mhux Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 Hey there, I still have another year as an undergrad and being in Salem, OR means access for almost everything is 2+ hours! I'm from Salt Lake (talk about easy access), but frequently wonder where the 'best' place to live in WA is, in respect to (alpine) climbing and skiing access. This is cascadeclimbers, so I'd love for some locals to chime in! Considerations: Year round climbing, reasonable cost of living (if it's a significant difference), climate (less rain is better but its the PNW...), location (less city more towns), and perceived or real availability of jobs. Places in mind: Index, Leavenworth, Eastern N. Cascades (Winthrop), North Bend, Bellevue, Bellingham And finally, I don't live there and I'm just looking for your thoughts, so please excuse any 'dumb questions'. Lets hear it! Quote
JasonG Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 If harder climbing is your thing, then Leavenworth is probably hard to beat except for the whole job and cost of living thing. It really depends on your profession though. On the west side, Bellingham fits your criteria somewhat well, except there isn't as much climbing in the winter. Again, jobs are hard to come by, depending, and the cost of living isn't super cheap. Â Which is why a jungle loving skier/pseudo climber like myself lives in Mount Vernon. The town isn't anything special, but it is centrally located and close to the best mountaineering in the lower 48. It is dirt cheap right now as well- decent houses can be found for the low 100's, and rates are ridiculously low. Crazy. Plus I am trying to get more climber types to move here, and I get a commission from the Chamber of Commerce. Kidding. Quote
JasonG Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 Right, the secret Renton crag! It is surprising we all don't live there. Â Quote
Pete_H Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 If climbing, especially year-round climbing, is your top priority I wouldn't move to Washington. Quote
AlpineK Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 Year long climbing... ColoRADo.  After climbing all the 14ers and ascending the glaciers of the RAD state you'll scoff at glaciers in the PNW  If you do move to Renton here's an educational video  [video:youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2FiLz1HYGzo Quote
Pete_H Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 Year long climbing... ColoRADo. Â Yeah and there's probably ten 200 page threads on supertaco about whether Colorado or Utah or California is better for climbing. Quote
Raindawg Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 The best place to live in Washington is So. Cal., cuz truth is, guys like me are colonists with the ultimate goal of making California's borders from Mexico to Canada. Y'all complain about us buying up your property, but you sell it to us, and then whine about "Californicatin'" your culture, which you soak up like a sponge. Whaaaaaaa! Â Quote
ivan Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 can't imagine a more fulfilling life than being shacked up in index for a good long year or two, 'specially if yer a cultural-anthropologist Quote
Icicle_TV Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 Leavenworth of course. Driving more than 15 minutes to go climbing is just uncivilized. Quote
mhux Posted April 24, 2012 Author Posted April 24, 2012 Year long climbing... ColoRADo. Â Yeah and there's probably ten 200 page threads on supertaco about whether Colorado or Utah or California is better for climbing. Exactly...if I was truly worried I'd go back home to Salt Lake! can't imagine a more fulfilling life than being shacked up in index for a good long year or two, 'specially if yer a cultural-anthropologist So its one of those rural meth towns...? Never been there myself Leavenworth of course. Driving more than 15 minutes to go climbing is just uncivilized. now that's what I'm talking about! But is the housing cheap and the job market reasonable? Thanks for the replies so far, interesting stuff. Quote
chef_raekwon Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 I'm a recent transplant to Mazama and am loving the Methow so far. Pretty much have to find remote work though. Quote
DPS Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 (edited) If earning a living does not enter the equation, then either Mazama or Leavenworth. If one needs to make a living I'll throw out Issaquah. Other than being a souless suburb populated by people who make a little bit of money all trying to look like they make a lot of money, it has awesome trail running, a 20 minute bus ride to downtown Seattle, 20 minutes to rock climbing at Exit 32/38, 30-40 minutes to Snoqualmie pass for alpine rock, mixed winter alpine climbing, back country and lift serviced skiing and a reasonable 2 hour drive to Leavenworth. Edited April 24, 2012 by DPS Quote
mhux Posted April 24, 2012 Author Posted April 24, 2012 Wayne why do you say Spokane? Northern Idaho and Canada are close? Quote
obwan Posted April 24, 2012 Posted April 24, 2012 DPS is correct - if you need employment, the Puget Sound Region on the Westside of the Cascades is it. But it's dryer and nicer on the Eastside, and finding work may be more of a challenge. What is called the eastside (of Lake Washington) is the Bellevue, Issaquah, Kirkland area - which is pretty centrally located to what DPS described, as far as climbing and the mountains ( all within 1-2hrs). Boeing and Microsoft are close - and if you choose 'Rentonia', you could build 737's all day as they have orders for the next 10-12 years, and punching out 1+ a day. Â Quote
wayne Posted April 25, 2012 Posted April 25, 2012 Wayne why do you say Spokane? Northern Idaho and Canada are close? 6-8 crags very close by, and yes Cascades, rockies, close enough. You can do Rockies ice, or the Bugaboos on the weekend. Unimaginable Quote
banos Posted April 25, 2012 Posted April 25, 2012 Â Which is why a jungle loving skier/pseudo climber like myself lives in Mount Vernon. The town isn't anything special, but it is centrally located and close to the best mountaineering in the lower 48. It is dirt cheap right now as well... Â Been here since '90... mountaineering/skiing/biking/kayaking.. North Cascades/Olympic Peninsula/BC Rockies/Vancouver Is/San Juans.. Seattle/Vancouver/B'ham.. Quote
keenwesh Posted April 25, 2012 Posted April 25, 2012 moved out of washington and am loving it. Oh sorry, that doesn't fit the criteria for the original question. Quote
JoshK Posted April 25, 2012 Posted April 25, 2012 moved out of washington and am loving it. Oh sorry, that doesn't fit the criteria for the original question. Â Ahh, the ever predictable "I moved somewhere else, and it's cooler than where I was before" guy. Major originality points. Â If I could pick anywhere in WA to be instantly transported, complete with job, house, etc. I'd say L-Worth or Wenatchee. Decent weather, and centrally located to top-notch rock climbing, alpine climbing, backcountry & lift skiing, river-sports, and more. Even ice climbing in a better year. You have breweries and vineyards all around. For spectator sports, you can watch the tourists graze on hot-dogs and saltwater taffy in little Bavaria. Â I lived in Boulder, CO and I would pick Leavenworth in a heartbeat over Boulder aside from the social scene, which is astronomically better in Boulder, needless to say. I loved Colorado, but if alpine climbing is your thing, the Colorado rockies are child's play compared to the Cascades. Quote
wetslide Posted April 25, 2012 Posted April 25, 2012 Depends on your source of employment. As a photographer, you could make a living out there just from the nature shots alone. Quote
mhux Posted April 26, 2012 Author Posted April 26, 2012 So the general consensus is Leavenworth, if you could get work, and maybe Mt Vernon on the westside? What's Wenatchee like? I bet there's a good amount of jobs to be had (I didn't say careers) in Leavenworth, considering its a tourist trap, right? Quote
keenwesh Posted April 26, 2012 Posted April 26, 2012 I never claimed to be original. Â Having a house/shack in Index would be hard to beat. live up there whenever it's dry and be close to leavenworth if the weather does get damp. The social scene might be a little drab, or meth filled. However the locals I've talked to have all been nice and friendly. Camped next to a few shitfaced guys from the area who tried to sell us a couple oz. we declined. in the morning one of them was hanging half out of the tent, which was partially collapsed. Quote
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