English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-09-11 02:12:08 · 13 answers · asked by miss_lemonz 1 in Travel Canada Ottawa

13 answers

Canada is a huge country. The closer you are to the U.S. border, the warmer the weather. Some cities get to 30 below zero. Vancouver is expensive, beautiful, rains allot in winter, little snow. There is work but housing is costly. Alberta has tons and tons of work. Can get cold, but you dress for it. Ontario is a big province. Southern Ontario has a reasonable winter. Snow, can get cold but usually around the freezing mark. Lots of work here as well but again, expensive and crowded. Quebec is a great place to live but you really need to speak french to fully appreciate the province. Any of the Maritime Provinces have lower housing costs, not quite so much work, but full of great people and have decent winters(most years) and great summers. For work, go to Alberta, edmonton or Calgary. For weather, the Okanagan area, Kelowna, Penticton, or Vancouver. For a home with land of your own, any of the Maritimes. Great country. Lots of work in the Far North as well but extremes in cold.

2006-09-11 04:46:02 · answer #1 · answered by Bob D 6 · 0 0

I would recommend Halifax, Nova Scotia. Be warned that there is a bit of a higher unemployment rate in the Atlantic provinces than the rest of the country, but these numbers usually reflect the more rural areas. Halifax is a bustling city with lots of multiculturalism and heritage. It's also a beautiful place to live with friendly people and a strong sense of community. It doesn't take long to drive outside the city and enjoy all the wonderful splendours Nova Scotia and the rest of the Maritime provinces have to offer. Alberta's job market is booming, but its social serivices are lacking and can't keep up with the population explosion (this affects daycare, police, school systems etc.). The Atlantic provinces are also the least expensive places to live in Canada. A house in Vancouver costs twice as much for example. The crime rate is also very low compared to the larger cities of Canada.

http://novascotia.com/en/home/default.aspx

http://www.gov.ns.ca/cmns/overview/comingtoNS.asp

http://www.halifaxinfo.com/

http://www.halifax.ca/

2006-09-12 03:32:18 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I'm from the west and have never been east of Mantioba so I can't give you any recommendations about over there. That said, the cities of Western Canada right now are going nuts economically. Calgary in particular is in the middle of a massive oil fuelled boom making it hard to find a place to live but easy to find a job. Vancouver and Victoria at the same time are not surrounded by as much of the hype but are just about as hot, Although they're both fairly expensive to live in, you may find living there and working there somewhat easier. Edmonton would fit in that boat as well.

I think all of these towns are beautiful places to live and don't really want to hack any of them. It's pretty hard to beat the magnificence of the Coast Mountains around Vancouver and the year round coastal climate. That said however, if you live in Vancouver, you have to learn to like the rain and not seeing the sun for a couple months over the winter. The same is to be said about Victoria, but it is to some degree mitigated by being on the island and not pressed right against the mountains. Calgary you don't have to deal with the rain and you have the Rockies right at your doorstep. You do however have to deal with weather that is well... somewhat erratic. I remember working on an outdoor job one winter and at the end of work Friday it was -34 degrees Celcius and the start of work Monday it was +5. Some people hate it. Others love it.

I have to say Vancouver and Victoria both have an edge on Calgary when it comes to culture. The simple reason is both of those cities are more established and have a more static population. They just have built institutions and social character that Calgary just hasn't really been able to. That said, Calgary is changing, rather dramatically now and these institutions are on the rise and new efforts are being made to make neighbourhoods are more social environment (walkable communities for example). Much the same can be said for Edmonton as for Calgary, but I can't really speak for how their community is developing in this respect.

With all this said about the cities, something has to be said of the rural environment and I don't really know if I'm the best to comment on that. I grew up in a small town in the BC interior which has really become a victim of the cities' boom. Housing prices have shot up in the smaller towns where urban vacationers have second homes or are retiring, but there just isn't that many jobs. There's lots of low paid service industry work of course, but real work is often quite difficult to find. Hence, like me, most of the young people move to the city and these small towns end up having a distinctly 40/50 plus atmosphere. There are of course notable exceptions, but far too many for me to mention here. It's something you'd just have to do some research on.

Good luck.

2006-09-11 02:36:12 · answer #3 · answered by Johnny Canuck 4 · 0 0

I live in Toronto, which is the biggest city in Canada. It's very multicultural and beautiful here. But...... from what I am reading, it looks like everyone is moving to Alberta. There are lots of jobs there because everything is booming.

I guess it all depends what you plan to do for a living when you get here.

2006-09-11 02:52:55 · answer #4 · answered by Louise On The Edge 3 · 0 0

I have lived coast to coast in Canada, my husband is military and we talk about where we will settle when he retires. We have narrowed it down to 2 cities, Victoria or Ottawa. Really it depends on what you are looking for from life. This is a very diverse country.

2006-09-13 12:44:11 · answer #5 · answered by PLDFK 4 · 0 0

What do you decide directly to do in Canada? Take a trip? Or pass to grad college? Or artwork? different visas finding on what you decide directly to do in Canada for a fashion long. Federal experienced Migration - in case you had the college tiers & journey to formerly qualify - is now closed to purposes. criminal immigrants with tiers, journey, and PR status (so as that they are criminal to artwork with none costly employment visa) all started complaining some twelve months in the past that once a twelve months in Canada intensively attempting to locate a job, they have grew to become up no longer something by any potential. Canadian immigration has been too extreme for too long, and it has caught up with them. So in spite of bachelors & masters tiers, it extremely is extremely unlikely you could immigrate legally and locate artwork. Jobs have become particularly scarce in an outstanding variety of fields, and in case you verify the job advertisements, a lot specify that any applicant would desire to be approved to artwork as a fashion to notice for the job. meaning jobs open in basic terms to Canadian voters & criminal everlasting citizens who meet all job standards.

2016-09-30 14:01:18 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Vancouver

2006-09-11 02:17:39 · answer #7 · answered by DemonInLove 3 · 0 0

Whitehorse

2006-09-11 03:15:21 · answer #8 · answered by Dr. Phil 6 · 0 0

Toronto or one of it's many 'burbs. Lots to do. Very cosmopolitan. Never feel lonely. People from every corner of the world.

2006-09-11 07:55:49 · answer #9 · answered by Know-it-all 4 · 0 0

Iqaluit.

2006-09-11 02:17:30 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers