Not true. We spend six to eight weeks every year in South Dakota. Any state west of the Mississippi River to Wyoming is vacation land to us.
If you are located in the Eastern part of Pennsylvania, where to do you go for vacation at all in the Western part of Pennsylvania? Tell me you at least stop to eat at the steak and lube place in Sharon if you DON'T stay in western PA LOL In Western Pa's defense, I told my parents that if I were to stay in Pa, it would be the very western part of the state.
Some years ago, eating in at a BBQ joint here outside my hometown, heard some teens behind me talking about how they hated this area and how they wanted to move out and get away from this place. I turned around and let them know that I was a relocated yankee and came from a place up North that I felt the EXACT same way about the place I came from and I'm living where they're at now.
Ironically enough, 20 years later, with an education and working hard and "moving around", I decided my home is exactly where these teens think the dump is where they want to get out. I can't imagine someone having those "home feelings" moving to the coal region of Eastern Pa where my parents are from.
Again, I've come to the conclusion that home is where the heart is.
And in defense of Pa, there are people I know who live in NC that have NEVER left the state of NC in their life (my wife swares she can say the same thing about the people who live in the same county we live in, but she does volunteer work with the court system, so she meets more interesting people than I do). I do remember someone mentioning about "Washington" and the comment from someone else was "where is that at?" (let alone asking if it's DC or the state).
Point is, no matter where you live, people are people and you have all types that live EVERYWHERE. Could pick a nice location and by luck of the draw get nutso neighbor who doesn't care if he goes to jail or not.
I picked up my Kubota from John Thomas in Kentucky. I drove up to meet him at his place for a test drive. The drive to John's I remember was much nicer through Tenn than when I had to go to Louisville from West Virginia previously for work. Looking at the map, if I were a betting man, someone from New Hampshire (or Vermont or Maine) would like the Bowling Green area over numerous other places in Kentucky, particularly closer to Ohio (no offense to Ohio).
Remind me again, why does any live in Ohio?:laughing: (just kidding!) Again, home is where the heart is.
I just remember paddling in Idaho looking at the mountains remembering, this is where I belong. Still haven't moved there with the family yet. My bad.