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Here's what I'll tell ya:
It's beautiful. Unbelievably, picture postcard beautiful. It's so refreshing to see so much green, after living in droughty California all my life. So many wonderful, natural, places to go in all directions. Many adventures to be had.
People are... well... nice. They're nice. They're very friendly, but it's harder to make friends up here. I've never had a problem making friends though I had moved to various parts of California before. Here, while they're quite friendly, unless you have children in school with them, or go to their church, it's hard to connect. I think it's the weather, actually. BEcause it's often cold and wet or just gloomy, people tend to stay in more. Less chances to mingle.
Olympia and Seattle, some parts of Tacoma, and a few towns like , Edmonds, Bainbridge Island, are wonderful areas for arts and being a liberal. If you get involved in some groups, I'm sure you'll make some friends. It's just harder here, for some reason.
The weather. Let's not kid ourselves. Olympia gets nearly 50 inches of rain a year. Where I am we get around 38". It's different than California rain. While we get a rare, soaking, storm from the South Pacific, our rain comes down over a period of 9 months, rather than 3. It's gray A LOT. It's not the rain that gets you, it's the gray. You will never know if this is an issue with you until you live here through a few fall/winter/springs, when it's mostly cloudy. Some people move up here and enjoy the cold cloudiness, some put up with it because of all the wonderful things available make it all worthwhile, and others can't take it and move back. You will not see your sandals or shorts for 8 months out of the year. Fleeece will be your new best friend.
In return.. you get gorgeous summers, snow on the mountains, great fishing, blue waters, and a Bald Eagle or two flying over your house.
Be aware that most people gain around 20 pounds in the first few years of living here if they come from a warmer climate. If you know that ahead of time, and watch out for it, you'll be fine. When you come from a warmer place, where you are more active throughout the year, you don't realize that you're scaling back because of the weather. Because it gets dark much earlier in the fall/winter, you are inside much earlier. The successful people at counteracting that are the ones that realize they have to be active, even if they dont' feel like it. If you wait for a perfect, sunny, day to get outside, that'll be a problem.
Being able to leave the inland empire, as someone here just posted, should be reason enough to love it up here. It's not perfect here. No place is. After the honeymoon period of a few years, you'll see that there are good things and bad things, just like where you come from. BUT.. you may find, as many people do, that it's perfect for you!
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