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Poll: 57% of Houstonians have considered leaving

13,119 Views | 149 Replies | Last: 3 mo ago by Cinco Ranch Aggie
Charlie Murphy
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TarponChaser said:

Charlie Murphy said:

If Houston has more outdoor activities and slightly better weather it would be fine.


What activities do you want that Houston doesn't have?


Been touched on but outdoor activities in Houston are forced at best if you are not a golfer. Proximity to salt water is great but if you aren't doing either of those Houston has little to offer in terms of spending enjoyable time outdoors.

Welcome to the China Club

"Here's the pitch...POPPED it up! Oh man, that wouldn't be a home run in a phone booth."
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Ragoo
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AG
Charlie Murphy said:

TarponChaser said:

Charlie Murphy said:

If Houston has more outdoor activities and slightly better weather it would be fine.


What activities do you want that Houston doesn't have?


Been touched on but outdoor activities in Houston are forced at best if you are not a golfer. Proximity to salt water is great but if you aren't doing either of those Houston has little to offer in terms of spending enjoyable time outdoors.


also, tarpon complete shot holes in his own argument in a thread on the outdoor board about kayaking. He listed a dozen waterways in and around the hill country. Houston has a few brown, trashy lakes and rivers.

I am sure the majority of people aiming to leave only came to Houston for work and don't have family roots or ties to the area. Much like myself.
jja79
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Not from Houston but was there from 1995 to early 2023. Great place to be in business or any of a plethora of careers. Being a native of the desert I never liked the rain, wobbling pine trees and the humidity. I moved back to the desert and while 115 degrees is real I can be floating the river in less than half an hour, on a mountain lake in <45 minutes within a hour and a half be at 5,000+ feet elevation and much cooler. Snow boarding is <4 hours away and the golf beats anything Houston has to offer.

Glad I found a career in Houston but wasn't unhappy leaving.
TheMasterplan
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I moved here for economic opportunity and many that are native to Houston overrate it and don't realize it is an economic town. Or they complain too much about it because they went to London once and want Houston to be like that. Ok - figure out a plan to move there. Houston isn't London and we shouldn't spend capital to make it like that.

The food is good but I haven't really been blown away by it by any means. I had some thai food last night and it wasn't as good as where I used to live closer to SE Asia. And it was more expensive and it wasn't what I would call high end. Still very close but not exactly.

The golf is good here though - I like that. I don't have a bad attitude about Houston though that many others have.
TarponChaser
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Ragoo said:

Charlie Murphy said:

TarponChaser said:

Charlie Murphy said:

If Houston has more outdoor activities and slightly better weather it would be fine.


What activities do you want that Houston doesn't have?


Been touched on but outdoor activities in Houston are forced at best if you are not a golfer. Proximity to salt water is great but if you aren't doing either of those Houston has little to offer in terms of spending enjoyable time outdoors.


also, tarpon complete shot holes in his own argument in a thread on the outdoor board about kayaking. He listed a dozen waterways in and around the hill country. Houston has a few brown, trashy lakes and rivers.

I am sure the majority of people aiming to leave only came to Houston for work and don't have family roots or ties to the area. Much like myself.


I did nothing of the sort. OP in that thread said he lives in SA and wants recs for close places to paddle.

Believe it or not the Houston area has a number of places very close for good paddling day trips. And there are a number of waterways that get really clear due to having sand bottoms. It's not the clear Hill Country color from the limestone-filtered water but still clear. Village Creek, Spring Creek, Luces Bayou and a number of the creeks/rivers that feed into Lake Houston are really nice paddles. Lake Raven in Huntsville State Park is an overlooked gem. Conroe around Cagle is great too. The Colorado around Columbus is excellent. And both Livingston & Rayburn are fantastic.

This doesn't even touch on the saltwater places.
BSD
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Ragoo said:


I am sure the majority of people aiming to leave only came to Houston for work and don't have family roots or ties to the area. Much like myself.


I came to Houston for work about 20 years ago. I don't have family roots to the area at all. But the people here are great, and the friends that I've had for my duration of my time here are my family now. I'll be leaving someday (as I alluded to in an earlier post about just not wanting to be in a big city), but leaving this adopted family/city will absolutely be the hardest aspect of the transition.
TX04Aggie
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Similar boat here. Have great community and what I call "urban family" here, but look forward to enjoying the fruits of my labor elsewhere someday.
Pahdz
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You're not getting Braums unless you're within 300 miles of their Newcastle, OK dairy.
Pahdz
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Grew up in Katy but left at age 25 in 2005. Spent a couple years in Phoenix and Dallas before 8 in OKC and now 7 in Minnesota.

Outside of the politics Minnesota is awesome. Especially if you love the outdoors.

Yes, winter is cold and long, but I'd argue that folks up here are just as active when the lakes are frozen, the ground has a foot blanket of snow, and temps are below freezing for weeks. Skiing, ice fishing, snowmobiling, pond hockey, it's really something.

A clear sunny calm day with temps in the 10-30 range are amazing in the winter. There's no such thing as bad weather just bad gear.
swimmerbabe11
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htxag09 said:

94chem said:

TarponChaser said:

94chem said:

TarponChaser said:

Charlie Murphy said:

If Houston has more outdoor activities and slightly better weather it would be fine.


What activities do you want that Houston doesn't have?


For me, running trails and hiking 14ers in places like Cloudcroft, Taos, or Leadville. Doing things outdoors in the summer. At least I live on the good looking side of Houston, but that blows chunks when the trees attack us every few years.

Can't imagine how butt ugly it would be in Katy or Sugar Land.

But you can't do that in 90% of the rest of the country either. And you can do stuff outside in the summer here. I do it all the time.


Yeah, but I'm posting right now from a kayak in Michigan. Now way I'm doing that right now in Houston. And it would be nice to have a night time temperature below 80. And a river that you can actually go in. And Braums. Why can't Braums come to Houston. Gosh, I know I'll catch heck for this, but Whataburger sucks.

And I was just talking to a couple guys from Michigan and their parents are planning to move south because they can't handle the winters anymore. Or at least they don't want to.


Snowbirds are super common. I'd love to be in Kayak on a lake in Michigan right now, but I'd rather swelter in the sun than deal with lake effect snow. Big fff that noise.
Jock 07
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Born & raised in JV and I've lived across the country outside of TX since graduating A&M in 07. I enjoy coming back to town to see family and I do really miss the gulf coast fishing and the food especially BBQ, Mexican and gulf coast seafood. I will say of all the places I've lived outside of TX, CO (where I'm at currently) is really the only place I could see setting up roots once I have the option of staying in one place long term. Maybe MT.
I will say as I get back to the tine on avg ~1/yr, it has changed dramatically from what Houston was during my youth.

ETA: unless I'm in/near the mountains I have 0 use for snow and cold and would trade ****ty snowy/cold winters for swampass Houston summers any day.
Texaggie7nine
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If someone prefers smaller town life over giant metro, I won't argue. Obviously, Houston isn't for you. For me though, I wany lots of pro sports, great diverse food options, close to the sea for good seafood and easy trips to the beach, great museum and frequent big exhibits, tons of entertainment, especially lots of concert options amd so much more that goes with giant metro cities.

So, if you are looking at Houston vs other big metro cities, I will argue all day that Houston is a top 3 option. The only other cities I would consider would be Miami and Nashville.
7nine
Adelicia Hayes
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it is hard living here sometimes, but I could never leave
Jack Cheese
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Came to Houston for a job 18 years ago. Our whole family is in Fort Worth area, now our kids are starting to settle there. It's a matter of time and finances for us, and we'd already be there if we could.

Having said that, Houston is a great place with friendly people (like FW) and we'll always have fond memories of being here.
swimmerbabe11
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I consider leaving all the time..but I love Houston. Thinking about going to other cities doesn't mean anything bad about Houston, it just means there are other places in the world.


That being said, Fort Worth is at the top of the list of cities I would move to in a heartbeat if it made sense for our family to do so.
Biz Ag
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Counting down to retirement within the next two years. Wife is on board with retiring in College Station, so if we find the right place it will be sooner than that.
TarponChaser
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Biz Ag said:

Counting down to retirement within the next two years. Wife is on board with retiring in College Station, so if we find the right place it will be sooner than that.


I grew up in Bryan. Not a chance in hell would I retire to BCS.
AgCPA95
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Biz Ag said:

Counting down to retirement within the next two years. Wife is on board with retiring in College Station, so if we find the right place it will be sooner than that.


Houston native looking to do the same. Going to likely buy a townhome or something small soon to spend more time in town around football and other sporting events. Then may just stay with that or upsize a little down the line.
Milwaukees Best Light
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I love this city. F the haters. Nothing more pathetic that someone who thinks they know their way to happiness but doesn't have the stones to do it. If you think moving away will make you happy, ****in do it. Don't be a *****. You only get one shot, make it count. There are no checkpoints headed out of town. Do it. And take some California people with you. And yankees too.
98Ag99Grad
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Change your name to Saint Arnold if you love this place so much. Poser
TarponChaser
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98Ag99Grad said:

Change your name to Saint Arnold if you love this place so much. Poser


While I agree with MBL's post this retort was well played.
Al Bula
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Milwaukees Best Light said:

I love this city. F the haters. Nothing more pathetic that someone who thinks they know their way to happiness but doesn't have the stones to do it. If you think moving away will make you happy, ****in do it. Don't be a *****. You only get one shot, make it count. There are no checkpoints headed out of town. Do it. And take some California people with you. And yankees too.
this is a solid Sunday day drinking drunk post. The most impressive part is no edits.
Mostly Foggy Recollection
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Milwaukees Best Light said:

I love this city. F the haters. Nothing more pathetic that someone who thinks they know their way to happiness but doesn't have the stones to do it. If you think moving away will make you happy, ****in do it. Don't be a *****. You only get one shot, make it count. There are no checkpoints headed out of town. Do it. And take some California people with you. And yankees too.


Respect this post too. I hated 3/4 of what Houston had to offer (minus economy and food) and left for rural Texas, but I love a mother ****er who will back what he likes… and I agree with ejecting the foreign influence.
Ryan the Temp
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Milwaukees Best Light said:

I love this city. F the haters. Nothing more pathetic that someone who thinks they know their way to happiness but doesn't have the stones to do it. If you think moving away will make you happy, ****in do it. Don't be a *****. You only get one shot, make it count. There are no checkpoints headed out of town. Do it. And take some California people with you. And yankees too.
All the hate for people from California. I was born there, but I've lived in Houston longer than I ever lived in California.
HouAg12
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Denver
David_Puddy
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The thought of leaving has crossed my mind more and more lately as well. Going on 22 years here now. If my business here wasn't starting to take off, I'd seriously be considering a move towards the end of the year. Most of my family is in Wimberley and that would probably be my first option. My uncle has a 1k acre ranch on the Blanco that I would love to be a few minute drive to instead of 3 hours. If I could find enough business towards the hill country area that would afford me a comfortable living, I would definitely move.
AJ02
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I grew up in San Antonio. Lived there for 18 years before I left for A&M. I never want to go back and take no offense to people who dog on SA. I don't like it.

I always thought I was a big city girl. I've lived in every major metro area in Texas...San Antonio, Houston, DFW, Austin. And a couple of smaller towns in between. Out of all of them, I'd pick Fort Worth. But alas, job and family commitments keep me in Houston. Otherwise I'd live anywhere that there's less traffic. I hate that it takes me 20 minutes to get to the HEB 5 miles from my house. The older I get, the less I like other people.
El Gallo Blanco
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Ag_07 said:

You realize we've had that stuff since the beginning of time.

Those aren't things that have sprung up recently that you all of a sudden can't deal with. You knew what you were getting into.

That's what strikes me about this whole conversation. The things most are bltching about have always been here.
Someone was asking what would make this nasty swampy unbearably hot city more tolerable (in terms of outdoor activities). When my longhorn wife was finishing school, that's what made Austin so much more livable in the brutal hot summers to us. It actually felt nice to be out in the scorching heat when you have 68-70 degree springfed water that is swimable and a cooler of cold beers. Beaches more in line with Eastern Alabama or Florida (or hell just South Padre) would make this a more tolerable place to live.

I was born here and my whole family is here so we continue to anchor down. Houston sucked much less when it was much less crowded gorwing up. Also, as a kid we had season passes to Astroworld/Waterworld, and the heat isn't such a beatdown when you are younger. As an adult, golf is pretty much the only fun outdoor activity I can think of...and this time of year, I pretty much only start after 4pm.
EclipseAg
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It's common for people nearing retirement to suddenly recognize the attractiveness of smaller, slower-paced communities -- places they would never have considered in their 20s or 30s.

You move to the big city to make money and when you're done, you find someplace that is a little easier to handle on a daily basis.
MAROON
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Been here pretty much my entire life except four years in BCS and four years in Corpus (first job). Love this city but acknowledge it has its warts. Still, it has a great economy, great spirit, great food, great medical facilities, etc etc. etc. I'm lucky enough to live in an inner loop enclave with great police protection and public services. I'm within very easy travel to downtown/galleria areas, medical center, astros games, Texans games, and most of the great restaurants and concert venues (except the South Dallas venue called The Woodlands Pavillion).

You can play golf 365 days a year here as well as just about any outdoor activity - granted you will have rain outs and some days you better get it done before Noon or after 6:00.

The other thing that is great about Houston i its very open to outsiders. You are not judged by where you went to high school or who your daddy or granddaddy was. You are judged by what you have accomplished. Now of course there are some circles where what granddaddy did might be still important (looking at some of the old guard at Houston Country Club), but it's not as prevalent as other towns.
El Gallo Blanco
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TarponChaser said:

Biz Ag said:

Counting down to retirement within the next two years. Wife is on board with retiring in College Station, so if we find the right place it will be sooner than that.


I grew up in Bryan. Not a chance in hell would I retire to BCS.
I definitely would, having a family...if single, no way. They have great golf communities like pebble Creek, slightly better weather, and the food scene has really changed for the better. Home prices have shot up as many WFH'ers and retirees have relocated there, but pretty much everything, from housing, to country club dues to daycare dues, is cheaper.

I get it though...if I grew up there, I may have a much diff opinion. I think it's a pretty cool town to raise kids in now though.
schmellba99
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Pahdz said:

Grew up in Katy but left at age 25 in 2005. Spent a couple years in Phoenix and Dallas before 8 in OKC and now 7 in Minnesota.

Outside of the politics Minnesota is awesome. Especially if you love the outdoors.

Yes, winter is cold and long, but I'd argue that folks up here are just as active when the lakes are frozen, the ground has a foot blanket of snow, and temps are below freezing for weeks. Skiing, ice fishing, snowmobiling, pond hockey, it's really something.

A clear sunny calm day with temps in the 10-30 range are amazing in the winter. There's no such thing as bad weather just bad gear.
I worked with about a half dozen folks from Minnesota over the years. Every single one of them moved south because of winters and how bad they sucked.

A lot of industries up there shut down during the winter months because you can't get work done when it's -20 with 50% humidity, snow and wind.
schmellba99
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HouAg12 said:

Denver
Denver is an overrated shthole

Traffic is, at best, equivalent to Houston. But probably worse. Weather sucks - it is a desert environment. Politics suck. Homeless problem blows Houstons out of the water. Winters are cold and dry and snow is not pretty after 2 days. Everybody there hates you no matter what.
Milwaukees Best Light
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schmellba99 said:

HouAg12 said:

Denver
Denver is an overrated shthole

Traffic is, at best, equivalent to Houston. But probably worse. Weather sucks - it is a desert environment. Politics suck. Homeless problem blows Houstons out of the water. Winters are cold and dry and snow is not pretty after 2 days. Everybody there hates you no matter what.

62whatever is going to lose his flipping mind reading this. Denver is his magic happy place. Just ask him. You probably don't even have to ask, just wait a minute or two and he will tell you.
Pahdz
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Correct, you know what industry I'm in and basically once deer season hits and asphalt plants close the season is over.

For most of the field crews, they take the seasonal layoffs, collect unemployment and either head south for a bit or spend all winter on a snowmobile or ice fishing.

They work their tail off during summer though. The speed and efficiency of site construction up here blows the south out of the water and they're digging twice as deep.
 
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