Question:
What states get little to no snow?
tartanheart
2011-03-01 13:42:25 UTC
I am looking for a new place to live. I have lived in Wisconsin for a long time. I am ready to move to a place that gets very little to no snow and stays relatively warm during the winter. I am looking for a place that stays warm but doesn't get to hot and/or does not have a lot of humidity. I have considered a number of places but have only ruled out one, Texas.

I like being around driving distance a metropolitan area. Big cities that have a lot to offer. But I like living in the country or small towns with a good sense of community. A community that has good schools, friendly neighborhoods, low crime, exciting things to do.

Anyone have any ideas?

I have considered Honolulu. If anyone knows a great place to live outside of Honolulu that would be great too.
Eight answers:
anonymous
2011-03-01 13:43:37 UTC
Florida actually gets less snow than Texas. It snowed two winters in a row here in Austin!!! I would say either Hawaii or Florida
RoVale
2011-03-01 22:05:16 UTC
Your best bet would be southern Arizona or New Mexico. It does not snow much there and it stays fairly warm in the winter although summers can be very hot. Neither area has a lot of humidity. I'm in southern New Mexico right now and our humidity level is around 18%. One odd thing about living in an area with low humidity is the lack of dew. I can park my car outside all night and in the morning, it will be just as dry as when I first parked it.
pedro76
2011-03-01 14:58:44 UTC
Your own ideas sound good to me.Florida has little snow but then it now has bad air from the gulf oil disaster and it is likely to be there a long time.Hawaii has expenses of extra transport from 48 area.Hawaii has a volcano area to avoid.It may get tsunamis but not real cold weather.
anonymous
2011-03-01 15:30:03 UTC
Southwest from Bakersfield/LA to Santa Fe. Anywhere else either snows or is too humid.



Almost anywhere in the US above 32 North can get snow, and the Gulf would be too humid for you.
?
2011-03-01 13:45:54 UTC
Try California, there are many suburban areas that have beautiful weather and are not far from big cities. Florida may also be a good choice, but it is humid there sometimes.
Alex
2011-03-01 13:42:58 UTC
Arizona
anonymous
2016-04-28 01:51:56 UTC
Sounds like Arizona, but alas Arizona's population is about 6.4 million.
anonymous
2011-03-03 03:14:00 UTC
Honolulu isn't a state. Hawaii is.


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