That I have actually been to?
Here is a list based on my experiences.
Cities:
1) London
2) Montreal
3) Philadelphia
4) Chattanooga
5) Charleston
6) Savannah
7) NYC
8) Seattle
9) Reno
10) Salt Lake City
Small towns:
1) St. Augustine, FL
2) Key West, FL
3) Fernandina Beach, FL
4) Gatlinburg, TN
5) Chico, CA
6) East Grinstead, UK
I was in Fernandina yesterday and as we 'speak' I finishing off the last of the fudge I bought at Fantastic Fudge. This stuff is off the chart good.
Never been to London, but I want to go. It sounds really nice. I just did a little research about Chattanooga, and that place looks awesome! I'm pretty interested in visiting there now. I've heard Savannah is really nice and I've the exact opposite about Reno(assuming you're talking about Nevada). The only other cities I've been to on your list is NYC and Key West. I might have passed through St. Augustine. Nice list though.
p.s. I looooooove fudge so when I go to Savannah or Jacksonville I'll definitely take drive down there. The pictures from there look like you could actually make a special trip and stay there for about a week. Very nice little town.
I agree with the sentiment of Dallas can be a nice place to visit, but the traffic all over the Metroplex is just too much for my liking. The only major city I've been too that I could see myself living, or around for that matter is Denver. Chicago, NYC, and San Diego are all nice places to visit, but I can't imagine living there.
I can handled the Dallas traffic but I sure would sure hate to deal with it every day.
There are tons of interstate rebuilding in various stages of reconstruction in the DFW area.
Houston and Austin traffic is probably worse. The smaller Texas City’s generally have a very good network of wide streets and roads with good interstates expressways that are almost always very well maintained.
When I said that there were very good people doing very good things in the DFW area the Winspear family came to mind. Many years ago I met some of them. There was a Winspear presents at my wedding representing my wife’s side of the family. I lost track of what they were doing after the connection got a divorce but the older folks were very nice and generous people. I wish the OKC area had more people with that same type of civic generosity.
I get that, when I started reading his list I thought he was just picking based on what he knew of the cities, not spcifically the ones he had been to. I think Paris is a great city and I am sure I would love it there - but I've never been there myself.
Of course, there is a fine line between a great city and a city with great areas which is why Chicago didn't make my list. Downtown (and surrounding areas are very walkable) but suburban Chicago sucks. I would never live in Tampa again but the Hyde Park, Bayshore, and Channel Side/Harbor Island areas are off the chart awesome.
No . . . sorry . . . i've never been to paris . . .("but i've been to Oklahoma" c/o Hoyt Axton plus a lotta years)
Yet . . . Dealy Plaza--in dallas--is amazingly pedestrian and bicycle friendly. Especially when encountered unexpectedly and unintentionally with a sense of deja vu.
And in real life, it looks much smaller than in all the videos and pictures and whatknots . . . might lead one to believe.
(oops . . . sorry . . . i thought this was a conversation about dear dallas as compared to Paris (or jacksonville/atlanta/orlando) . . . my bad . . . =)
the commerce street, 3-D, real life walk prior to the OU/Texas Game on the cusp of the State Fair ain't no slouch either.
especially with all of the cops in texas providing a thin, multi-colored line protecting the public from jay-walking and having uncontrolled fun.
(OU lost that year . . . and the texas fans didn't gloat. it was like a miracle, right under that big statue they us'ta have at the fairgrounds adjacent to the Cotton Bowl Museum)
sorry . . . i didn't intend to say something positive about dallas . . . ok?
(perhaps visiting the tunnels in paris might not be such a good idea? whether in an enclosed vehicle or other alternative? just a thought . . .? why . . . there might even be Phantoms of Oprahs lurkin' about . . . aboot: Canadian Spellin')
(oops . . . almost forgot)
Dear Dallas:
I know that you love.
I hope that you know you do.
Please be kind and don't steal our water.
thx.
OKC
eta (edited to add): Thank you Celebrator!
(pps: what was the carbon footprint tax on that visit?)
(have you considered . . . Dallas?? (torea) =)
No, I've been to Paris several times and never spent time in the suburbs. It was a hypothetical question. I have, however, spent time in the suburbs of London when visiting my cousin who lived there and it was not much different than the suburbs of US cities. Would you downgrade London because of some suburbs that weren't walkable?
I posted this several years ago. This is a 20 megapixel photo of London. Very very cool.
London World Record Panoramic Photo: See Big Ben, London Eye, Tower Bridge, and more than you can imagine.
Fort Worth > Dallas.
I am starting to grow weary of Dallas myself. The traffic is horrendous and lots of road rage. Lots to do here, however if I decide to stay in Texas, I would definitely choose Austin or Galveston. Galveston has so much history and I happen to love all the Victorian architecture. They just completed "Pleasure Pier" on the Sea Wall with replaced boardwalk and rollercoasters and rides. The Moody Gardens are beautiful. I really like Austin because it's much more diverse than Dallas with a highly educated workforce. The economy is still doing quite well in Austin!
No love for Barcelona, Madrid, Paris? Here's how I would rank the cities I've visited or lived in:
1. NYC -- The greatest city in the world (that I've been to / lived in)
2. Paris (this could easily be my first choice)
3. Barcelona
4. Amsterdam
5. Jerusalem
6. Prague
7. Madrid
8. Berlin
9. San Francisco
10. Athens
Note: No London or Asian cities here; haven't been to either....yet. Hoping to change that in the near future.
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