Aussie's getting told to holiday in CALIFORNIA

tricka

Active Member
Hahahaha i been noticing in the last two weeks there is advertisments popping up on the telly for us to go and holiday in cali....holiday, fuck as soon as i can pack my grow room up and have enough money, i'd move in a heartbeat, fuck the holiday, i just wanna legally grow pot!!! who else in Australia would apply for MMJ card if our country was to decrim this beautiful plant called cannabis

i wanna know?
 

Snow Crash

Well-Known Member
I lived with a few Aussies when I worked for a ski resort in Colorado. They like to import people from all over and give them a place to live and a decent wage for a season if you like. You get a season pass and all the snowboarding you'd like.

The trade off is that you miss out on summer...

Endless winter!
 

tricka

Active Member
yeah sounds great! but a year is a short time when your having fun, i got two mates that do instructing work in japan in our summer boarding all year round, just hopping fom cap to caps all over the world......

nah i wanna do it propally, live and move in for permanant! maybe B.C maybe????
 

Grumpy Old Dreamer

Well-Known Member
Hahahaha i been noticing in the last two weeks there is advertisments popping up on the telly for us to go and holiday in cali....holiday, fuck as soon as i can pack my grow room up and have enough money, i'd move in a heartbeat, fuck the holiday, i just wanna legally grow pot!!! who else in Australia would apply for MMJ card if our country was to decrim this beautiful plant called cannabis

i wanna know?
Medical??

Fuck that, I have no medical reason to smoke MJ - and if it was decriminalized then why bother providing your details to some government controlled data bank.
 

tricka

Active Member
Medical??

Fuck that, I have no medical reason to smoke MJ - and if it was decriminalized then why bother providing your details to some government controlled data bank.
Then im sure you would like to grow it legally.....no? you can supply your mates who medically' need to smoke it, its all paper talk anyway, you love ya dope and i know ya do, medically...I'm sure we can come with an answer for you to smoke ;)"
 

Stonetech

Well-Known Member
yeah sounds great! but a year is a short time when your having fun, i got two mates that do instructing work in japan in our summer boarding all year round, just hopping fom cap to caps all over the world......

nah i wanna do it propally, live and move in for permanant! maybe B.C maybe????
All the ski resorts up here in CAN hire aussies as well, especially Whistler, B.C. It would give you an in. Once yer in who knows where it might lead. Its not decriminalized but everyones doin it anyway.

Hey i got an idea, maybe we can swap identities! I'll move to stralia (hopefully you live on the gold coast) and you can live in B.C. and grow heaps of bud.:-P
 

tricka

Active Member
All the ski resorts up here in CAN hire aussies as well, especially Whistler, B.C. It would give you an in. Once yer in who knows where it might lead. Its not decriminalized but everyones doin it anyway.

Hey i got an idea, maybe we can swap identities! I'll move to stralia (hopefully you live on the gold coast) and you can live in B.C. and grow heaps of bud.:-P
hahaha whats so good about the gold coast....oh yeah titties!!!! im down in melbourne, thought about that for while, but i would love just to do a big move, fuck me mates, just me the Mrs and the dog, all growing pot the less people you know, the more chance you can deck ya whole house out!!
 

Stonetech

Well-Known Member
hahaha whats so good about the gold coast....oh yeah titties!!!! im down in melbourne, thought about that for while, but i would love just to do a big move, fuck me mates, just me the Mrs and the dog, all growing pot the less people you know, the more chance you can deck ya whole house out!!
I couldn't trade Vancouver for Melbourne, the beaches and overcast sky are the same. When i was in melbourne it fuckin snowed! Sorry, but I'm looking to upgrade.:-P

Big moves are hard when you have a family, easier to do when your young and single. Doesn't mean a guy can't dream though.
 

Snow Crash

Well-Known Member
As a Californian, to an Australian - if you like to surf and are not a "big city" person, then, I'd suggest moving to the Central Coast of California.

This is the area south of San Francisco around the Monterey Bay. I'm from Santa Cruz and the area there is the right kind of laid back place. It is expensive to live in (as is all of California) but compared to Australia I hear it's about the same. If you want a perfect spot, check out: Pleasure Point (google it). It is at the end of 41st Ave, on the cusp of Soquel and Capitola, about 5 miles southeast of Santa Cruz. Everything on the beach there, from 41st Ave, down to about 16th Ave, is going to be affordable to live in. Santa Cruz is the kind of place where it's just as fast to get around on your bike. The hills are a bitch... But it's not like San Francisco or anything. The Cannabis scene there is fucking legit. They grow 'em tall up there in the Redwoods.

You can then use this as a spring board to check out Northern California and Southern California. I have family that live all over California and it's kinda tough to pick a favorite place. I like the central region. Santa Cruz County is the only place on the planet to have a rain forest, salt marshes, beaches/ocean, inland sand/desert, complex river systems (Southernmost river that the Salmon still spawn in), etc, etc. It has damn near every ecosystem on the planet contained in a 100km square area. Include the Monterey Bay in the equation (the aquarium is bad ass)... Many people who live in the Santa Cruz area commute about 45 minutes to San Jose (the silicon valley) to work at places like Intel, Symantec, Adobe, nVidia, Yahoo, eBay, etc. There's a lot of money in the area to be had if you have some technical skills. The Santa Cruz Boardwalk will help people get situated and work for a seasonal work during the summer at a low/reasonable rate also.

Anyway. That's what I'd suggest. Not like Santa Cruz needs a lot more people but they are generally friendly - especially to travelers. Just steer clear of the mexicans :)
 

chillwills

Well-Known Member
Hey Tricka! I happen to be in love with California. Ive been trying to move there for years. Growing up in Las Vegas I had many many visits to cali.

However I definitly would move to Northern California.

If you decide on Southern Cali I will warn you: There are PHONIES everywhere! But those are mostly the people who were attracted to Hollywood/LA.
But still tons of cool people.
 

tricka

Active Member
As a Californian, to an Australian - if you like to surf and are not a "big city" person, then, I'd suggest moving to the Central Coast of California. Just steer clear of the mexicans :)
Hey there Snowy ;) how are ya? thanks for the indepth reply, after reading this i will get on the google machine and do that search...i'm only just realing starting to learn where some of the smaller cities are located around the differents states of America, names i've heard all my life but dont know where they lie in respect to their capital....juz lazyness i guess not to get an Atlas out and have a geeze, everynow and then when im really blazed, me and the Mrs curle up on the couch and switch on the 'world globe' we have on the side table, it has high ridges where all the mountain ranges are and it also shows all the currents of the oceans, mad fun to spin it and dream about what our lives would be like if we were native to the spot we just randomly picked.....Santa cruz sounds like a lovely place....and yes i do love my wide open beaches but i most prefer the bush or brush or wilderness or what ever you guys call it, so being able to have all those diff ecosystems covering that area must be treat.....im a keen fisherman and bushman, dont shoot cos i dont own a licience or gun, i have fun most wkends motorbike riding in the warmer weather and a mix of skiing and motorbiking (Trails) in the winter.
Ive heard of the sillicone valley and i would interested in seeing the vast open spaces and their factories, Im a boilermaker steel fabricater by trade and work in the construction industry, so seeing big builds excites me!!

??? Are the Mex's crazy ???
 

Snow Crash

Well-Known Member
Hey there Snowy ;) how are ya? thanks for the indepth reply, after reading this i will get on the google machine and do that search...i'm only just realing starting to learn where some of the smaller cities are located around the differents states of America, names i've heard all my life but dont know where they lie in respect to their capital....juz lazyness i guess not to get an Atlas out and have a geeze, everynow and then when im really blazed, me and the Mrs curle up on the couch and switch on the 'world globe' we have on the side table, it has high ridges where all the mountain ranges are and it also shows all the currents of the oceans, mad fun to spin it and dream about what our lives would be like if we were native to the spot we just randomly picked.....Santa cruz sounds like a lovely place....and yes i do love my wide open beaches but i most prefer the bush or brush or wilderness or what ever you guys call it, so being able to have all those diff ecosystems covering that area must be treat.....im a keen fisherman and bushman, dont shoot cos i dont own a licience or gun, i have fun most wkends motorbike riding in the warmer weather and a mix of skiing and motorbiking (Trails) in the winter.
Ive heard of the sillicone valley and i would interested in seeing the vast open spaces and their factories, Im a boilermaker steel fabricater by trade and work in the construction industry, so seeing big builds excites me!!

??? Are the Mex's crazy ???
Good to be talking with you.

I grew up in the Santa Cruz mountains, which is basically the Southern most tip of a very large North American Redwood forest. My backyard consisted of mountains, trees hundreds of feet tall, springs and streams, and the most diverse Salamander population on the planet (little tidbit there, learn something everyday). If you have seen the movie Return of the Jedi then you know exactly what my area looks like. The tree-top village for the Ewoks was staged in a spot about 1km from my home.

The best part about living there was that in 15 minutes down Hwy. 9 I could be standing on the beach in Santa Cruz. It is where the wetsuit was invented for a reason... but I still would body surf that 62 degree water (on a good day) all over. In about 3 hours I could be on any of a number of ski resorts. Traffic and weather permitting, 4 hours gets you to just about any ski resort in California. I'm talking about Dodge Ridge, Kirkwood, Squaw Valley, Heavenly, Sierra Summit, Sierra at Tahoe, Mammoth Mountain, Diamond Peak, Northstar at Tahoe, Sugar Bowl, Donner, Boreal, Bear Valley, and probably others I haven't been too...

For the dirt biking enthusiast in you, check out the Hollister Hills. In the central valley of CA, around Hollister, Salinas, Los Banos, and South of the San Luis Reservoir there is quite a bit of open and unspoiled land. Not really being used for anything, maybe cows somewhere on thousands of acres of grass and sparsely placed trees. I imagine the rolling hills and flat valleys of grass that grows tall in the spring and turns gold in the summer is somewhat familiar to you.

The only negative I have to say about the place is the traffic. The greater Bay Area (including Santa Cruz, Oakland, San Francisco, and Gilroy) contains some nearly 15 million people spread out over a large area. I think the key is to live on the edge of that "urban sprawl" near the still beautiful places so that you can still utilize the economy of the area as well as find all the thing you like to do.

California... It really is the bomb. From the lakes, to the cities, and the coastline... Hell, it is the 6th largest economy in the world, and it's only one of fifty states and it is gorgeous. They charge you to live there though. Sales tax is at like 10% in some areas. And they tax your earnings a good 35% by the time you get them.

Basically, you honestly only get about 50% of what you earn... Aaaaannnnndddd you have to pay for one of the highest costs of living in the world. This, and the declining infrastructure, are why I actually chose to leave California and locate myself further North in Oregon. Portland is a very nice place, the coast area and the skiing are also available. Intel, Nike, Google, and other large companies employ a great number of people here. The cost of living here is about 75% of what it is in California and you don't have to pay crazy sales taxes (they take about 40% of your earnings though).

I think if you wanted to move stateside you should look into getting a job and a work visa. The seasonal summer work is a good stepping stone to get all the paperwork handled. I wish you the best of luck in your travels.

Edit: The Mexicans in California don't really consider themselves Californian. There is a definite sub culture centralized around gang life mentality which is extremely dangerous to get involved with. I would never say that every Hispanic person in the state is like this (like the Russians in Sacramento being violent and intoxicated 24/7) but in Santa Cruz it's just better to give them their space. If they are cool people you'll pick up on the energy pretty quick.
 

medicalmaryjane

Well-Known Member
If you decide on Southern Cali I will warn you: There are PHONIES everywhere! But those are mostly the people who were attracted to Hollywood/LA.
But still tons of cool people.
yeah it sucks down here and there are a lot of phonies but the weather is better. I hate cold.
 

jwn

Well-Known Member
Basically, you honestly only get about 50% of what you earn... Aaaaannnnndddd you have to pay for one of the highest costs of living in the world. This, and the declining infrastructure, are why I actually chose to leave California and locate myself further North in Oregon. Portland is a very nice place, the coast area and the skiing are also available. Intel, Nike, Google, and other large companies employ a great number of people here. The cost of living here is about 75% of what it is in California and you don't have to pay crazy sales taxes (they take about 40% of your earnings though).

I think if you wanted to move stateside you should look into getting a job and a work visa. The seasonal summer work is a good stepping stone to get all the paperwork handled. I wish you the best of luck in your travels.

Edit: The Mexicans in California don't really consider themselves Californian. There is a definite sub culture centralized around gang life mentality which is extremely dangerous to get involved with. I would never say that every Hispanic person in the state is like this (like the Russians in Sacramento being violent and intoxicated 24/7) but in Santa Cruz it's just better to give them their space. If they are cool people you'll pick up on the energy pretty quick.

Snow Crash, I'm in the process of moving from the midwest out to portland this summer and would like to get some details on the area. If you wouldn't mind sharing some details on the area I'd appreciate (such as decent areas to live and things you must do.) I thought there wasn't any state income tax in oregon, so I'm a little puzzled by the 40% of your paycheck thing. I only know that tidbit from being in the army and talking to people from Oregon who I always seemed to get along with best. Do they hit you up for other taxes as opposed to an income tax?
 

Snow Crash

Well-Known Member
There are personal income taxes here. There isn't (or wasn't) any sales tax here.

The Portland Metro area is actually quite small, but really nice, like a small San Francisco. The North east area is the cookie-cutter style urban sprawl of mixed homes new and old. The south east area is kinda ghetto, especially Gresham.
The Western side of the river is nicer, custom homes and newer townhouse/condo/apartments.

Oregon is pretty simple to do. See the gorge, the east side of Oregon is really cool. Gotta hit Mount Hood. Southern Oregon is cool too, especially near Crater Lake. The coast is alright during the summer. The food in Portland is top notch. Get the Salmon in season for sure. They get crab straight from Alaska too. The best wines come from grapes grown along this narrow strip of land down the center of the state, almost in the high country, but not quite. If you look at a map it is pretty easy to pick out, that last narrow bit of green before the elevation hits 4000' or so, perfect. It is a volcanic rich soil at the same latitude as France and a lot of the wineries out there are so small they only supply locally, so if you want something special wine is a good idea.

If you fish or camp or hike, or do any of the many things like enjoying nature and clean water... Not so bad.
 
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