NOHOME said:
Keith Tanner said:
The trick to surviving a Canadian winter is to embrace it. Ski, snowshoe, enjoy that crisp blue sky you only get when it's below freezing, the silence of woods covered in snow. If you need to hide from it, you belong somewhere else :)
If you're cold, put more clothes on. This is a solved problem. There's a limit (both legal and practical) about how far you can go the other way when it's hot...
And hence why I do not advocate for South West Ontario as a place to live. There is not much to do in the summer, and even less in the winter. Winter activities are 3 or more hours north. There is not quite enough reliable snow to run a snowmobile and way to many restrictions as to where you can ride.
I neither advocate for or against SW Ontario, but I think there's another way to look at it.
We moved up here from the GTA because it was darn cheap. It ain't that anymore, but as far as things to do in the summer, there is so much to do locally that even if I were fully retired I wouldn't have time to do it all. I have Waterford on one side, the Grand river on the other, and lake Erie is 15 minutes away. If fishing, or water sports, and activities is your deal, you're golden. Port Dover is close, Turkey point Provincial park, with it's camping, beaches and trail system, and Port Rowan (Backus mill), and long point are less than an hour away, and those are only the well known areas. I have a dirt oval 10 minutes from my house, two paved tracks a half hour each way, and TMP with it's small road course, frequent track days, and test and tune events at the drag strip less than 30 minutes. If you care to drive another 30-60 minutes there are numerous other dirt and paved oval, and drag strips. There are 4 MX tracks within half an hour and probably a dozen within an hour or so drive, as well as 2 local clubs that put on their own events, and a separate one with a provincial series. Of course we have all the small town festivals, dining, breweries, etc. that is prevalent across the province these days.
As far as weather, I no longer enjoy the snow, and even though I'm only an hour from NOHOME, we get less than half their snow, which, for me, is a bonus. I have a sled, but some years we get so little it's not possible to take out. Those are the better winters, as far as I'm concerned, as most of the time the temps are hovering around, just above or below freezing, and snow for a day or two is nothing more than a nuisance.
One positive about this area is your proximity to the GTA. It's still possible to commute from here and into the big city money, and though that seems to be changing, there will always be jobs available if you have the option. In this area people are generally left alone to do what they please and local government interference is minimal. I know that's not always the case in some parts of the province, FYI.