Good luck with that
ccolley68 said:
We just moved out of Sugar Land a little over a month ago. We lived there for almost 15 years. We moved down there when we had a newborn, and had been in the same house the whole time, and had 2 more kids. We lived in Riverstone, right by Sienna Plantation. The whole area is nice and clean as others have mentioned. It's one of the least terrible commutes of all the suburbs.
But the demographics finally just got to be too much for us. Some areas are better and some worse, but all have some element of it.
We initially made the move for schools and all the normal suburban parent stuff, but pulled our kids out of the public schools in elementary and ended up in private because I didn't want my daughter to be the only person who looked like her. Say what you want about that decision, but I wouldn't change it. My daughter couldn't wear a tshirt with a Christmas tree on it to school, or a necklace with a cross on it. But they celebrate Diwali and all the other crap at school. We had enough of it and pulled them out of public.
As others have mentioned, the sense of community is non-existent unless you are part of 'those communities' and they don't welcome outsiders to anything. If you have a good friend group established it can be overcome, but don't expect to move into any new neighborhood in SL and have the neighbors come by to bring casseroles and welcome you to the culdesac poker night. On the flip side, we moved back into Houston proper, and my kids play outside with the neighborhood kids every single day. They start knocking on the doors at 8am. We love it. In SL we basically built a backyard oasis because everything we did was back there, by ourselves.
Holidays sucked. Maybe 25% being generous decorate for Christmas in my old neighborhood. Same amount do Halloween candy. They just don't want to have anything to do with anyone who isn't like them. It was sad for my kids. But boy do the natives like to do their stuff and shoot their fireworks on their holidays. And some of them last for multiple days. I wouldn't even venture to the Towne Center, especially on a weekend. They have call to prayer there. F that.
I know it probably sounds racist and non-inclusive or whatever, but that's just our lived experience. And we were there for a long time. If you like all that diversity, which really isn't diversity, it's all one thing, it's just not white, then go for it.
Diggity said:
Good luck with that
MrPlow2010 said:
I lived off HWY 6 and Settler's Way for 10 years
EclipseAg said:MrPlow2010 said:
I lived off HWY 6 and Settler's Way for 10 years
When my oldest entered SWE, the art auction at the annual carnival fundraiser was a huge deal. All the parents would try and outbid each other, paying outrageous amounts for class art projects. Everyone knew each other and it was a fun, competitive event for a great cause.
By the time my youngest was leaving SWE, the camaraderie and participation had dwindled to the point where I felt compelled to be the only bidder on classroom projects that had no parents bidding.
It happened that fast.
Milwaukees Best Light said:
I would give a hard look at Sienna Plantation. I don't know how that drive up 6 would be in the morning, but I would investigate.
I Am A Critic said:digging tunnels said:
How is your Hindi?
Ask your new neighbors if they know a Ben Chod
If you're not bilingual, it could be naan-starter.
"teen takeovers"f burg ag said:
Look closely at the demographics in Sienna too. We have recently had small teen takeovers at rec centers. Last weekend I was driving up the main parkway and there were 4 teens on four wheelers popping wheelies and holding up all traffic behind them for a mile or so.
1996 said:
The question really is where this is not happening in Houston. I grew up in Bellaire from '76 to '92 and the demographics and the 50s style ranch houses that I grew up with are both long gone. The Houston I grew up in has been gone since the 90s
94chem said:SEConferenceAggie08 said:Milwaukees Best Light said:
Move to El Paso. This town is full.
Cool bro, great response. Sounds like you need to lay off the Milwaukees Best Lights.
You don't Tine-board much, do you?
Quote:
Back in the day Greatwood was way out there.
MrPlow2010 said:
I lived off HWY 6 and Settler's Way for 10 years and my neighborhood slowly became how you just described. We lived across the street from Mesquite park and would often be the only english speaking family there. Very few decorated for Halloween or Christmas. All of our favorite resturants went out of business and were replaced by Asian or Indians places to eat. There was no sense of community anymore but I moved to Greatwood last August and couldnt be happier. American flags on homes all around along with more Aggie flags. My neighborhood has a group of kids that come knock on our door after school to play with my kids.
The construction getting in and out of Greatwood sucks right now but we are very pleased with our decision to move to Greatwood last year.
kongaggie said:
All these neighborhood threads just point out how conservatives need to stop running to the far periphery of the city and reclaim the urban core instead of letting liberals run things. The mass development suburbs that aren't planned well are to be taken over by low-effort minorities with their DEI jobs who hate American culture and aesthetics.
Seersucker Ag 2011 said:
This thread is overly dramatic, IMO. ... You can still find a great life with great people if you do a little research and are the least bit outgoing. Don't write off the area entirely based on a few pockets or posts.
Plenty of young patriots in the loop with me.Milwaukees Best Light said:kongaggie said:
All these neighborhood threads just point out how conservatives need to stop running to the far periphery of the city and reclaim the urban core instead of letting liberals run things. The mass development suburbs that aren't planned well are to be taken over by low-effort minorities with their DEI jobs who hate American culture and aesthetics.
You go first and we'll be right behind you.