same here...Great thread. I'm not quite there yet, but the info is interesting.
If/when health and all that permitting the gals return to SW Fla I will assure you this fan will once again attend all three nights. It was a great experience with the exception of the near bone chilling temps in the arena (19 years down here will make it seem that way). We got an early look at the frosh, Williams and Nurse, the real return of Tuck and among other successes were getting a little even with Vanderbilt for the BS complaint in the Mo'ne Davis non event. I live about 25-30 minutes south of the arena. Hope they are back soon....getting old waiting!!!Thanks, everyone, for the opinions, facts and welcoming thoughts. Right now, we're at the point where we don't know what questions to ask, so I plan on saving this thread to look y'all up when it gets closer to moving time (don't get me started about moving three small dogs and four cats across the country). I appreciate all the many different ways you joined in. Once we arrive, I'll be looking to join in meet-ups at various games. I was really disappointed to hear that UConn is not doing Estero this year. Oh, well.
Anyway, feel free to keep the comments coming. We're enjoying everyone's perspectives on things.
Yes, Amigo, but it is not the dogs I worry about at all. It is the four cats. My experience with cats goes waaaay beyond the threat of allergies. We did a round trip, PHX to San Antonio (yes, watching a UConn basketball game was involved). One of our cats was suffering from a serious eye disease and needed to be medicated every hour. So be brought her and her companion cat (do not even ask!). She was fine, but her companion meowed every 6 seconds (yes, I timed it) for the first five hours of the trip. Neither would eat, drink or excrete for the whole distance.Not a lot of advice about Florida - but I found your comments about Siesta Key interesting, as my wife had a friend at church (where she worked) who owned a condo down in Siesta Key. They loved it, but sold it because finances were "tight" - all things being relative since it was a million dollar condo. - being "not rich", the wife and I would have loved to have seen the inside but we did drive by outside. Down where the spit of land was very, very narrow.
Although we considered Florida, we chose AZ because we don't care for the humidity and hurricane threats. Loving Tucson, but yes, missing the water. Unlike you, I don't so much want to do anything with it except look at it occasionally.
I moved 3 small dogs cross country when we came in 2011, not really a problem, although 2 of them were kept on very mild tranquilizers. It was winter, so the temperature was mild enough to grab a lunch / take a restroom stop and leave them in the rented van, and then had pet-friendly hotels nightly. Smooth, no problems.
Later moved my sister-in-law and her son cross country with their 3 cats. Again, winter time, cats actually stayed in cages in the van 24 / 7. I was only the driver on this one, I don't think this was the best way to do it, and I suffered due to a mild allergy. But they did arrive safe and are thriving (though elderly, now).
That's a great story. Fortunately, we will not hit snow and in addition, our largest dog is a 21 pound Dandie Dinmont Terrier (yes, there is such a breed).We dove to Fla, with 2 Great Danes, in a Ford Diesel truck, a150 with a cap on the back. Got stuck for 2 days in a snowstorm in northern VA. Too cold to leave the dogs in the truck. If we had driven 45 minutes longer we would have driven out of the storm, it was really bad,about 18 inches. The hotels were running out of food. Thankfully a restaurant nearby we could walk to,barely.
Yes, Amigo, but it is not the dogs I worry about at all. It is the four cats. My experience with cats goes waaaay beyond the threat of allergies. We did a round trip, PHX to San Antonio (yes, watching a UConn basketball game was involved). One of our cats was suffering from a serious eye disease and needed to be medicated every hour. So be brought her and her companion cat (do not even ask!). She was fine, but her companion meowed every 6 seconds (yes, I timed it) for the first five hours of the trip. Neither would eat, drink or excrete for the whole distance.
As a result, I believe that if someone has never driven with cats, they should drive at least five hours with at least two felines on the back seat. It will be good for you. The experience will smooth off whatever rough edges had been part of your life up til then. After that, you will be so willing to do anything else that you may even take up long-distance trucking as a hobby, because it will be calm and quiet compared to the cat experience. We may purchase a small RV (and try to figure out how to attach a generator so we can air-condition it -- just to get the cats across the country.
By the way, we are fans of your town, and will miss our occasional trips to Tucson, especially to the Museum of the Sonoran Desert, my favorite place in AZ.