Wyoming in the Winter time you have no idea of what OP is saying. "Cold and windy" do not describe NH in comparison to Wyoming.

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Hyzerflipflop333 t1_jc6hbju wrote

Moving to NH to avoid cold and wind is really just going to lead to a path of disappointment lol. I don’t care where you’re from, NH isn’t know for it’s nice warm weather.

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FlyingLemurs76 t1_jc6fneh wrote

While I agree, OP also said in the same post on a different sub they don't want a blizzard every year.

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TheMobyDicks t1_jc75wcd wrote

I don't get why you're getting downvoted, but whatevs. It's nowhere near as windy here as Wyoming. And every year the winter gets more mild.

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Reddit_in_her_voice t1_jc557fk wrote

I'm not reading all that. I'm happy for you tho or sorry it happened

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FlyingLemurs76 t1_jc57mae wrote

OP is just fetishizing our quaint life, the usual

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YBMExile t1_jc69yg4 wrote

OP is asking some questions, and shared her situation. Nothing wrong with that.

OP, I love Southern NH (Monadnock Region). Gorgeous part of the state, access to things we need within a reasonable drive, good neighbors. I also like the area around Salisbury, Boscawen, Warner, Webster. GL with the search.

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FlyingLemurs76 t1_jc6g555 wrote

OP is cavalier with disregarding anything but confirming information, which I take the most issue with but candidly I would also like to tone down the influx into NH.

I would also love a significant tax on home/land purchases for anyone who hasn't been a primary resident for at least 5 years.

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YBMExile t1_jc6ko1r wrote

No, you don't want new residents and you'll look for things to pick at because of that. I mean, own your shit, man.

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FlyingLemurs76 t1_jc6lpll wrote

I like tourists, I understand the role they play in our economy, I just don't like them moving here, reducing available housing, and pricing out the locals.

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ShireSkiBum t1_jc72dac wrote

You do realize the tourists are buying up properties and renting them out as airbnbs when they don't use them right?

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FlyingLemurs76 t1_jc73ryy wrote

I do, and I'm against that. I believe in owner occupancy for STRs

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YBMExile t1_jc6m75m wrote

Yeah, we stopped being tourists when we invested our hard earned dough into a home, taxes, supporting businesses, and being good neighbors.

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FlyingLemurs76 t1_jc6mdpm wrote

I'd rather that you hadn't. Own your shit, to quote you, and understand the adverse impact you created on young people in our state.

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YBMExile t1_jc6neuo wrote

You're making a lot of assumptions.

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FlyingLemurs76 t1_jc6nly5 wrote

I disagree, the pricing out of locals is a well studied, understood, and documented phenomenon.

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YBMExile t1_jc6nyxo wrote

And new residents are a very convenient bogeyman, it feels better, and is much, much easier for you to pin everything on them.

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FlyingLemurs76 t1_jc6l81m wrote

It's both, but it gave me something to latch onto. I feel I am owning my shit.

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[deleted] OP t1_jc598f7 wrote

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FlyingLemurs76 t1_jc59tet wrote

You're welcome, I think you're just looking for external validation for a path you want to be right because of issues of your personal life leading to disregarding any comments that contrast to your idealized version of NH. How you communicate in that, combined with your comments on other postson this specific topic, led me to that statement. Good luck.

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[deleted] OP t1_jc5bcd7 wrote

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FlyingLemurs76 t1_jc5c7ul wrote

RemindMe! 24 months

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Mynewadventures t1_jc6e7ah wrote

Ugh. Your poor husband and kids. "Did you hear? Mom doesn't like "insert anything", so we're moving 2000 miles away again"

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FlyingLemurs76 t1_jc6f8f6 wrote

I set a reminder for two years. I figure it's enough time for her to execute the move, hate the move (again), and then we'll see if it's still a two parent family unit.

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[deleted] OP t1_jc743aa wrote

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Mynewadventures t1_jc77oul wrote

I was in the military. My Brother did 24 years in the military. My Sister was in the military. My Father was in the military, my Father in Law retired after 23 years in the military...

Are you saying that you moving is a result of being in the military (which would be the first mention of such) or are you simply deflecting the conversation from being about your own selfishness?

Let me guess:

You got a boyfriend in college, got him to marry you when he graduated with that sweet degree that would afford YOU that 1.1 million dollar house, had 1, then 2, then 3, then FOUR kids keeping yourself from having to go find a job, and then you home school them so that you can stay home and not have to get a job, and THEN keep making all of these people move at your whim and whimsey.

I'm sure that it's all quite rationalized in your head and you are the fierce momma bear that only has the best interest of everyone involved, but I present a different take, that absolutely may not be true, but:

Your husband knows that he can never win with you, as you hammer and hammer away until you get your way; his happiness and comfort are a far second to yours. He's resigned to the blithe and insulting "happy wife, happy life" which can also be translated as "there is no taming the shrew".

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ChuntStevens t1_jc4p9zl wrote

this is a lot but nh should be fine for whatever weird nonsense you want to get after.

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Sandi_T t1_jc521yv wrote

It's hard to make deep friendships in NH. The people are very nice, friendly, courteous. Yet they are always busy. As a person who, in adulthood, always had a couple of real, deep friendships and typically a friend group (less close) at any given time or place, I've been a fish out of water here.

I've resigned myself that I'm simply not going to have anything here but pleasant acquaintances. I've lived all over in the USA, but never find people simultaneously so pleasant and yet ultimately so distant.

Weirdly, most people I talk to about it agree... But still they aren't willing to move beyond whatever it is that causes this disconnect.

I thought it must be something weird about me, but other people feel the same way.

"Would you like to have coffee or go take an art class?"

"Yes, definitely! Here's my number!"

Call them..."How about Tuesday?" "Busy." "Wednesday?" "Busy." "Thursday?" "Busy." "Well, let me know if you get time."

Six months later they call, "Why don't you call me? I thought you wanted to go out for coffee?"

"I'd love to! How about Tuesday?" "Busy." "Wednesday?" "Busy." "Right, anyway, nice chat, see you around."

It's weird.

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JothamS t1_jc4p7di wrote

In my opinion NH is the best for “live and let live.” It’s got a pretty common sense people, everywhere has folks who are at one extreme or another and you’ll find that in NH too. Generally, the more south east you are you’ll find liberals and the more west and north you’ll find conservatives. But both groups are pretty decent to their neighbors. I have some neighbors that I’ve never met but others who are close friends. If folks want to be left alone… leave them alone. That could almost be the state motto

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ShireSkiBum t1_jc71fix wrote

def not for you and you will burn your 3rd change.....this almost feels like a troll post, lol. You have too many opinions and already leave places when the going gets tough. NH is cold. On a more serious note, you should just visit. NH is small enough where everyone's opinion is possibly localized to their specific area so anything i say may not apply to another town or area. I would honestly recommend something in the south eastern NH where the major cities of MA/ME are relatively close. If you're going to be hermits, just look up the town with the least zoning rules so you can do whatever you want with your property.

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[deleted] OP t1_jc73vum wrote

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ShireSkiBum t1_jc76h7a wrote

Sorry for your loss! I was half joking in the first part of the post because we get these posts all the time. Why do you desire a change? I think that should be answered before moving here. NH is a really a mixed bag everywhere you go so you're going to have to be ok with it not meeting all the check boxes just like anywhere else. The major difference with the mixed bag is that most places to move to are so small that there's not much you're going to be able to change it other than driving really far to find another community. Instantly when you move here, you will be viewed as the outsider pariah as you can see from the comments on this post. Are you ok with dealing with that? The community stuff or quaint town feel isn't a given and you'll have to work and deal with ppl for possibly decades before you get what you think you want in that area. As a transplant myself, i'm just telling you the writing on the wall before you get here. If you're going to be isolationists, then expect to be treated as such. Thankfully where we moved, we already knew a ton of ppl and have been heavily involved in a ton of ways but we see these dynamics play out in a lot of places.

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z-eldapin t1_jc4q6w2 wrote

Ok, NH fits most of what you are looking for.

Maybe check out the Greenville / Jaffrey area?

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dilznoofus t1_jc4v19h wrote

we relocated to NH last year after a lot of hunting around; I have previously lived in Wyoming as well. I think NH is a great place that is close to very concentrated urban areas while being astoundingly rural, if you want it to be.

I am a remote worker but I occasionally need to travel for work and while Boston is a very legit option for travel, since we are in SW NH I find hopping down 91 to Hartford (BDL) is so much easier... about 90 minutes of a straight shot on the highway, easy airport, a fair number of direct flights due to business travelers. with PreCheck and Clear I've found I can be from the parking lot to my gate in 10 minutes, which is pretty awesome.

I love that NH is a purple state with the entire gamut of opinions and yet people manage to coexist and get along, like we used to before the world went insane. So happy we moved here.

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[deleted] OP t1_jc4xcto wrote

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dilznoofus t1_jc87cpr wrote

we have two small children and we homeschool as well. NH is very supportive of this; if you end up looking into public schools, many of the schools here are fantastic, but you really have to do your homework on this as every town runs its own schools so it varies dramatically from one town to the next. for most NH towns, paying for schooling is ½ to ¾ of the town costs on a yearly basis, so it's not a small item!

We didn't want to live in the Boston-commuter-belt that is the swath from Wilton all the way over to the seacoast... it's expensive and I have zero need to go to Boston for anything, so the proximity is not worth any expense (for us.) Your mileage may vary.

We live in the Connecticut river valley and we love the proximity to mountains, Vermont, easy transit down the 91 corridor, actual local farms for food, and a sense of being very separated from things while being reasonably close. Keene is our nearest town and it has most of the things we need for shopping within a reasonably short drive.

for the more rural/distant areas bear in mind that some services will be hard to come by - like dentists, accountants, pediatricians, any kind of contractor, etc. for SW NH the Cheshire medical center in Keene is the regional hospital and Dartmouth Hitchcock up in Lebanon/Hanover is the main "big" hospital for the broader region, with lots of specialists and whatnot.

If you'd like to chat more I'm happy to discuss with you via DM or on the phone or whatever, we're super glad we moved here and NH needs more young families with kids to relocate here to help replace all the aging folks :)

(and the old people in our town LOVE seeing our kids around town - I was thinking they might be cranky retirees - nope! it's like being a in town full of surrogate grandparents. fantastic!)

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TheMobyDicks t1_jc75ezw wrote

"We are generally liberal leaning people..."

I'd suggest Vermont, particularly the Waitsfield area. It's close enough to Burlington and I-89. It's kind of a close, secluded community surrounded by mountains and the Mad River.

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powpowpowpowpowp t1_jc4w78e wrote

I’m a NOVA transplant living in NH. I like the Upper Valley a lot. There’s definitely towns more spaced out within a 30 minute radius from Lebanon and traffic isn’t as bad as further South.

It’s a couple hours drive to any major airport, but there’s a tiny airport in Leb that connects to Boston and White Plains, NY.

As with other parts of the state, housing supply can be tricky. Unlike NOVA, it’s less about high prices and demand and more a lack of turnover. If your search radius is 30 minutes from town, you’ll probably have at least some options that work.

I don’t know what WY is like, but our state does see plenty of cold weather. Winters last well into March and we usually see at least some snow into April. Finding some kind of winter activity you enjoy is a must.

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Rooster_Local t1_jc52jxk wrote

We relocated back to NH in 2018 (I grew up here). I also work remotely and have to travel, albeit less now than pre-Covid. I live in the southeast corner of the state, just 15-20 min from Manchester airport and less than an hour from Boston. So it is very convenient in that regard, but because of that, I think real estate is on the more expensive side here.

I primarily fly out of Manchester since Boston does not have much for direct routes to where I typically fly anyway and is super easy to get in and out of. But far fewer routes and direct flights to choose from, so really depends where your husband flies to.

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AcolyteOfTheHand t1_jc53vgr wrote

"Free agents" made me think you were some type of sovereign citizens, libertarians, or some other nonsense. Hopefully not the case.

Know that NH is one of the most educated states in the country and the least religious (measured by church attendance).

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dogownedhoomun t1_jc5syj6 wrote

Lived in NOVA for 4 years (great falls) loved it...miss it terribly! It's colder here (always lived here or Maine prior to Nova). Would crack up at 50 degrees novas would be running around in giant puffy winter coats. Dress warm!

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FTheOldWest t1_jc4xei6 wrote

Nh fits! How far from a major airport is he willing to be? That's an important piece for sure. Its the difference between salem nh and looking at like, Concord or bow. I sent you a dm by the way!

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[deleted] OP t1_jc503id wrote

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FTheOldWest t1_jc50jhx wrote

Oh perfect! That's like most of tbe towns in nh from Boston! I would def check out concord, bow, hooksett, dover, Durham, Lee, and many more. Really, most nh towns are going to fit

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