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It must be warm in winter (I have Reynaud's syndrome and suffer in cold weather).

2006-11-02 05:00:05 · 4 answers · asked by gannyrocks 1 in Science & Mathematics Weather

Sorry....I mispelled economical. My bad!

2006-11-02 06:04:00 · update #1

4 answers

Bonita Springs, Florida is a bike ride to the Gulf and if you find the right area, it's very cheap to live there. My mother rents a 2br 1bath house out for $750 a month. I lived there myself for a year. Now I live in Fort Myers. I have psoriasis and can't take cold weather either. The ocean really helps... and so does sunshine. It never really gets cold here. If it gets below 60°, I build a fire.

2006-11-02 05:11:17 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I moved from Ohio to Florida about 14 years ago and I think it's cheaper to live here. We have no State tax, we have a homestead exemption on our homes, (meaning we don't have to pay taxes on the first 25K of our home) and our sales tax is 1% cheaper than Ohio. (at least the area I live in) There are dollar menu's at fast food restaurants, and the food is really no more expensive than it is up there. We have great weather, so growing a garden year round is easy to do so that can cut down on your grocery expenses. My parents still live in Ohio and we were discussing this very issue yesterday. My mom seems to think things here are so much more money but in reality my parents would save money by moving here. We don't have to run our heat 4- 6 month out of the year like people in Ohio do, and there's months where we don't need to run our heat or AC. This overall lowers your bills. The job market does suck though. That's my only real complaint. If you are lucky enough to find a job then they don't pay you what you are worth. I'm self employed and my husband works for a well known company in our area. We are lucky because his job is full time so we are eligible for medical benefits through his employer. This isn't the case with most. Most of the time you'll only find part time work unless you have a specialized degree. (which he does) I live on the opposite side of Tampa, so I'm not sure how much housing is there. I also don't know about the job market in that area. My best piece of advice would be to make a trip down here to the area you are thinking about moving to and look around. Look at the house prices, jobs available, etc. I was very fortunate I already had a good paying job lined up before I moved here. It's not an easy thing to do, but 14 years ago the job market and economy wasn't as bad.

2016-05-23 17:47:41 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Anywhere! Just dig a hole in your yard since the water table is so high.

2006-11-02 05:08:55 · answer #3 · answered by dale e 1 · 0 2

ecomical?

2006-11-02 05:54:21 · answer #4 · answered by Crystal A 3 · 0 1

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