Why would you move to South?

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snorri

Legendary Member
Yebbut.... if you live by the coast, 180 degrees of your world is cold saltwater. It's limiting.
The sea is your access to the rest of the world, unlimited:smile:.
 

slowmotion

Quite dreadful
Location
lost somewhere
The sea is your access to the rest of the world, unlimited:smile:.
Actually, I've messed about in boats since I was a little kid, mainly in Cornwall. I love looking out across water to another headland or another side of a creek. I'm less keen on just being in a place where 180 degrees is blank sea.
 

Slick

Guru
In a storm, I guess the sea must be spectacularly uplifting.

Actually, I've messed about in boats since I was a little kid, mainly in Cornwall. I love looking out across water to another headland or another side of a creek. I'm less keen on just being in a place where 180 degrees is blank sea.

Your missing out, we bought a very small holiday place that backs on to the sea. I love watching the storms almost as much as the seals sunbathing in what passes as summer round these parts.
 

slowmotion

Quite dreadful
Location
lost somewhere
Your missing out, we bought a very small holiday place that backs on to the sea. I love watching the storms almost as much as the seals sunbathing in what passes as summer round these parts.
I love the coast if you can look along it and see interesting things. On the other hand, I don't want to gaze out at the grey North Sea, on an eroding coast, with zero expectation of seeing Denmark. I find it faintly depressing.
 

Slick

Guru
I love the coast if you can look along it and see interesting things. On the other hand, I don't want to gaze out at the grey North Sea, on an eroding coast, with zero expectation of seeing Denmark. I find it faintly depressing.
I'm was brought up beside the Irish Sea, there is the odd site of land depending on your exact position like the Ayrshire coast or Paddy's mile stone, but for the most part the next sight of land would be America. Still never been bored looking at it as it changes every day.
 

steveindenmark

Legendary Member
I moved North 15 years ago.

From Germany to Denmark. I wish I had done it much sooner. I love it here.

I lived all over the UK and geographically it is much of a muchness. Packed full of people and traffic.

The thing that makes the difference is friends, family and job satisfaction.
 

threebikesmcginty

Corn Fed Hick...
Location
...on the slake
I lived all over the UK and geographically it is much of a muchness. Packed full of people and traffic.

It's an urban jungle all over...

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steveindenmark

Legendary Member
We can do selective posting all day. The fact that you have posted a tiny corner of Wales on the only day of the year when it didn't rain, does not prove your argument.

Do you really want to argue the fact that most of the UK is over populated?
 

Drago

Legendary Member
We can do selective posting all day. The fact that you have posted a tiny corner of Wales on the only day of the year when it didn't rain, does not prove your argument.

Do you really want to argue the fact that most of the UK is over populated?

Indeed. The traffic is terrible near my cottage in Voe.

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And the view over my back fence in Northamptonshire...

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The UK is heavily populated. However, by and large the distribution of that population is uneven and weighted towards the South - part of the very subject this topic addresses - leaving huge swathes of the country still relatively remote and rural in nature. To dismiss an entire country because of the population density in one part of it seems odd.

You clearly like Denmark, and that's great, I'm cool with that. It looks like a genuinely nice place. Nevertheless, if traffic and bustle ain't your thing you didn't need to move to Denmark to find peace and quiet.
 

rich p

ridiculous old lush
Location
Brighton
It's a stupid argument. There are large conurbations in the north which aren't exactly underpopulated and there is London and it's environs which account for most of the crowding. Elsewhere there are are beautiful quiet swathes of countryside and normal population density.
Ever been to Dorset, Steve?
I cycle around the lanes of Sussex, and on the South Downs, barely seeing any traffic.
 
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