View Full Version : Pacific Northwest Homeland
April
May 3rd, 2009, 05:48 PM
I am in NW Montana but would love to hear from anyone in the nearby area ( with a couple hundred miles). I also am eager to give info to anyone considering relocation to this area.
vindicator06
May 5th, 2009, 12:02 PM
Are you near Libby (Montana)? How far are you from Bonners Ferry, Idaho?
albion
May 5th, 2009, 01:46 PM
Kalispell, Montana PLE
http://www.stormfront.org/forum/showthread.php?t=549227
http://www.stormfront.org/forum/showthread.php?t=524024
Jobs in the Pacific Northwest
http://www.stormfront.org/forum/showthread.php?t=581928
NW Montana and why you should move here
http://www.stormfront.org/forum/showthread.php?t=517064
April
May 5th, 2009, 02:27 PM
Are you near Libby (Montana)? How far are you from Bonners Ferry, Idaho?
I am in Kalispell. Do you ever get out this way? If so let me know and we can have coffee.
Nate Richards
May 6th, 2009, 02:11 AM
I moved to SW Washington a few months ago. Not very near April's area but I'll give a little info for this spot. It does indeed rain very often, and I like that. If you don't like rain, don't move here. I love the smell, and the softer light.
I'm near 99 Highway, in a part of Vancouver that is supposed to be "dangerous", according to locals. True enough, there's some theft and begging, but I haven't heard any gunfights at night. I've had no helicopters spotlighting my building, or police squads running around screaming death threats at niggers and telling me to "put it down and get back indoors". It seems pretty mellow here. This might be a place where you could raise kids, I mean better than the average urban area.
Local quirks: Oregon state gov doesn't trust you to pump gas. Oregon lets you sell aluminum cans for a nickel a piece but you can't crush them and you can only turn in 7$ worth at a time. Some of the clerks are nice about it but still you only get 40-50 a day for that routine.
Axel Faaborg
May 6th, 2009, 02:29 AM
Local quirks: Oregon state gov doesn't trust you to pump gas.
How do you mean?
Nick Apleece
May 6th, 2009, 03:49 AM
How do you mean?
In Oregon there is no self-serve gas. An attendant pumps it for you. Not quite like the old full-service stations where they'd check your oil and clean the windshield, but close enough. I'm not sure why it's illegal to pump your own gas there, probably some Nanny State law but it may be a pro-labor thing.
vindicator06
May 6th, 2009, 10:32 AM
I am in Kalispell. Do you ever get out this way? If so let me know and we can have coffee.
I'm in SC and am somewhat familiar with the Bonners Ferry area, although I've never actually been physically there. I would like very much to live out there, but I am dealing with many restraints that keep me here.
Axel Faaborg
May 6th, 2009, 02:38 PM
In Oregon there is no self-serve gas. An attendant pumps it for you. Not quite like the old full-service stations where they'd check your oil and clean the windshield, but close enough. I'm not sure why it's illegal to pump your own gas there, probably some Nanny State law but it may be a pro-labor thing.
WTF? What the hell do they do in the morning when all the tradesmen are gassing up for work simultaneously? That's a lot of staff to have on hand.
I'm guessing that they don't have the 30-pump super-stations like QT that we do down here, then.
April
May 6th, 2009, 02:49 PM
I would like very much to live out there, but I am dealing with many restraints that keep me here.
Everyone has restraints that they think prevent them from moving. Really,unless you are still on paper and cannot legally move, nothing is stopping you. It is easy for losers who have nothing to lose to make big moves but that is not the type of person we encourage to move here. We want people who have a lot to lose. We want people who have ties and want to make new ones here.
It was hard for us to move as well. We had to leave family and friends and jobs and our home for the first 40 years of our lives. We will probably always consider California home to some extent. But we had to move to make our children's lives better so we did.
In many ways it is the spirit of being a pioneer. I am sure that many left nice homes and good jobs and kin to move West and explore the nation and look for something better.
vindicator06
May 6th, 2009, 06:31 PM
Everyone has restraints that they think prevent them from moving. Really,unless you are still on paper and cannot legally move, nothing is stopping you. It is easy for losers who have nothing to lose to make big moves but that is not the type of person we encourage to move here. We want people who have a lot to lose. We want people who have ties and want to make new ones here.
It was hard for us to move as well. We had to leave family and friends and jobs and our home for the first 40 years of our lives. We will probably always consider California home to some extent. But we had to move to make our children's lives better so we did.
In many ways it is the spirit of being a pioneer. I am sure that many left nice homes and good jobs and kin to move West and explore the nation and look for something better.
Bonners Ferry would be a great place to live if you have money and don't need a job. I am also dealing with health and age issues.
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