Ciboag96 said:
I like the plethora of fusion food trucks. I'm still searching Vegan / Appalachian fusion. Strangely absent.
Ciboag96 said:
I like the plethora of fusion food trucks. I'm still searching Vegan / Appalachian fusion. Strangely absent.
BaileyAg said:
The food here is fantastic.
(San Antonio still does Tex Mex better).
Absolutely not. Its only until recently its become somewhat better.BaileyAg said:
The food here is fantastic.
(San Antonio still does Tex Mex better).
So you've never actually lived in El Paso then.William Foster said:We are only here because family is the most important thing to us. If that wasn't tying us down, no way in hell we would still be here. I love them enough to live the rest of my life in this increasingly sh*tty city.Larry Hagman said:
I love Houston lived most of my life here but there really isn't any other reason to be here except for the economics/jobs and relatively low cost of living
But if that wasn't a factor...I'd rather live in a tiny box of a house in San Diego than in a mansion here. Hell, I'd rather live in El Paso or Tucson, AZ than Houston. I chuckle when people on here tell transplants "Try El Paso, Houston is full". That's not bad advice actually.
Maybe northeast of town this is true. But for the most part, we are Beaumont formation here - which is black gumbo clays that do exactly what you describe above after a rain.Noname124398 said:
Coming from Dallas, the thing i like most about the Houston area is the access to hunting/fishing/outdoor activities.
Lots of public land between the WMAs/NWRs on the coast and the Sam Houston NF to the north. Access to saltwater for fishing and duck hunting to the south (could use a few more freshwater lakes though, that's Dallas' only advantage). Arrowheads in just about any stream within an hour radius.
Geographical diversity - Coastal prairie to the west which is great for duck and goose hunting, Pineywoods to the east for deer, squirrels, wood ducks.
Decent hiking opportunities and good soil that wont cake your feet in a pound of mud post-rain like Dallas' black gumbo mud.
Neat biodiversity - all sorts of snakes, gators, and other critters that you dont get to see everywhere else. Plants and mushrooms that are plentiful due to the tropical climate. Petrified wood and other cool rocks if youre into that sorta thing (Im really good at finding stuff to do outside lol)
Houston is THAT bad to me. Those are not ideal destinations by any means. Just more tolderable places to live in my honest opinion.schmellba99 said:So you've never actually lived in El Paso then.William Foster said:We are only here because family is the most important thing to us. If that wasn't tying us down, no way in hell we would still be here. I love them enough to live the rest of my life in this increasingly sh*tty city.Larry Hagman said:
I love Houston lived most of my life here but there really isn't any other reason to be here except for the economics/jobs and relatively low cost of living
But if that wasn't a factor...I'd rather live in a tiny box of a house in San Diego than in a mansion here. Hell, I'd rather live in El Paso or Tucson, AZ than Houston. I chuckle when people on here tell transplants "Try El Paso, Houston is full". That's not bad advice actually.
And Tucson isn't some hidden gem either.
Again...you have obviously never spent time in El Paso. Houston is a literal heaven compared to EP, and it isn't even close.William Foster said:Houston is THAT bad to me. Those are not ideal destinations by any means. Just more tolderable places to live in my honest opinion.schmellba99 said:So you've never actually lived in El Paso then.William Foster said:We are only here because family is the most important thing to us. If that wasn't tying us down, no way in hell we would still be here. I love them enough to live the rest of my life in this increasingly sh*tty city.Larry Hagman said:
I love Houston lived most of my life here but there really isn't any other reason to be here except for the economics/jobs and relatively low cost of living
But if that wasn't a factor...I'd rather live in a tiny box of a house in San Diego than in a mansion here. Hell, I'd rather live in El Paso or Tucson, AZ than Houston. I chuckle when people on here tell transplants "Try El Paso, Houston is full". That's not bad advice actually.
And Tucson isn't some hidden gem either.
Agree. And healthcareTXAG 05 said:
Houston has great people, great jobs, great food, entertainment, culture, everything. If you can't find lots to love here, that's on you.
AgLA06 said:Agree. And healthcareTXAG 05 said:
Houston has great people, great jobs, great food, entertainment, culture, everything. If you can't find lots to love here, that's on you.
It does not have topography or pretty views.
It does have crime and trash / homeless.
I haven't found a place yet that only has the plusses.
William Foster said:We are only here because family is the most important thing to us. If that wasn't tying us down, no way in hell we would still be here. I love them enough to live the rest of my life in this increasingly sh*tty city.Larry Hagman said:
I love Houston lived most of my life here but there really isn't any other reason to be here except for the economics/jobs and relatively low cost of living
But if that wasn't a factor...I'd rather live in a tiny box of a house in San Diego than in a mansion here. Hell, I'd rather live in El Paso or Tucson, AZ than Houston. I chuckle when people on here tell transplants "Try El Paso, Houston is full". That's not bad advice actually.
I agree but tell that to my co-workers and clients.TXAG 05 said:
Houston has great people, great jobs, great food, entertainment, culture, everything. If you can't find lots to love here, that's on you.
Coeur d'alene, Idaho and the surrounding area. Best place in the country to live according to many lists.maroon barchetta said:AgLA06 said:Agree. And healthcareTXAG 05 said:
Houston has great people, great jobs, great food, entertainment, culture, everything. If you can't find lots to love here, that's on you.
It does not have topography or pretty views.
It does have crime and trash / homeless.
I haven't found a place yet that only has the plusses.
I've heard good things about Finland, Norway, Denmark, Sweden, and Idaho.
Coeur d'Alene, Idaho and the surrounding area such as Hayden Lake.AgLA06 said:Agree. And healthcareTXAG 05 said:
Houston has great people, great jobs, great food, entertainment, culture, everything. If you can't find lots to love here, that's on you.
It does not have topography or pretty views.
It does have crime and trash / homeless.
I haven't found a place yet that only has the plusses.
Hopefully your child is doing better. I will keep him or her in my prayers.EclipseAg said:Yep.TheWoodlandsTxAg said:
I can guarantee that if you can't find what you need in the suburbs and exurbs, go into the medical center and you will probably find the foremost expert on your medical issue in the whole entire world.
Years ago, one of my kids needed specialized surgery. We get referred to a doctor at Texas Children's.
Find out later he is world-renowned. His patients came from all over the world for treatment.
Today, many of the suburban hospitals affiliated with Memorial Hermann and Houston Methodist are performing procedures that would have been unheard of outside of an academic setting a decade or so ago. Highly specialized cardiac/neurological surgeries, etc.
Houston Methodist, for example, has four Level III NICUs outside of the Texas Medical Center.
TheWoodlandsTxAg said:Coeur d'Alene, Idaho and the surrounding area such as Hayden Lake.AgLA06 said:Agree. And healthcareTXAG 05 said:
Houston has great people, great jobs, great food, entertainment, culture, everything. If you can't find lots to love here, that's on you.
It does not have topography or pretty views.
It does have crime and trash / homeless.
I haven't found a place yet that only has the plusses.
TheWoodlandsTxAg said:Coeur d'Alene, Idaho and the surrounding area such as Hayden Lake.AgLA06 said:Agree. And healthcareTXAG 05 said:
Houston has great people, great jobs, great food, entertainment, culture, everything. If you can't find lots to love here, that's on you.
It does not have topography or pretty views.
It does have crime and trash / homeless.
I haven't found a place yet that only has the plusses.
Thank you ... this was many years ago. The surgery was successful and she is a healthy adult now!TheWoodlandsTxAg said:Hopefully your child is doing better. I will keep him or her in my prayers.EclipseAg said:Yep.TheWoodlandsTxAg said:
I can guarantee that if you can't find what you need in the suburbs and exurbs, go into the medical center and you will probably find the foremost expert on your medical issue in the whole entire world.
Years ago, one of my kids needed specialized surgery. We get referred to a doctor at Texas Children's.
Find out later he is world-renowned. His patients came from all over the world for treatment.
Today, many of the suburban hospitals affiliated with Memorial Hermann and Houston Methodist are performing procedures that would have been unheard of outside of an academic setting a decade or so ago. Highly specialized cardiac/neurological surgeries, etc.
Houston Methodist, for example, has four Level III NICUs outside of the Texas Medical Center.
The suburban hospitals here are amazing. Methodist and Memorial Hermann Hospitals in almost every suburb.
Then also Methodist, Kelsey, and Memorial Hermann clinics in every suburb.
94chem said:
- my 4 minute commute for the past 26 years, and listening to people complain about theirs.
- Lake Houston. Love it when it's not in my living room.
- NE side, where trees thrive, and the houses were built before they realized the economic boon of clear-cutting and Katy-fying everything.
- Listening to people go out of their way to say something negative about Dallas. It's entertaining. As if people in Dallas like Dallas...
- Bolivar and Galveston, Kemah and Seabrook.
I find it funny when people say San Antonio city has better tex mex than Houston or vice versa. Houston has 2.8 million hispanics, San Antonio has 952,000 hispanics. The majority of Mexicans from both cities come from Monterrey and northern mexico, the Mexican food in Texas is heavily influenced from northern mexico. Why would San Antonio mexicans cook better than Houston mexicans, when most likely they both come from the same part of Mexico lol?? Its not like San Antonio has some secret mexican ingredients or recipes that you cant find in Houston.TarponChaser said:BaileyAg said:
The food here is fantastic.
(San Antonio still does Tex Mex better).
Negative.
At worst it's a push.
To be fair, and I say this as someone who considers Houston to be a borderline-unlivable-scorching-swampy-moquito-and-democrat-infested hellscape, it seems like everyone on our teams tends to bi*tch about their local weather or city conditions any time we are on a call and making small talk. You should hear the people in Minneapolis. People in Cali also complaining about crushing costs and how hard it is to live out there. etc etcTheWoodlandsTxAg said:I agree but tell that to my co-workers and clients.TXAG 05 said:
Houston has great people, great jobs, great food, entertainment, culture, everything. If you can't find lots to love here, that's on you.
They believe it is hell on Earth.
I have to listen a constant ***** and moan sessions on Zoom everyday about how bad Houston is.
TarponChaser said:94chem said:
- my 4 minute commute for the past 26 years, and listening to people complain about theirs.
- Lake Houston. Love it when it's not in my living room.
- NE side, where trees thrive, and the houses were built before they realized the economic boon of clear-cutting and Katy-fying everything.
- Listening to people go out of their way to say something negative about Dallas. It's entertaining. As if people in Dallas like Dallas...
- Bolivar and Galveston, Kemah and Seabrook.
To be fair, Katy didn't have much in the way of trees to begin with. There's a reason it's the Katy Prairie. Rice fields and before that mostly open grassland except down in the bottom land.
I was shocked to hear that the Greater Katy area is larger than the population of the city of Pittsburgh. They surpassed Pittsburgh in 2015.94chem said:
- my 4 minute commute for the past 26 years, and listening to people complain about theirs.
- Lake Houston. Love it when it's not in my living room.
- NE side, where trees thrive, and the houses were built before they realized the economic boon of clear-cutting and Katy-fying everything.
- Listening to people go out of their way to say something negative about Dallas. It's entertaining. As if people in Dallas like Dallas...
- Bolivar and Galveston, Kemah and Seabrook.
Username checks out.TheWoodlandsTxAg said:I was shocked to hear that the Greater Katy area is larger than the population of the city of Pittsburgh. They surpassed Pittsburgh in 2015.94chem said:
- my 4 minute commute for the past 26 years, and listening to people complain about theirs.
- Lake Houston. Love it when it's not in my living room.
- NE side, where trees thrive, and the houses were built before they realized the economic boon of clear-cutting and Katy-fying everything.
- Listening to people go out of their way to say something negative about Dallas. It's entertaining. As if people in Dallas like Dallas...
- Bolivar and Galveston, Kemah and Seabrook.
I would not be surprised if suburban Katy became the largest suburb in the world.
There is unlimited space to expand to the west.
My only gripe with the western, southwestern, southern, and northwestern suburbs are the lack of trees.
schmellba99 said:
They aren't the same though.
Houston tex-mex has some hints here and there from some creole and cajun influences whereas the SA tex mex doesn't and is closer to traditional Mexican fare. Houston's tex-mex is also more influenced by the coastal Mexican styles than SA's is.
Both have high and low points for sure. But Houston's is superior across the board because we have more variety IMO.
Most everything west of SA until you get to San Diego is just not all that good on the mexican food front.