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Shuhak
Randy D
Discussion » Questions » Life and Society » How has your neighborhood changed?

How has your neighborhood changed?

Posted - December 12, 2018

Responses


  • 53509

      Most of the anti-tildites have moved out or moved on. Other than that, my weekly sandwich-drives still haven't attracted even ONE of the neighbor women. (Sigh.)

    ~
      December 12, 2018 5:21 PM MST
    3

  • 5451
    I'm so glad the anti-tildites have moved out because now there are some houses available in your neighborhood!  I just bought the one next door.  It'll be great!  Your tildes can come over and make friends with my circumflexes, carons, breves, cedillas, umlauts, dots, hooks, macrons, perispomenes and rings.

    It'll be one big happy diacritical mark party!  I'll supply the beer umm, I mean lemonade.
      December 12, 2018 5:38 PM MST
    3

  • 53509

      Umlauts give people hives. You're an enabler. Grrrr.
    ~  
      December 12, 2018 5:41 PM MST
    2

  • 5451
    Just don't scratch them and you should be OK.




      December 12, 2018 5:52 PM MST
    3

  • 44620
    Spider bite.
      December 12, 2018 7:52 PM MST
    1

  • The HOA stopped allowing home owners to rent out their units, which eliminated much of the bad seeds.  ( l know not all renters are terrible). Apparently in this particular neighborhood though, the renters were terrible.   We have only lived here about a year and a half, after the renters were axed.
      December 12, 2018 6:14 PM MST
    5

  • 1633
    It's a lot colder than it was three months ago.
      December 12, 2018 6:15 PM MST
    5

  • 3523
    Almost all the children have grown up and most of them have moved away.  The neighbors daughter is still at home but she has a baby of her own now.  So it's mostly just us old folks now.
      December 12, 2018 6:29 PM MST
    4

  • 976
    Not much since the summer. Our neighborhood decorates for Christmas and usually to the hilt. This year the only decoration is the elf on the shelf at the entrance. Most days, he's mad because someone has come by and trashed his house (knocked it over). It's a clever display and the antics that go on overnight are hilarious.  
      December 12, 2018 7:24 PM MST
    5

  • "A couple of the restaurants I liked are no longer available.  One closed and the other one changed hands."

      December 12, 2018 7:51 PM MST
    7

  • 17600
    The snowbirds are staying all year.  The summer population has dramatically increased due to this.  We love the summer when nothing is crowded and traffic nonexistent.  
      December 12, 2018 10:43 PM MST
    5

  • Most of the oldest families living here have died off or moved away.  The house next door was empty 7 yrs before it sold.  Now the owner rents it out.  In 5 years there have been 3 different families.  Not many families are friendly or even say hello.  Not at all like it was here years ago.  Really a bit sad:(
      December 13, 2018 1:14 AM MST
    7

  • 10643
    I've lived in this neighborhood for well over 50 years.  In that time...

    85% of the native trees have either been cut down or have come down during storms.  
    90% of the homes went from having wood siding to having vinyl siding (and only 1 of the wood sided houses is still 1960's avocado green).
    100% of my neighbors have moved or died.
    The gold mine in the next block was turned into a subdivision (90's).
    The "airport" next door was turned into 2 separate schools (70's).
    The pasture at the top of the hill  that once housed cows and horses was turned into a subdivision (80's)
    The large parcel of land behind my house went from being an overgrown forest to one of the top-rated golf courses in the state (90's).
    Neighbors used to know each other and their kids played together.  Now neighbors don't speak to neighbors (about 2% of neighbors even know their neighbors name) and there hasn't been any children in this neighborhood since the 80's.
    The sound of farm animals (cows, sheep, chickens, horses, goats) used to fill the air (roosters woke folks up at dawn).  Now there is silence.
    The house atop the river below me was burned down (purposefully) and an ugly 2-story "crate" was built in its place (it's now a rental).
    When I came here everyone grew a vegetable garden.  Now 99% of them only grow marijuana.
    When I came here nobody locked their doors or their cars.  Now every house has security cameras (protecting their marijuana?) and deadbolts.
    Used to give away extra produce in the summer and give neighbors cookies at christmas.  Now no one wants either.

      December 13, 2018 10:42 AM MST
    5

  • 22891
    it hasnt
      December 13, 2018 10:45 AM MST
    2

  • 44620
    We moved here 14 years ago and the only thing that has changed much is the turnover of people.
      December 13, 2018 11:01 AM MST
    3

  • 5835
    When I moved here in 1948 the town had almost 900 population and two churches. Now it has 360 pops and six churches. Back then the town was supported by truckers whose companies ordered them to get food and gas here and then drive all the way across Arizona without stopping. Since the freeway came through, the town is supported by RV parks catering to winter tourists. Of the sixteen houses on my block, six are either demolished or uninhabited. The house market is so weak that some tourists buy a house just to have a parking place. If they have an old RV, it's cheaper to buy a house than to buy a flashy RV so the parks will let them in.

    Back then even a small town had a vibrant community. My father decided to buy a place here because the city across the river in Arizona had a sales tax on groceries and California didn't. 
      December 13, 2018 6:02 PM MST
    3

  • Feckers are trying to force me to learn AYE AYE AYE AYE lingo. :P
      December 13, 2018 7:52 PM MST
    2