Well - because I like it here./w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif
As GlenMoss and some of the others have pointed out, the cost of living in this area is quite low. The unemployment rate is also usually quite low. The last time the guys in Washington were fighting over the minimum wage the local fast-food outlets were advertising $8.00 an hour to get help.
I've learned I don't like big cities or crowds. I now live in Middlebury Township, Elkhart County, Indiana. This is the western fringe of the Amish territory; east of here you find lots of county roads with no power lines along the road. The county 4H fair is one of the best in the nation because of the mix of small and medium farms. (I forget if it was the 4H organization or an independant group that did the rating, as this was about 8 years ago, but Elkhart was in the top 5).
I've got 4.5 acres of woods, the center strip in a 15 acre woodland. I've got good neighbors with a mind-set that matches mine.
I'm a professional computer geek with 26 years at the same company in Elkhart (hint- I guarantee that you've all got our product somewhere in your plumbing/w3tcompact/icons/grin.gif) and I'm figuring on retiring right here. My sister has a house on the St. Joe river cross-town from me, and our mother lives roughly inbetween the two of us.
If I get the urge to vist a large town, to see what I'm missing, Chicago is 2 hours away; Detroit, Cleveland, or Indianapolis are about 5 hours away. On the other hand, Lake Michigan and the Indiana Dunes park is just over an hour away.
Why do I live where I live? I like it here!
Tom