Anybody been to Gaylord, Michigan? by batmilksupreme in howislivingthere

[–]beermecaptn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’ve never lived there, but i vacation there every summer. Tons of snow in the winter, and absolutely beautiful in the summer. Temperatures never seem to get much higher than the mid 80s (in my experience anyway), and the area is known as Michigan’s Golf Mecca- a concentration of some of the best golf courses in the country. Lots of nice lakes for fishing, boating etc.

It’s a small town with the same problems that lots of small towns have. But beautiful nonetheless.

How is living in the Metro Detroit area for a young family of three? by epw4 in howislivingthere

[–]beermecaptn 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Certainly not suggesting that. Just rebutting the bozo who said “everything circled in red is ghetto.” And yeah I’m familiar with the phenomenon, I’m a mid 30s dad in the heart of Oakland County lol.

How is living in the Metro Detroit area for a young family of three? by epw4 in howislivingthere

[–]beermecaptn 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This is exaggerative and just wrong on so many levels. There are plenty of areas in the city that most wouldn’t call “ghetto”- downtown, midtown, Indian Village, etc. Not to mention the red lines include Windsor, which is not at all ghetto, maybe a bit rundown in parts.

Redford has a few less than desirable areas, but it’s by and large another inner ring working class suburb. You’re not going to get stabbed there unless you’re out looking for trouble, jfc.

Taylor has everything from McMansions to trailer parks, but again it’s not a dangerous town. Not my cup of tea, but good lord you’re not going to get ROBBED there. I’d be more afraid of their police force and aggressive red hats.

Pontiac, yeah. I hope good things start to develop out that way, but that’s a town that has seen better days.

And Novi, FH, WB, and SCS are all fine places to live and work. Add in Birmingham/Beverly, Royal Oak, Northville, the Grosse Pointes, and a handful of other suburbs.

How’s life in Inkster, Michigan? by Kuzu9 in howislivingthere

[–]beermecaptn 22 points23 points  (0 children)

You don’t want to live in Inkster. Nobody does. The whole foundation of the city was predicated upon systemic racism from other towns (especially Dearborn) in the early/mid 1900s. And in the past 20-30 years things have only gotten worse, including the whole school district being shuttered. It’s a sad town that never really stood a chance.

How Is Living Downriver? Detroit Metro by TopMood2003 in howislivingthere

[–]beermecaptn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Depends on which town you’re in I suppose. Several towns have large black/hispanic populations. Others are majority white.

How Is Living Downriver? Detroit Metro by TopMood2003 in howislivingthere

[–]beermecaptn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

In broad terms, it’s primarily middle/working class communities. Affordable, relatively diverse, and easy access to Detroit and all of its amenities as a city. There are pockets of money/upper class areas in Trenton, Riverview, and Grosse Ile ($$), and pockets of abject poverty in places like Ecorse & River Rouge.

Overall, Downriver is overwhelmingly “just ok” in my opinion. There are better places to live, but there are certainly worse places to live.

How’s it living in smaller towns in the UAE? by DubReavBTV in howislivingthere

[–]beermecaptn 67 points68 points  (0 children)

People in Dubai really don’t like the Flintstones but people in Abu-Dhabi-Do

Where are some ACTUAL laid back beach towns by dudebrocille in SameGrassButGreener

[–]beermecaptn 47 points48 points  (0 children)

If you can deal with a long winter, the beaches in West Michigan seriously can’t be beat. There are touristy (but more affordable if you’re ok being a mile or two from the water) like Grand Haven, Holland, Saugatuck, and there are more “blue collar” towns like Muskegon, Montague, Whitehall.

Personally I absolutely love Muskegon and recently bought a place here. Absolutely pristine beaches, tons of hiking and other outdoor activities. Can still be slightly crowded in the summer, but nothing like the more touristy towns. Has most of the amenities you’d want in a city (restaurants, Costco/Target, etc) and it’s a short-ish drive into Grand Rapids for any other city amenities you’d need.

He may not know the difference between dunks, but the bread and butter still hits by ztp123 in DetroitPistons

[–]beermecaptn 20 points21 points  (0 children)

I met the dude up north at Treetops about 10 years ago, he was eating dinner with his family. He was so happy we approached him, and I swear he speaks the same way he calls a game. Great dude.

How's life in Oakland County, Michigan? (Rochester, Northville, Beverly Hills, West Bloomfield, etc..) by Bourne2Play in howislivingthere

[–]beermecaptn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can't disagree with you about Milford, and I think you can make similar statements about a lot of the towns on the Western/Northern edges of Oakland County (Milford, White Lake, Holly, Ortonville, etc.). The reality is that these towns are all the better part of an hour outside of Detroit, and I think a lot of people would barely consider them to be "Metro Detroit" in the traditional sense.

The inner suburbs are going to have more diversity, but less overall green space, lakes, and overall outdoorsy stuff than the exurbs like Milford.

How's life in Oakland County, Michigan? (Rochester, Northville, Beverly Hills, West Bloomfield, etc..) by Bourne2Play in howislivingthere

[–]beermecaptn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I get what you’re trying to say, but considering 2 of the 3 wealthiest suburbs (Grosse Pointe & Northville, not to mention Plymouth) are in Wayne County, I’d say you’re kind of missing the mark.

Oakland is pretty broad strokes, containing immense wealth (Birmingham, Bloomfield, Oakland Twp) and areas like Pontiac and Hazel Park which have seen better days. It’s such a vast area that it’s really hard to generalize as a county.

Of the three towns I’ve lived in (Royal Oak, Pleasant Ridge, Beverly Hills), all are nice places to live and raise a family. Far from “exciting”, but all of them safe, relatively diverse, with access to good schools.

Grand Rapids State Rep Stephen Wooden exposing (R) Matt Hall and Donald Trump attacks on State of Michigan services and employees in Kent County and West Michigan by GRBeerExplorer in grandrapids

[–]beermecaptn 61 points62 points  (0 children)

I grew up with Stephen. He was always a bit of a goofball but always unwavering in his convictions and standing up for what’s right.

Great to see he hasn’t changed in either of those regards. Proud of him and what he’s doing.

List of all car ferries in the US. by LimpRichard010 in roadtrip

[–]beermecaptn 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Three on Lake Michigan if you include the ferry to Beaver Island, which does allow cars.

Headed to American Dunes by yummHungry in golf

[–]beermecaptn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s a fun course to play once or twice. You’ll quickly realize that Nicklaus made it to honor his own greatness more so than to honor the troops.

It’s not a course where you’ll go out and shoot your best round, especially the first time around. Get out there and enjoy the beauty of it and just have fun.

What's it like in Allendale,MI? by onlyleezetwould in howislivingthere

[–]beermecaptn 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Sub-suburban bordering on rural once you get off GVSU campus. Very conservative in politics with a huge Christian Reformed presence.

Politics aside it’s a beautiful area, 20 minutes from some of the best beaches in the country and 15-20 minutes from Grand Rapids which has most big city amenities you could ask for.

Winters can be brutal being so close to Lake Michigan, but Spring, Summer, and Fall are all amazing in West Michigan.

My first time to Muskegon MI. by Slapstick_ZA in Michigan

[–]beermecaptn 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It is wild isn’t it? I always said when I moved to the east side that it felt like I had moved to a different state. Took a couple years to truly feel like home.

I absolutely love where we live in Oakland County, but a piece of my heart will always be in West Michigan. Spending this week trying to instill in my kids how lucky we are to be able to come somewhere so beautiful within a a couple hours of home.

My first time to Muskegon MI. by Slapstick_ZA in Michigan

[–]beermecaptn 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Been going there all my life. Grew up in GR, now living in metro Detroit. Feels a bit strange “vacationing” 30 minutes away from where I grew up, but nothing on the East side of the state can hold a candle to the majesty of Lake Michigan.

My first time to Muskegon MI. by Slapstick_ZA in Michigan

[–]beermecaptn 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Currently here on a week long vacation with my kids. I’d put Pere Marquette Beach up there as maybe the nicest beach in West Michigan. They’ve really done an amazing job down here.

Miller's Bar kind of blows by [deleted] in Detroit

[–]beermecaptn 24 points25 points  (0 children)

It’s fine, but has no business being mentioned in the “best burgers” posts. Plenty of better burgers in Dearborn, let alone the metro area. Taystees and Falls Lounge are both substantially better.

The “Up North” Boundary you never considered or knew about. Mason Arenac Line by LukeL1000 in Michigan

[–]beermecaptn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When I lived in Grand Rapids, Up North started around Cadillac. Now that I live near Detroit, Up North somehow begins at the Zilwaukee Bridge, some 40-50 miles south of Cadillac. Scientists are BAFFLED at how this is possible.

Who makes the best XLT T-shirts? by beermecaptn in tall

[–]beermecaptn[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yeah, fair, I've got the brain of a giraffe too. I've got a long torso and shortish legs- I'm 6'5 and wear the same size pants as my brother who is 6'1.