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I Might be moving there i think its a cool place with all the land and everything and its just nice i think. Im moving from michigan...what dfo you think about the move and kentucky? thanks guys!

and girls =)

2006-08-13 12:43:00 · 4 answers · asked by Chris Webb 2 in Travel United States Other - United States

4 answers

I love Ky, it is a beautiful state with lots to do. If you like big cities, you might be disappointed. All states are beautiful, you just have to find the great things about each state and focus on them. Every state also has drawbacks. Focus on the positive.

2006-08-13 13:24:43 · answer #1 · answered by gtoacp 5 · 3 0

I have lived in KY all my life. It has a bit of everything: the one and only horse country, mountains, rolling farm land, and many beautiful lakes and rivers. As for places to live... for city life I would chose the Eastern suburbs of Louisville (esp Lyndon or Jeffersontown) for small towns Shelbyville, Versailles and Midway are very nice and located near the cities.

Louisville has a great park system (esp. Cherokee & Waterfront/ River Rd ), many historic, safe neighborhoods near downtown, and a nice nightclub/ restaurant/ ecclectic shop corrider in Bardstown Rd (N of I-264). Lexington has lots of chain restaurants and shopping, but it doesn't really have any cultural attractions or nice parks, but the surrounding horse country is amazing...both cities have good economies & unemployment rates under 2%.

2006-08-14 12:23:11 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

I drove through there and I thought it was a beautiful state with great roads and nice friendly people.

2006-08-13 20:31:49 · answer #3 · answered by otisisstumpy 7 · 1 0

"...with all the land and everything..."?

Not sure what you mean by that. Michigan is a much bigger state in land area, 56,809 square miles versus Kentucky's 39,598 square miles. Plus, Michigan is phenominally bigger in water area, 40,001 square miles versus Kentucky's 679 square miles.

Furthermore, Michigan's landscape is much more diverse. The oldest mountains in North America (Porcupine Mountains). Huge sand dunes (Sleeping Bear Dunes and Saugatuck Dunes, for example). Four Great Lakes. Cliffs and rock formations (Pictured Rocks, for example). Hundreds of waterfalls (Tahquamenon Falls, for example). Thousands of beaches. 11,000+ inland lakes. Dozens of rivers and bayous. Hundreds of islands.

2006-08-14 09:39:09 · answer #4 · answered by AF 6 · 0 4

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