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Old 11-09-2020, 05:46 PM
 
29 posts, read 28,226 times
Reputation: 13

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Thank you for everyone so far who has responded, thats why I posted to get real world expectations.
1. I know its expensive, but it is less expensive than CA all around, it may not be much but its less expensive and a different lifestyle than southern california which is what we want.
2. We are not true CA natives, I grew up on the east coast and we've lived there and Colorado so we are experienced with snow and harsh winters, we are looking forward to the snow and winter.
3. There will be a culture shock im sure but were a resilient bunch and im sure well adapt.
4. Regarding driving, id like to be around an hour commute but understandably it can vary greatly in the snow and the hospital would understand that if im called in but I work night shift so I will generally be going opposite of traffic.
5. Regarding utilities, I understand there will be similarities but I said the average where as I've gotten bills upwards of 6-800 depending on the year and the place we lived in, Temps up into the triple digits and an old ac system = high costs.
6. I only mention downtown hospitals because of their pay, which I believe is higher but also because of their ranking with certain specialties, my wife has some medical issues so we need a good hospital/health benefits, im not adverse to other hospitals just has to have good benefits.
Here's a few houses that I've found and why my thought process was what it was(all right around an hour commute, and I dont mind using toll roads):
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/5...57523501_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1...56845628_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/4...56580127_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/5...57175795_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1...57123413_zpid/

Those are all 8/10 schools or higher and we also considered just buying land and having the house built.
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Old 11-09-2020, 06:05 PM
 
23,764 posts, read 18,882,064 times
Reputation: 10888
Quote:
Originally Posted by twistedx View Post
Thank you for everyone so far who has responded, thats why I posted to get real world expectations.
1. I know its expensive, but it is less expensive than CA all around, it may not be much but its less expensive and a different lifestyle than southern california which is what we want.
2. We are not true CA natives, I grew up on the east coast and we've lived there and Colorado so we are experienced with snow and harsh winters, we are looking forward to the snow and winter.
3. There will be a culture shock im sure but were a resilient bunch and im sure well adapt.
4. Regarding driving, id like to be around an hour commute but understandably it can vary greatly in the snow and the hospital would understand that if im called in but I work night shift so I will generally be going opposite of traffic.
5. Regarding utilities, I understand there will be similarities but I said the average where as I've gotten bills upwards of 6-800 depending on the year and the place we lived in, Temps up into the triple digits and an old ac system = high costs.
6. I only mention downtown hospitals because of their pay, which I believe is higher but also because of their ranking with certain specialties, my wife has some medical issues so we need a good hospital/health benefits, im not adverse to other hospitals just has to have good benefits.
Here's a few houses that I've found and why my thought process was what it was(all right around an hour commute, and I dont mind using toll roads):
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/5...57523501_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1...56845628_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/4...56580127_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/5...57175795_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1...57123413_zpid/

Those are all 8/10 schools or higher and we also considered just buying land and having the house built.
Without seeing the houses themselves, those are all good areas except the Wayland one is on a main road (Franklin one "kind" of is as well) and I'm not personally a fan of that Mansfield location although it's fine. All but the Wayland house will push you beyond an hour in any kind of traffic, although driving in for the night shift you might be OK. Going home in the morning could be a different story.
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Old 11-09-2020, 06:11 PM
 
18,740 posts, read 33,459,496 times
Reputation: 37360
If OP indeed works night shift as posted, that changes the whole picture for any commute, whether in Boston or elsewhere. I worked nights for many years and never had a commuting issue no matter what. Totally different story than normal business hours or even hospital day shifts.
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Old 11-09-2020, 06:14 PM
 
23,764 posts, read 18,882,064 times
Reputation: 10888
When do most night shifts let out in Boston??? If it's at 7, I can't imagine not hitting traffic.
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Old 11-09-2020, 06:31 PM
 
Location: Baltimore
21,755 posts, read 12,907,551 times
Reputation: 11298
Quote:
Originally Posted by twistedx View Post
Thank you for everyone so far who has responded, thats why I posted to get real world expectations.
1. I know its expensive, but it is less expensive than CA all around, it may not be much but its less expensive and a different lifestyle than southern california which is what we want.
2. We are not true CA natives, I grew up on the east coast and we've lived there and Colorado so we are experienced with snow and harsh winters, we are looking forward to the snow and winter.
3. There will be a culture shock im sure but were a resilient bunch and im sure well adapt.
4. Regarding driving, id like to be around an hour commute but understandably it can vary greatly in the snow and the hospital would understand that if im called in but I work night shift so I will generally be going opposite of traffic.
5. Regarding utilities, I understand there will be similarities but I said the average where as I've gotten bills upwards of 6-800 depending on the year and the place we lived in, Temps up into the triple digits and an old ac system = high costs.
6. I only mention downtown hospitals because of their pay, which I believe is higher but also because of their ranking with certain specialties, my wife has some medical issues so we need a good hospital/health benefits, im not adverse to other hospitals just has to have good benefits.
Here's a few houses that I've found and why my thought process was what it was(all right around an hour commute, and I dont mind using toll roads):
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/5...57523501_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1...56845628_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/4...56580127_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/5...57175795_zpid/
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1...57123413_zpid/

Those are all 8/10 schools or higher and we also considered just buying land and having the house built.
The first 3 are actually in the Providence Metro, not even in the Boston MSA. The first one is especially far, too far?

Duxbury is quite long commute but at night it should be fine minus the lack of lighting on Route 3.

The last home is one I highlighted as your best option. Rather small home though IMO. 1300 soft. 6 people-snowed in, meh.

And yes Boston night shifts typically let out at 7AM and you’re likely to face traffic in most any direction.

All in all? Id simply recommend you move to a very similar state that is cheaper. Connecticut is cheaper and noticeably slower pace of life. Anything you want in MA-CT has it. I’d recommend the Hartford or New Haven area Yale University hospital or Hartford Hospital are good starting points. But there are others.

But really, your not even going to be close to Boston and you could work in the Hartford CT area, live anywhere around the city and make it to Boston in 1.5 hours during off hours. IMO it’s much more practical and it’d be a calmer lifestyle. I spent 4 years in the area.

We’re just trying to level with you. I’d take all this advice quite seriously. We’re not trying to be mean it’s just what your looking for is slim pickings in MA and you’re really not gonna get a change in pace of life. This is a dense urbanized high cost state. If anything your free time will be significantly less due to commute, shoveling and distance from Boston.
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Old 11-09-2020, 06:33 PM
 
18,740 posts, read 33,459,496 times
Reputation: 37360
Quote:
Originally Posted by massnative71 View Post
When do most night shifts let out in Boston??? If it's at 7, I can't imagine not hitting traffic.
Yes, 7 or 7:30. But you're going against traffic on both ends of the commute. I'd get out of my job at 7:30 and sail west on Rt. 2 and it would be packed bumper to bumper on the other side going in towards town.
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Old 11-09-2020, 06:44 PM
 
Location: Baltimore
21,755 posts, read 12,907,551 times
Reputation: 11298
Quote:
Originally Posted by brightdoglover View Post
Yes, 7 or 7:30. But you're going against traffic on both ends of the commute. I'd get out of my job at 7:30 and sail west on Rt. 2 and it would be packed bumper to bumper on the other side going in towards town.
Yea just this doesn’t make sense as a move. If you want cheaper and slower pace of life. And something like Mass but your gonna have to be an hour from Boston? Might as well be in Connecticut. Far more options. Am I wrong?
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Old 11-09-2020, 07:11 PM
 
29 posts, read 28,226 times
Reputation: 13
Quote:
Originally Posted by massnative71 View Post
Without seeing the houses themselves, those are all good areas except the Wayland one is on a main road (Franklin one "kind" of is as well) and I'm not personally a fan of that Mansfield location although it's fine. All but the Wayland house will push you beyond an hour in any kind of traffic, although driving in for the night shift you might be OK. Going home in the morning could be a different story.
What do you mean "main road"? How big/lanes we talking? I've lived and grew up a stones throw from 2 lane to 6 lanes busy roads.

Most hospitals start at 7pm, so I'd be commuting around 5pm, which is generally when people are leaving the areas im driving to so the traffic is less
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Old 11-09-2020, 07:12 PM
 
23,764 posts, read 18,882,064 times
Reputation: 10888
Quote:
Originally Posted by brightdoglover View Post
Yes, 7 or 7:30. But you're going against traffic on both ends of the commute. I'd get out of my job at 7:30 and sail west on Rt. 2 and it would be packed bumper to bumper on the other side going in towards town.
Really??? I guess Rte. 2 is unique in that sense, as most roads out of Boston see significant outbound traffic as well these days. How long ago was this? Traffic had gotten substantially worse over the last decade. Also I can imagine it not being too bad if you worked at say Mt. Auburn and headed out Rte. 2 in the a.m., but if you are coming from Longwood there's quite a bit of mess to get through on the way to Rte. 2.
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Old 11-09-2020, 07:14 PM
 
23,764 posts, read 18,882,064 times
Reputation: 10888
Quote:
Originally Posted by twistedx View Post
What do you mean "main road"? How big/lanes we talking? I've lived and grew up a stones throw from 2 lane to 6 lanes busy roads.

Most hospitals start at 7pm, so I'd be commuting around 5pm, which is generally when people are leaving the areas im driving to so the traffic is less
Meaning 2 lanes but with a double yellow line down the middle (a through road as opposed to a neighborhood/side road.). Rush hour in Boston starts around 3:30 (earlier Fridays) and lasts till around 7, although you can hit traffic at any hour of the day.
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