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The Water Cooler
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Thinking of moving to beautiful Oklahoma
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<blockquote data-quote="dennishoddy" data-source="post: 3747330" data-attributes="member: 5412"><p>I live in North Central Ok. Basically 100 miles from Oklahoma City, Tulsa or Wichita Ks. </p><p>Small town of 28,000 that is typical of cities of that size. Good schools. Mostly conservative. </p><p>If you're into hunting/fishing, just about anywhere in Ok is a mecca for that. </p><p>If you're into semi urban living, OKC or Tulsa would be the place to move. Lots of suburbs and subdivisions on the outskirts with a short drive to the city center. </p><p>What's amazing is that the OKC area in the central part of the state gets much more snow than the northern counties where we live. We rarely get snow while the central gets dumped on occasionally. It's cleared up in a day or two.</p><p>Personally, I can't live in the city. We are in the country and visit the city only when necessary.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dennishoddy, post: 3747330, member: 5412"] I live in North Central Ok. Basically 100 miles from Oklahoma City, Tulsa or Wichita Ks. Small town of 28,000 that is typical of cities of that size. Good schools. Mostly conservative. If you're into hunting/fishing, just about anywhere in Ok is a mecca for that. If you're into semi urban living, OKC or Tulsa would be the place to move. Lots of suburbs and subdivisions on the outskirts with a short drive to the city center. What's amazing is that the OKC area in the central part of the state gets much more snow than the northern counties where we live. We rarely get snow while the central gets dumped on occasionally. It's cleared up in a day or two. Personally, I can't live in the city. We are in the country and visit the city only when necessary. [/QUOTE]
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Thinking of moving to beautiful Oklahoma
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