Moving to BC, but where???

kevandkristie

New Member
Aug 12, 2006
6
0
1
Western Australia
Hey DavidB, wow, what a thorough and well thought out post!

You raise many good points and certainly offer some great suggestions.

I guess when I said BC, I meant Vancouver, but then didn't necessarily mean downtown Vancouver city, so called it BC if you know what I mean???

I lived in Calgary for a while and find it quite good, and I enjoyed the weather, I even spent a short time near Estevan in Saskatchewan where the weather is obviously harsh. Part of the reason for choosing to locate somewhere mild (and may only be for a while till we check things out and decide where we are comfortable as a family) is that my wife and kids are used to temperatures ranging from about 10 - 12c as a cold day to 40+c in summer, that is I'm not sure they are up for big sub zero temperatures straight off the cuff!

I'm sure there are plenty of magnificent places to live, but my thinking for starting out close to Vancouver city is that all of the facilities, ammenities and infrastructure that someone wanting to explore a new playland would need. I am going to do some browsing now on those other places you mentioned (Salmon Arm, Kelowna etc.. NOT TAIWAN!! By the way, since when do Salmon have arms??) and see what I can find out.

As for the work front, your right, I probably couldn't work as an Ambulance Paramedic, however the oil industry, especially offshore is far more forgiving being so international in structure. Worst case there are several other oil jobs I can do that pay fairly well if necessary and convert my qualifications over time.

Thanks so much for your insight- it has given me some new things to consider...

Cheers,
Kev.
 

..35

New Member
Nov 26, 2005
14
0
1
If you are lucky enough to have lots of cash and be able to live in Vancouver, the island or the okanagan, then you should also take your lifestyle into consideration. When I lived in Vancouver, even driving for hours for a day hike the hiking trails are packed with people. Fishing? Forget it.
I now live in an area of BC that has not been destroyed by people moving here from Alberta or Ontario. Affordable housing, 10 minute commute, amazing fishing, awesome hiking trials less then 30 minutes from my place and I can hike them all day long and not see other hikers. I can hit a moutain stream and fly fish all day and not have it ruined by an endless parade of people. Just me and the bears. Mountains, glaciers, rivers, lakes, they are all here. It's what my home town of Vernon used to be before Alberta and Ontario destroyed it.
I will never live in the lower mainland or vancouver island again.
 

kevandkristie

New Member
Aug 12, 2006
6
0
1
Western Australia
Hi all,

have started looking more at the Okanagan area - looks pretty good and good affordability for buying etc.. Haven't found too many rental listings though so not sure what the prospects are like with that...

..35 Where you are now sounds fantastic. Probably the sort of place we would like to settle once we have that first 6 months or so where you want to check everything out and do everything there is to do. Are you going to tell us where you are, or are you keeping it a secret so it doesn't get spoiled?

Regards,
Kevin
 

Gonzo

Electoral Member
Dec 5, 2004
997
1
18
Was Victoria, now Ottawa
I lived in Victoria and loved the city, but found work scarce. If you're going to be looking for a job I suggest Vancouver. If you're going to retire, Victoria.
 

Silkwhip

New Member
Nov 7, 2006
2
0
1
Where?

Hi! Look forward to having you as a BC resident!

Do you want to live in a city? What kind of climate are you looking for? I live in Summerland, BC, a beautiful place on Lake Okanagan. You can rent a house in the Okanagan Valley for your price range (not sure if you could in Vancouver or Victoria!. The Okanagan in about 200 miles as the crow flies from Vancouver, is not as rainy as the coast, nice beaches, ski hills... If you contact Royal Lepage Real Estate, in Penticton (about 30,000 ppl) and ask them about rentals, they can help. Have you done a search on rentals? Try Pentictonherald.ca and you can look!

Good luck!
 

talloola

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 14, 2006
19,576
113
63
Vancouver Island
employment?

my husband and I grew up in New Westminster, but when our children were teenagers we moved to Courtenay
on Vancouver Island. Depending on your line of work, this is the most wonderful area to live, weather is
great, golf all year, not crowded, good schools, and post seconday as well.
It's beautiful hear, you can fish, ski, or golf all on the one day if you wish.
We are close to Mt. Washington, close to ocean and lakes, our little city has all the shopping of the
big urban areas, but lower crime and more comfortable.


Good luck with your future.
 

talloola

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 14, 2006
19,576
113
63
Vancouver Island
not so

don't let anyone talk you into thinking that living on Vancouver Island isn't a good idea, because you
have to pay too much to travel to the mainland. If you live here, other than a hockey game, as the
other person mentioned, you won't need the mainland, as there is no reason to go there, unless
you want to be in gridlock, congestion, and take a long time to get from anywhere to anywhere.
I grew up on mainland, my husband fought the traffic for years, he would choose to travel 50 miles
to work here, than 10 miles on the mainland, we just got real tired of it.
There will be new hospital built here in the next couple of years, adding to the two that allready serve
Courtenay and Campbell River, it will be about half way between, so I would think there will a number
of new jobs available.
The average rental accomodation for 3 bed. suite, would be $1200 - 1500 per mo. and all rental areas
here are pleasant and clean, no slums.
There is a new modern freeway which can take you from Campbell River to Victoria in about 3-31/2 hrs,
as well as the beautiful original highway which travels along the ocean for the most part.
We have been on the island for 25 yrs now, and we still feel like were on vacation, just love it.
 

Karlin

Council Member
Jun 27, 2004
1,275
2
38
Welcome to Canada.

I would hope that you plan to AVOID a long commute - it is polluting and stressfull.

The coastal areas are warmer, but wetter. Come inland, come to the Kootenays.

The price range for housing is within your amounts. Some places like Trail have bungalows for as low as $50,000, I saw a story and a half bungalow near downtown Trail for $35,000 purchase price!!!! But no, Trail is polluted by the smelter there [although they reduced their pollution by 95% recently].

However, other Kootenay areas have small town wonderfull lifestyles and affordable homes and hopefully you can find work there.
 

Sohale

New Member
Dec 8, 2006
2
0
1
Hi there,

I have lived in Surrey, B.C. for over 10 years. Surrey can be a great place to live depending on where you want to live. I would strongly recommend Kelowna, B.C., Canada, if you have the money to invest in a bussiness. Because kelowna has a beautiful lake with tourists year long. Investing in a hotel or bussiness would be your best bet. Just regular work is also pretty good. The good thing about kelowna is that you can buy a house 4-6 bedroom house with backlane and all for a price around $275,000 to $350,000 and with a low mortgage of 4.9% to 5.2%, it's pretty affordable. But renting for the first 2-4 months would be good because that will give you and idea of your yearly cost for electricity, gas, insurance, healthcare, etc. is. Then you can work with that, considering that kelowna also has cheaper to rent homes with a population of around 100,000 people. It's not close to vancouver (5 hours drive) but it's kelowna's downtown is just as fun considering that it is run on tourism and retirees. If you want to live close to downtown vancouver, surrey would probably be best, considering that is called "the city of parks", you can find nice homes near sky train stations (35 minutes to vancouver) or a bridge for a good price. Surrey and Kelowna are great places to raise your family. Surrey offers houses with larger lots and house sizes than new west, burnaby, vancouver, richmond, etc. for an affordable price. It's and ideal time to invest in land or a house right now in B.C. because the real estate market is being driven by the 2010 Winter Olympics in Whistler. All of B.C. is experience a boom, with no signs of a bust (market downfall). If you you need more information on all this then just go to wikipedia.com and type in something on the left hand side search box (like surrey or kelowna or 2010 olympics).
 

Sohale

New Member
Dec 8, 2006
2
0
1
I forgot to tell you that in Kelowna you can go swimming in the lake, skiing, golfing, skating, bike riding on multiple biking routes, etc. all within 20 minutes of your location, anywhere in Kelowna. 20-25 minutes out of Kelowna will bring you to farms, this place has been awarded a bunch of times for its sweet cherries and World Famous Wines. Go to yahoo.com and click on images and then type in okanogan valley or kelowna or Lake okanogan and you will see beautiful pictures. Trust me, you cannot regret moving to kelown. There are like 50 small communities 10-30 minutes away from there, were you can buy land for under $50,000 as an investment property or something. You can also go camping and everything, there are campsites all of the district. Kelowna is the #1 desired place to live by Canadians. Even foreigners buyers are buying land in and around Kelowna.
 

Okanagan_Realtor

New Member
Jan 25, 2007
1
0
1
If you need some info....

Hi,
If you need some info. on the Best Place to live, (which I think is the Okanagan) sorry guys, and you need some info on properties......Let me know!:wave:
 

Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
21,155
149
63

From out my dirty front window.

You can't go wrong here. I can see the Coastal Mountain range and the entrance to Discovery Passage to watch the cruise ships May to October. My added benefit is the spa across the street. Sometimes the views walking in and out aren't hard on the eyes. Paradise I say.
 

L Gilbert

Winterized
Nov 30, 2006
23,738
107
63
71
50 acres in Kootenays BC
the-brights.net
It depends on whether you like city life or not. have work or not, etc.
I have a few acres here, takes a half hour to get into town, I don't have to eat and drink chemicals, listen to neighbors fight a few meters away from my bedroom, lotsa critters around for entertainment,I know and/or am friendly with everyone within a few kilometers, don't have drive-by shootings, theft of anything is rare (for some reason people like to take off with my number sign by the road), traffic is tolerable, lots of scenery, lake nearby, etc. But you don't want to move here unless you bring your work with you.
 

mavric772

New Member
Feb 22, 2008
2
0
1
I need some help!!

Hi,
If you need some info. on the Best Place to live, (which I think is the Okanagan) sorry guys, and you need some info on properties......Let me know!:wave:

Hi,

I'm from Windsor Ontario. I lived in Creek Side near Whistler BC back in 1998 for a year and a half "LOVED IT", but got depressed in the winter time due to the lack of sunlight and the grey clouds with all the rain. I've been reading allot of articles and already made several trips back with my girlfriend to the Okanogan reign. I loved Osoyoss and Summerland. I've been looking for some acreage to build a house and hunt, but a lot just outside the city would do. My price range is like $50,000 and all the properties I researched are no ware near that. If you could point me in the right direction it would be greatly appreciated. I'm a robot programmer and my future wife is a math teacher and has been in Windsor for 11 years. I love the outdoors and think BC in general is Gods gift to Canadians. P.S. the first thing I'd do is buy an ATV and boot around some awesome trail with my fishing pole.

Thanks,

Joe
 

karrie

OogedyBoogedy
Jan 6, 2007
27,780
285
83
bliss
Hi,

I'm from Windsor Ontario. I lived in Creek Side near Whistler BC back in 1998 for a year and a half "LOVED IT", but got depressed in the winter time due to the lack of sunlight and the grey clouds with all the rain. I've been reading allot of articles and already made several trips back with my girlfriend to the Okanogan reign. I loved Osoyoss and Summerland. I've been looking for some acreage to build a house and hunt, but a lot just outside the city would do. My price range is like $50,000 and all the properties I researched are no ware near that. If you could point me in the right direction it would be greatly appreciated. I'm a robot programmer and my future wife is a math teacher and has been in Windsor for 11 years. I love the outdoors and think BC in general is Gods gift to Canadians. P.S. the first thing I'd do is buy an ATV and boot around some awesome trail with my fishing pole.

Thanks,

Joe

50 000 MIGHT get you an acreage in Saskatchewan. But not for long. Trying to buy anywhere desirable in Western Canada for 50 000 is an exercise in futility. Best of luck.