agdaddy04 said:
Do you really feel your quality of life has improved exponentially since leaving Houston?
Exponentially is strong word, but overall, yes I think it has. The few things that do it for me:
It's a smaller city (not just pop. but geographically), so I can live in the suburbs and still only be 20 miles from work (instead of Tomball being 40 miles to westchase, or even further to downtown. This comes into play for when we go into town as well for events or games; on a saturday this is a 25 min. drive.
Yes it can get cold. Single digits or even negative is not uncommon, but we're talking maybe a few days a year at that level. The flipside is it is really damn nice a LOT of the year. It was 58 degrees the other day, and will be 55 today.. 20 days in december were 55 or higher.. And mind you, 55 here in the winter with all the sun we have is NICE. Like I'll sit on my deck in the afternoon and have a beer in a tshirt. (granted,my deck faces the afternoon sun.) Snow is snow, it comes, it goes. Our neighbor has a walkout basement, and we have no fence between us, and so we have a kickass hill for tubing when it snows. My 3 and 4 year old literally did this for 4 hours sat. and sun last weekend cause we got a nice 4" snow on Friday.
Cost of living is pretty much the damn same in my experience. We have about the same salaries (wife's is maybe 10% less), and we live the same lifestyle.
Maybe it's just me hating on TX, but I think there is just way more stuff to do here on the weekends. It's so easy and quick to go west and find endless amounts of stuff. There are casinos to hot springs to white water rafting/tubing to mountain climbing, old historic towns, drive up mt evans rd, really good hiking really close to home (like 30 minutes and we can be hiking up a mountain and have views of the entire denver metro), scenic drives, estes park, RMNP, the sand dunes, fishing, hunting, etc etc.. yes texas has a lot of these things, but here it just seems closer and more easily accessible. I have 2 NP within 4 hour drive. Or I can drive an hour and stay in Dillon and feel completely away from your everyday life.
On a more broader scope, we are within an 8 hours drive of:
Mount rushmore, arches/canyonlands/capitol reef NP, jackson hole/Yellowstone, mesa verde NP/Durango, Glen Canyon area
and then an 11-13ish hour drive from:
Zion NP, Grand canyon, havasu/hoover/Vegas, glacier NP, death valley NP, Big Bend NP
So summer road trips are off the chain, and my kids are just a 2-3 years away from enjoying those types of vacays.
The beer scene is off the chain, and I'm a homebrewer so I'm into it.
Negatives:
Of course friends; many friends we had were almost lifelong friends. It's nothing that Colorado did.
The dryness is def. a thing. My wife is starting to hate it, and blames her always being sick now on it (I say it's the kids getting us sick, we didn't have kids in TX). But we have whole house humidifier and one in our room.
Late snows: by the time late april / early may rolls around, and it's been 70s for most days, a snow can kind of be annoying. We still get them randomly all the way up until mid/late may. It can be like 8", but then it's 70 degrees the next day and it's all gone pretty quickly.
Late spring, summer and early fall evenings can't be beat for having friends/dinner/drinks on the deck. Even on a 100 degree summer july day, by 7pm it will be in the mid 70s and feel great.