Would you uproot your life, leaving behind your family, your job etc if you dont like the weather in a country.

(Obviously theres always more than one advantage of moving someplace but to build a life somewhere, would weather be top 3 factors in choosing where to live).

49 points

I would love to leave the south for cooler climates but I have too much family here so heat stroke it is.

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13 points

Those of us in the north want to move south so we can stay active for 6 more months.

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5 points

Cross country skiing, downhill skiing/snowboarding, snow shoeing, fat tire biking, hiking, winter camping. Most of the equipment you can find at thrift stores or used sports equipment stores. You don’t have to become a shut in in the winter.

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6 points

You become a shut in during summer because it’s constantly 90+°F outside and AC keeps breaking

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1 point

I moved away from the south specifically to avoid my family

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1 point

I am one who would love to move south to avoid the snow and have more time outside

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46 points
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I think absolutely yes. I’d give up a lot to move to Finland or some shit just because the weather there sounds like haven to me. I live in the Middle East and it’s not as much the heat that kills me (it’s “only” a factor for about a third of a year and it sucks too of course) its the goddamn dust storms, I’m so sensitive to these things. I still have no idea why some people like living in deserts under a scorching Sun, with all the sand and dust in the air, it’s dreadful, not to mention the nature is super boring without proper fields, forests and rivers and stuff.

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7 points

Saaame, tho Finland sounds too extreme.

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6 points

Please realize Northern European winters are… dark. It’s not the cold that matters much, it’s the darkness for months on end that can be seriously detrimental to mental health if you’re not used to it.

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5 points

I think of most of the middle east as coastal places less than actual middle of the desert life. I don’t get the appeal of living in US states like Arizona or Nevada.

I grew up in Alabama/Tennessee/Georgia with all of those trees, rivers, and forests. I have to say, the bugs and extreme humidity make the heat unbearable.

I live in Southern California now and moved here because it is the best weather in the world in a few small pockets very close to the coast. It is 15°-25° year round here.

I don’t know of any place with trees and rivers that is devoid of a terrible season or four.

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3 points
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I live in Finland and used to live in Portugal. Trust me, you don’t need to go so far north. Half the year you don’t want to go out because of how cold it is. The novelty wears out fast!

Germany was pretty good but alas, hard to find work that pays well enough with the horrible housing situation.

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2 points

I think dust storms sound like hell.

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26 points

It’s a great reason. Especially with climate change.

I met someone the other day that said they moved from Portland to Cincinnati because of their climate change concerns.

Over the next 50 years, we’re going to see MILLIONS of people in the U.S. moving for the same reasons.

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4 points

Because of the rising seas?

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6 points

moreso due to heat and violent weather patterns like hurricanes imho. rising seas are coming, but the heat’s going to kill a lot of folks before.

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23 points

You’re talking about your local climate, not weather, which can change any day

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2 points

Thanks for the reddit flashback

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21 points

I just think the distinction is important. Especially because climate change deniers try to confuse people about the two terms.

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5 points

All good, makes sense. Thanks for elaborating

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22 points

I moved from a town where it was hard to breathe because of the nearby toxic factories. During the winter, we’d have acid rain.

I now live in the Pacific Northwest. Housing is crazy expensive. Everyone wants to live here.

But my quality of living improved dramatically. No more being sick for 2-3 weeks a year. I owned a car that required yearly repairs because of how f’d up the roads were. I sold that because public transportation is so good. I go on hikes. Food diversity is better. Everyone is pleasant to talk to. A crazy homeless man apologized for yelling too much and a nice old lady walked him to get a sandwich. The biggest drama in my neighborhood is someone’s tomatoes growing too wild and is encroaching into another neighbor’s vegetables. I work remotely, and my wife found a job here, and we are paid significantly higher than before to compensate for the expenses.

Even though I’m paying a shitton for a small place that would have been a mansion in my old hick town, my quality of living skyrocketed.

It’s definitely worth it. And if you’re too concerned about the cost of living, try living here for a year. Don’t be sticker shocked.

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