The word pilotess would have been incomprehensible and unneeded.)
My second trip was to speak at Lincoln Memorial University School of Law. I think it was in the 2000s. I no longer remember what my presentation was about. I met Dr. John Lott at this event.
My third trip was to look around last year in preparation for considering the move with our daughter.
This is my fourth trip and the first as summer hits. What a summer! The positives:
1. People are friendly and polite. Only a couple of drivers that make me say, "Go back to Los Angeles!"
2. Everything is so green here. Northern Idaho is like this, too. But the Boise area is completely brown right now except where irrigation has corrected the problem. That picture i took yesterday from what I hope will be my backyard really shows what the adjective verdant means.
4. Gasoline runs from $3.13 to $3.28 per gallon depending on location.
Downsides:
1. Hot and humid. Between May and September, I expect my daytime will either be indoors, in a car, or in my pool. Of course, right now in the Boise area, the situation is just about as bad. It is dryer but temperatures often exceed 100 degrees. Misery is similar.
2. Houses are different here. Most houses here have small windows. Even though electricity seems similar in price (loss of hydroelectric) they build as though every kilowatt is being rationed like your life depends on it. I think it is because they are generally poorer here.
3. Houses are often built with a colonial facade but interiors are quite similar. Lots of basements. Idaho has them also but not so abundantly. Partly this is using earth cooling. Partly this is hoping thr rare tornadoes will let you survive even without a purpose-built tornado shelter. The basement in the new house could be retrofitted into a combination fallout and tornado shelter will a lot of cinder blocks and some concrete. It has a toilet, sink, and shower. It could be turned into an expedient fallout shelter in a few hours, I think, but we are downwind of Oak Ridge National Laboratory so probably not very useful.
4. Those basements come with staircases that range from worrying to terrifying. They are narrow, steep, and in some cases there is nothing to prevrnt you from falling out on to the floor. Many of these would not be up to code if built today, but most building codes grandfather them in. If inspection report does not screech about these, we will spend the money to retrofit something safer.
5. The existing staircase has the correct run/rise ratio. Rebuild so the steps are less steep and end in a landing followed by a 180 degree turn and more steps to the bottom. Add studs from joists to floor on which sheet rock goes and another banister. It will be a little claustrophobic but less scary and safer, especially for the dogs.
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