viewing ownly Posted Wednesday at 05:21 AM Posted Wednesday at 05:21 AM For those forum members who are Canadian citizens, I'm asking your take in particular. Is the consensus "We don't want you - stay where you are, please", or "Come on up! We have a larger percentage of friendlier people, available jobs, and free health care after you establish residency for a certain amount of time". Moving is doable without air travel, language isn't a barrier (except Quebec), and you drive on the right hand side of the road, too. (I still cannot believe a contestant on "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire" got that wrong, like they somehow thought the roads all did a criss-cross when you entered the country).
CuriousByNature Posted Wednesday at 12:05 PM Posted Wednesday at 12:05 PM I think most of us would welcome people moving up here from the US. We are far from a perfect country, however. The cost of living in major cities like Toronto and Vancouver is pretty high, though lower than Manhattan. Universal medical is great, but we have long waits for treatment and many people cannot find a family doctor. Canadians are pretty friendly, but that also depends on the region. I find almost everyone is polite, but not always warm and engaging like a lot of Americans tend to be. BSR, thomas, + Charlie and 1 other 2 2
mike carey Posted Wednesday at 12:50 PM Posted Wednesday at 12:50 PM I can understand that for some Americans, the idea of Canada is enticing. Less drama, the idea of a friendlier life. But moving is not easy, there are hurdles to jump, and no guarantees of being able to move. If you could move easily it may be a simpler choice, to move for now hoping that the things you think you need to escape might cease to be an issue and you could go back. Your own country always has a pull on you, emotionally, practically, families. Five years ago, I was disillusioned by the way I saw Australia going, and in the glow that New Zealand held across the ditch, there was the kernel of an idea to move. For us, moving there is far easier than it is for Americans to move north. We can simply move, no questions, 'register' as a resident, and in five years obtain a passport. It's more complex for Kiwis to go the other way, but for us it's easy. The pandemic snuffed out any idea of doing that, neither of us could at all. Five years later, the tone of Australia has changed. If I had moved, the pull of home would have been strong. I may not have regretted the move. But I do not regret now that I couldn't. But I could never, ever, ever have cheered for the All Blacks. Canada may have an allure now, but today in America is not forever. Escape may feel urgent in this moment, but whatever has changed, much remains the same. There is a rhythm of life, moving will disrupt it, the idea of change may promise something better, but it will be different in ways that you will not know until you try it. That can be a caution as much as an objective. + Charlie, + Vegas_Millennial, thomas and 2 others 4 1
+ sync Posted Wednesday at 01:18 PM Posted Wednesday at 01:18 PM (edited) In the interest of any cultural misunderstanding, "All Blacks" is the name of New Zealand's national rugby union team for their all black uniforms. Edited Wednesday at 01:20 PM by sync + Just Sayin, mike carey, pubic_assistance and 1 other 1 1 2
mike carey Posted Wednesday at 01:20 PM Posted Wednesday at 01:20 PM 9 minutes ago, sync said: In the interest of any cultural misunderstanding, "All Blacks" is the name of New Zealand's national rugby union team. Oh. Yes, it is. For some of us that's such basic knowledge that it didn't occur to me that it wasn't obvious. My bad. And in a play on that name, the national football team of Aotearoa is the All Whites, and the basketball team is the Tall Blacks. + sync, thomas, + Charlie and 1 other 3 1
+ José Soplanucas Posted Wednesday at 02:25 PM Posted Wednesday at 02:25 PM Not to Canada, but I am glad I left. BSR and thomas 1 1
mike carey Posted Wednesday at 02:32 PM Posted Wednesday at 02:32 PM 2 minutes ago, José Soplanucas said: Not to Canada, but I am glad I left. Yes, but you had the pull of a home country as well. Even the idea of Christmas in winter is foreign, and it draws us back to the south, where that holiday falls in what for us is its appointed season. Moving from the US to Canada doesn't bring that sense of dislocation. + Charlie and + José Soplanucas 2
BSR Posted Wednesday at 09:15 PM Posted Wednesday at 09:15 PM The biggest livability factor for many is the ratio of median income to median home price. As a general rule, median home price 3x median income is considered affordable. In Canada the ratio is a whopping 9x! It’s lousy in the US as well, 5.8x, but not quite as backbreaking as our northern neighbor. I got ratios only for Vancouver 12.7x, Toronto 10.7x, and Montreal & Calgary 6x. To compare: LA 10x, San Francisco 8.5x, New York 6.8x, Boston 6x. But cities in the Midwest are much more affordable: Oklahoma City 3.1x, Cleveland 2.7x, Detroit 1.9x. Many millennials are frustrated they can’t afford to buy, and many Gen Z are still living with their parents. If home ownership matters to you and you’re not making a high finance or tech bro salary, do your due diligence before making the move. pubic_assistance, + Charlie and + Vegas_Millennial 1 2
viewing ownly Posted Thursday at 03:27 AM Author Posted Thursday at 03:27 AM Thank you all for this - and an overseas rugby education, to boot! I was eyeing the city of Brandon, due to its close proximity to the U.S. border, and its very low crime rate for such a large population. I recently saw a coffee house in Brandon hosting a heavy metal singer from my hair band glory days of the early 1990s, so I know that there's an existing music scene. Many of my favorite artists are from there - I've requested a Sam Roberts Band song to be played at my memorial service. For the immediate future, I need to work on me, clean up my place to make it sellable, and likely wait until the Winter of '26 to see where things are at with the financial state of myself and both countries at that time. I have confidence that we'll still be separate, unless the ghost of James K. Polk intervenes.
pubic_assistance Posted Thursday at 11:46 AM Posted Thursday at 11:46 AM 21 hours ago, mike carey said: Even the idea of Christmas in winter is foreign I've been in the Tropics a few times over Christmas Holiday. (Having visited my family before or after Christmas day). Its always comical as a NorthEasterner to see Santa suits, Pine trees and Fake snow around Plastic reindeer..all adjacent to palm trees and 90 degree weather. On one hand, it was pleasant to know I was avoiding the cold weather, but on the other the holiday didnt feel "real". A move to Canada for most people in the Northern US would feel familiar since most Canadian cities are WAY south in Canada and many arent even as far north as Maine in the US. + Vegas_Millennial 1
+ SirBillybob Posted Thursday at 03:55 PM Posted Thursday at 03:55 PM (edited) If you are rich and seek a spousal sponsorship, I’m very high maintenance and require a non-prenup pledge. If you apply for entry through the Home Support Worker program, I’m very high maintenance and you must buy your own Pledge. Edited Thursday at 03:56 PM by SirBillybob thomas, + ApexNomad and + Charlie 3
BSR Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago On 8/21/2025 at 8:46 AM, pubic_assistance said: On one hand, it was pleasant to know I was avoiding the cold weather, but on the other the holiday didnt feel "real". A move to Canada for most people in the Northern US would feel familiar since most Canadian cities are WAY south in Canada and many arent even as far north as Maine in the US. Factoid I heard recently: 24 US states are farther north (if you take the state’s northernmost point) than the city of Windsor ON. pubic_assistance, + Charlie and CuriousByNature 2 1
pubic_assistance Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago 5 minutes ago, BSR said: 24 US states are farther north (if you take the state’s northernmost point) than the city of Windsor ON. Washington State, Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, North and South Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin and Michigan, New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine are all in line with or North of Toronto. + Charlie 1
+ SirBillybob Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago If you are in California wine country you are in line with Canada.
+ Vegas_Millennial Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago (edited) 5 hours ago, SirBillybob said: If you are in California wine country you are in line with Canada. I thought all of California was whine country. 😉 Edited 13 hours ago by Vegas_Millennial CuriousByNature and pubic_assistance 2
BSR Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago 3 hours ago, SirBillybob said: If you are in California wine country you are in line with Canada. I interpret “in line with” as “at the same latitude.” I googled it because that didn’t sound right. The northernmost point in California wine country (northern edge of Mendocino County) is at 40 degrees N whereas the southernmost point in Canada is Point Pelee ON at 41.9 degrees N, a distance of 130 miles. If you’re in Napa or Sonoma, the heart of California wine country, the distance is 240-250 miles. But if by “in line with” you meant “near,” in the grand global scheme, 130 miles isn’t much. + Charlie, pubic_assistance and + SirBillybob 2 1
mike carey Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago Fact not factoid, if you travel due south from Detroit, the first other country you reach is Canada. (Windsor, to be precise.) + Charlie, + poolboy48220, pubic_assistance and 1 other 3 1
+ SirBillybob Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 11 hours ago, Vegas_Millennial said: I thought all of California was whine country. 😉 Don’t pelee on California.
+ SirBillybob Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago (edited) 11 hours ago, BSR said: I interpret “in line with” as “at the same latitude.” I googled it because that didn’t sound right. The northernmost point in California wine country (northern edge of Mendocino County) is at 40 degrees N whereas the southernmost point in Canada is Point Pelee ON at 41.9 degrees N, a distance of 130 miles. If you’re in Napa or Sonoma, the heart of California wine country, the distance is 240-250 miles. But if by “in line with” you meant “near,” in the grand global scheme, 130 miles isn’t much. Thanks for the longitudinal elaboration. 😛 I meant similar latitudes. Edited 3 hours ago by SirBillybob
mike carey Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 37 minutes ago, SirBillybob said: Thanks for the longitudinal elaboration. 😛 I meant similar latitudes. You've given yourself quite some latitude in you response. + Charlie 1
+ SirBillybob Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 9 minutes ago, mike carey said: You've given yourself quite some latitude in you response. YMMV.
+ poolboy48220 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 9 hours ago, mike carey said: Fact not factoid, if you travel due south from Detroit, the first other country you reach is Canada. (Windsor, to be precise.) Very true. Windsor is close enough (13 miles from my house to the border) that the radio often reports the weather there, and refers to it as "South of the Border". Honestly that joke has gotten old. + Charlie 1
+ Charlie Posted 42 minutes ago Posted 42 minutes ago Latitude simply refers to distances north or south of the Equator. Chicago and Rome Italy, are approximately the same distance north of the equator, but I don't think many people would consider them similar in climate. which is dependent on many other factors as well. CuriousByNature and pubic_assistance 1 1
pubic_assistance Posted 17 minutes ago Posted 17 minutes ago 22 minutes ago, Charlie said: Chicago and Rome Italy, are approximately the same distance north of the equator, but I don't think many people would consider them similar in climate. which is dependent on many other factors as well. Exactly. My parents live 150 miles due West from me. But I live in NYC on the coast and they live on the other side of the Poconos. So even though we are on the exact same Lattitude, it can be snowing at my parents house, while I am simultaneously enjoying a warm sunny fall day in NYC. + Charlie 1
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