Skwim: Not a bad place if you like to sit by the road and watch for license plates from all 50 states. And it's a good thing we have some grocery stores here, (Safeway, QFC, Walmart, Costco and Canned Food Warehouse), because it is a two lane wagon track out of town, east or west. It 2-4 hours, a toll bridge, a floating bridge and or 1 or 2 ferry rides to get to Seattle (where some folks go for medical care) and most of that is 2 lane roads that could have deer, elk or bear on them at any time, (or very rarely a cougar). There isn't even a hospital in Skwim, (oh ,the locals spell it Sequim), It's 20 miles West to Port Angeles, or 30 miles to Port Townsend, and 55 miles to Silverdale for a hospital. We see daily, sometimes multiples, medivac helo flights here.
We have great boating, it is only 25 miles across the Strait Of Juan De Fuca to Cattle Pass to get into the SJ Islands, and it is a beam sea ride. Want to get around Point Wilson and into Admiralty Inlet, it's 15 miles to the PT Tide Rip. Want to go West? You can go around the corner at the East end of the Dungeness Spit, the longest sand spit in the world, and get out into the wave train from the open Pacific. In any of those directions you intersect with some of the busiest commercial shipping lanes in the country, and maybe the world. That is big traffic, 600 to 1200 foot long vessels, traveling at 16 to 25 knots, and wouldn't even feel the bump if you stall out crossing in front of them. (Good excuse for AIS on board.)
We have volcanoes, yea, big ones, Mt Baker only 75 miles, and Mt Rainier is 125 miles, and OH yes, Mt St Helens, but we don't have to worry about that one any more, (It's only 200 miles,) it did its 2000 year eruption back in 1980 although it is still considered the most hazardous of the Cascade volcanoes. So, volcanoes are no big deal, every 200 years or so one might pop off, I'd trade that for a 6 hurricanes a year any time.
Funny, the Blue Hole City has the highest population of retired commercial pilots per capita of any lil berg in the US of A. (Maybe that's a had, because we had a bunch of people from California move in here lately
Yesterday, the temps were close to 80 and the humidity was about 60%. Boy was it hot and muggy. Terrible. Haven't seen a mosquito in so long I had to look it up to see what they were, and have never seen a no see him. "1 out of three", not sure if that poster knows the PNW. The Olympic Peninsula rain falls range from about 12" to over 220" a year, and that's within under a 2 hour drive from home. Two winters ago I had 21 years of snow in one week, 42 inches. Usual snow fall is about 2 inches, and that's over the whole winter. But we are sure not telling anyone about that. Usually we have the Irrigation Festival, the oldest continuous community festival in the state, (This year would have been the 125th year) and the Lavender Festival which combined bring about 50,000 people to the community of about 7,500 residents. No Festivals this year -- Covid19.
The PNW has any and every kind of weather you could want. Hot dry summers, go east of the mountains and same for cold winters, mostly sunny. More moderate temps, stay closer to the water. Big city traffic go to Seattle (for the uninitiated, that is anywhere between Olympia and Mount Vernon on the I-5 corridor), and you get all the shopping you can want.
Like a boat, every place you look at or live in, has compromises. Pick carefully, just enjoy the picking.
Harvey
SleepyC :moon
