🇬🇧BRIT Reacts To CALIFORNIA VS TEXAS!

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  • čas přidán 11. 10. 2021
  • 🇬🇧 BRIT Reacts To CALIFORNIA VS TEXAS!
    If You Would Like To Support The Channel: www.paypal.me/kabsayofe
    Hi everyone, I’m Kabir and welcome to another episode of Kabir Considers! In this video I’m going to React To CALIFORNIA VS TEXAS!
    • California and Texas C...
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Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @TheCosmicGenius
    @TheCosmicGenius Před 2 lety +150

    Again you remind me of the phrase, 'Americans think 100 years is a long time, while Brits think 100 miles is a long distance.'

    • @JustMe-gn6yf
      @JustMe-gn6yf Před 2 lety +15

      We always determined distance to our destination in hours not miles, I'm 3 hours from Dallas

    • @treetopjones737
      @treetopjones737 Před 2 lety +8

      It's about 8 hrs drive from L.A. to San Francisco.

    • @trentspears9118
      @trentspears9118 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah I heard his longest drive ever was 3 hours/~200mi and I was just thinking about how lucky he is that he would never have to travel upwards of 1000mi every year to visit family (at least as long as family is in the British Isles).

    • @spacemanduke3404
      @spacemanduke3404 Před 2 lety +1

      lol, haven't heard of the american part of that phrase before. I would have to agree

    • @emmef7970
      @emmef7970 Před 2 lety +2

      I always think of that phrase too. I hear many British CZcamsrs discussing this topic and I'm always amazed when I hear it. I've driven 18 hours just to get out of CA from the Mexico border to the Oregon border. Talk about fun!! I guess Brits don't get the whole "car trip" mentality. Get in the car & just drive across the country through the states of your choice. Or, pick a region of the country and drive through a number of states seeing all the beauty, landmarks, culture, etc. that each state offers. Americans can drive an hour each way just to their jobs everyday. Driving more than a hundred miles on a weekend to see family friends, significant others,to go to concerts, theme parks and an abundance of other things, is just normal. Most Americans don't give it much thought. Never once have I heard an American say 100 miles was a long distance. That's a day drive just to get out of town for a few hours and have lunch or dinner somewhere different. :) Never have I heard a Brit mention they just get in the car and drive just to see where they end up. Have a meal/drink, relax take a stroll, etc. & turn around and head home. Not sure why Brits do not seem to enjoy car trips & exploring new places at their leisure. I would love to have the opportunity to do car trips all over the UK. Especially outside of the major cities. :)

  • @DanKetchum007
    @DanKetchum007 Před 2 lety +109

    It would be difficult to find two states whose citizens dislike each other more.

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 Před 2 lety +26

      New York and Florida might be a close runner up.

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 Před 2 lety +6

      @Adam Marshall Unless you're actually on the border, I think that the Texan - Oklahoman rivalry is mostly just a football/college thing.

    • @kellyjames2700
      @kellyjames2700 Před 2 lety +4

      @Adam Marshall anything North of the Red River is a yankee 🤣 jk! It’s a Texas joke please don’t kill/bash me

    • @sunniertimer598
      @sunniertimer598 Před 2 lety +1

      SO true.

    • @langdonledwig3734
      @langdonledwig3734 Před 2 lety +4

      Oklahomans and Texans or Ohio and Michigan and many more

  • @itsame1139
    @itsame1139 Před 2 lety +55

    If you do visit California, don't forget NorCal. It has a lot to offer and is a different experience than SoCal.

    • @davidday2373
      @davidday2373 Před 2 lety +11

      California is a world of its own... so much, such diversity, nature, culture, etc.

    • @archaeologyfornon-archaeol1014
      @archaeologyfornon-archaeol1014 Před 2 lety +7

      yes, go see the Coastal redwoods, and Big Sur, which is more Central Coast. Very different areas, like two different countries. NorCal has lots of wineries too.

    • @kidsontheblock2680
      @kidsontheblock2680 Před rokem +2

      Ya California is honestly the best place to go to in terms of diversity in cultures and geographical locations.

    • @Kat-lk9lb
      @Kat-lk9lb Před rokem +3

      Exactly! The Bay Area is a completely different vibe then Southern California.

  • @danajohnson4757
    @danajohnson4757 Před 2 lety +137

    Texas girl here, born and raised. I just chuckle that the farthest road trip you have taken is 190 miles. I've driven that far, round trip, to go shopping! Lol!! We definitely have a more varied geography than the narrator mentioned. In addition to mountains, coastal plains, plains, desert areas; we also have forests and swampland. Yes, we have Tex-Mex, BBQ, Whataburger, and Buc'ees. 💕 Oh! And no state income tax!! 💕

    • @kabirconsiders
      @kabirconsiders  Před 2 lety +23

      I cant wait to visit Texas, the food and culture look amazing!

    • @pauld6967
      @pauld6967 Před 2 lety +4

      I hear you Dana. My commute to the office is roughly 30 miles each way, depending on the route I take, every day.
      I just returned from a 120 mile round trip that I took today simply to pick up the mail from a house that I am moving into.
      Once that move is complete, my round trip to the office will also be about 120 miles...but I will be able to hop on a train for about two-thirds of that.

    • @thisbeem2714
      @thisbeem2714 Před 2 lety +4

      @@kabirconsiders I recommend you definitely visit Austin while you're in Texas.
      If you like beer I also recommend visiting Black Star Co-op while in town. It's a brew pub. They don't accept tips because they pay a fair wage. Since COVID they had to add a 10% service tax onto their orders but that is still less than the 20% one would be expected to tip elsewhere.
      The traffic in Austin is CRAZY. Downtown is pretty walkable in the winter months and there are a fair number of bus routes and some express routes. Public transport is still pretty shit compared to Europe, but if you're not going too far it's doable.
      It's not exactly Texas culture in Austin (a good thing for me), but it's a great place to visit.

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 Před 2 lety +11

      @@kabirconsiders Tex-Mex isn't really a fusion of BBQ and Mexican. It's more a matter of American settlers adopting Mexican recipes, but substituting some of the ingredients.
      For example, Mexicans normally use corn tortillas (corn being the staple native crop). The English speaking Texans came from a primarily wheat based farming system, so used flour tortillas instead. Mexico typically favors white cheeses, while the Anglos introduced yellow, cheddar type cheeses. Mexican food tends to focus more on chicken or pork, while Tex-Mex tends to focus much more on beef.
      When you come to Texas, I highly recommend that you try fajitas. Imagine a burrito filled with your choice of either grilled and marinated strips of steak or chicken with a mix of grilled peppers and onions.
      Whatever restaurant you try, you *definitely* want to get the chips and queso (tortilla chips and a cheese dip mixed with peppers and sometimes spicy ground beef or pork).
      Central Texas also has a lot of German and Czech influence, due to settlers from those areas. Sausages, kolaches and quite a few other foods became staples of the Texan diet due their influence.
      Texas is also famous for it's many beer breweries, as well as a very large wine industry (Texas vineyards have actually restocked some French and Californian vineyards after blights killed off major portions in the past).

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 Před 2 lety +9

      @Dulce Sunshine While there are Red states that depend on blue state taxes, Texas is NOT one of them. We are actually a tax DONOR state (we send out more in federal taxes than we receive in benefits).
      You might also want to remember that the KKK (along with slavery) was an exclusively DEMOCRAT institution. As Texas gradually became less Democrat, and more Republican, it also became less and less racist.
      No Republican ever owned a slave. Jim Crow laws and segregation were exclusively championed by Democrats (who had political control of the South at the time).

  • @jariemonah
    @jariemonah Před 2 lety +147

    Hawaii is expensive because nearly everything they consume has to be shipped or flown there. You're only thinking of NYC as being expensive but the rest of New York State is pretty rural with farmland, forests, and mountains.

    • @tysonl.taylor-gerstner1558
      @tysonl.taylor-gerstner1558 Před 2 lety +6

      Also, all of Polynesia is more expensive. It helps to keep people from moving there in droves. French Polynesian, particularly Tahiti is expensive as F. Even to fly there is expensive. And it keeps the population more Native. For Hawaii, on the other hand it it too late. Because of that whole period that is still being fought I'm the courts

    • @Lill2895
      @Lill2895 Před 2 lety +4

      @@tysonl.taylor-gerstner1558 so true! I'd love to go to Hawaii but at the same time I'd rather go with a friend that's Hawaiian or at least a Pacific Islander because I would hate the tourism. I come from a super touristy city and it's awful when you're just trying to have a decent summer or winter lol

    • @kingjellybean9795
      @kingjellybean9795 Před 2 lety +1

      And Manhattan is practically new jersey lol

    • @cacaeater17
      @cacaeater17 Před 2 lety

      And Long Island is suburban

    • @8catmom
      @8catmom Před 2 lety

      @@kingjellybean9795 New Jersey is awesome

  • @kathleenhudson8429
    @kathleenhudson8429 Před 2 lety +183

    One thing a lot of people don’t realize is how diversified California is, geographically, ethnically, culturally, and politically. The state has every major world climate except arctic. There are beaches, valleys, mountains,and deserts, sometimes a little more than an hours’ drive apart.

    • @vanessamikawa7970
      @vanessamikawa7970 Před 2 lety +25

      I live in oc in SoCal and one thing I love is surfing early morning and big bear snowboarding in the afternoon!

    • @las2725
      @las2725 Před 2 lety +23

      We don’t have arctic climate but we do have glaciers!

    • @mikecalderon5251
      @mikecalderon5251 Před 2 lety +9

      My mother and my brother and his family live there. That doesn't make it any less of a piece of shit state that it is...

    • @rguz333
      @rguz333 Před 2 lety +3

      Amen, this is 100% accurate

    • @vernbotkin2749
      @vernbotkin2749 Před 2 lety +4

      Yes it is a beautiful landscape controlled by metropolitan ideals

  • @theblackbear211
    @theblackbear211 Před 2 lety +99

    I am going to point out that many Tejanos fought for Texas's independence also.
    They too were unhappy with a distant and unresponsive government.

    • @TXKafir
      @TXKafir Před 2 lety +8

      The first Vice President of the Republic of Texas was named Zavala.

    • @Mauther
      @Mauther Před 2 lety +21

      Also, Texas was not the only Mexican state to rebel. When Santa Anna started abusing the Mexican Constitution the states of Yucatan, Coahuila, Zacatecas, Nuevo Leon, and Tamaulipas all rebelled at the same time as Texas. While those rebellions were put down, Texas was able to defeat Santa Anna and severely damage his power. This allowed those previously rebellious states to try again and you got the briefly independent states of the Yucatan (1841-1848) and the Republic of the Rio Grande (1840). So no, it wasn't just a bunch of white Americans that pushed for
      independence.

    • @theblackbear211
      @theblackbear211 Před 2 lety +4

      @@Mauther Same thing a decade later in California, except the option of becoming a British territory was in the mix, so some considered the British a better option.

    • @chewy7626
      @chewy7626 Před 2 lety

      @@TXKafir *Zavalla

    • @cr0aks
      @cr0aks Před 2 lety

      @@Mauther Yea for the "Yellow Rose of Texas"! LOL

  • @harvbegal6868
    @harvbegal6868 Před 2 lety +32

    I'm glad you realize the distance between New York and California. You'd be surprised how many people come from smaller countries and want to go see New York City, Houston, LA, and Yellowstone all in a single week.

    • @Chaeyoung90
      @Chaeyoung90 Před rokem

      you cant do you’ll be here for like a month

  • @Lexykins2691
    @Lexykins2691 Před 2 lety +42

    Lived in Rhode Island-totally possible that Texas has a ranch that's bigger

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 Před 2 lety +10

      It's called the King Ranch.

    • @Camaromanm6ss
      @Camaromanm6ss Před 2 lety +1

      Maybe a few lol

    • @kimberlyrice4294
      @kimberlyrice4294 Před 2 lety +1

      Hey! I was born in Newport, RI, when my dad was stationed in the Navy there. My hospital delivery bill was a full $6.56 - in 1957! (That’s not all inflation, you know!)

    • @ssjwes
      @ssjwes Před 2 lety

      @@kimberlyrice4294 I'm younger so I didn't see it but I've tried to tell people about what you're trying to inform people of... You could have a baby delivered in the 60's for close to what you pay for an oil change today and no it's not all natural inflation. It's because of the government and insurance companies as well.

    • @dsbeats5657
      @dsbeats5657 Před 2 lety

      Yeah it is king ranch is humongous I had to go on a field trip to there

  • @Lucky397
    @Lucky397 Před 2 lety +142

    Most Texans don’t appreciate Californians moving to Texas. In a bio class the professor asked what is the most invasive species to Texas and the popular answer was Californians. We all laughed at it but most felt there was some truth to that statement

    • @Blue4Skies1
      @Blue4Skies1 Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah, f California. Yee yee squad don’t play.

    • @G-grandma_Army
      @G-grandma_Army Před 2 lety +28

      Yes we say “Don’t California our Texas”! We don’t want the ruined policies brought to our state. But I welcome them if they are wanting to join us, not change us.

    • @Parker-930
      @Parker-930 Před 2 lety +62

      Most Californians don’t think about Texas at all.

    • @las2725
      @las2725 Před 2 lety +21

      @@Parker-930 Truth.

    • @tyreek.6815
      @tyreek.6815 Před 2 lety +12

      @@Parker-930 lmfaoo wtf does that have to do with what they said. Like you wanted to start something. Literally more Californians move to texas than vice versa. This was so irrelevant lol.

  • @ItsaJday
    @ItsaJday Před 2 lety +39

    If you’re coming to California next year, I would suggest driving up Highway 1 along the coast to Northern California then, take the Highway 99 from north to south. 99 will take you along the mountains and through the Central Valley. The 1 will take you right along the coast through San Diego, if you are in the very south part of the state, through LA, along the coast, (hit me up near Pismo Beach! 🤣), through Monterey Bay, (huge aquarium there), to San Francisco. Don’t forget to see the Redwoods, Yosemite and Joshua Tree! I can’t wait for you to experience it!

    • @ItsaJday
      @ItsaJday Před 2 lety +3

      Actually, I’ll have to see if Hwy 1 goes down that far! I haven’t been there since I was a kid.

    • @Lill2895
      @Lill2895 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ItsaJday the 1 (I live literally 2 blocks from it 🤣) turns into another highway once you get closer to San Diego. I think it turns into the 5?

    • @ItsaJday
      @ItsaJday Před 2 lety +2

      Thank! I wasn’t sure! Hey neighbor! 😁

    • @iwillruletheworldyay
      @iwillruletheworldyay Před 2 lety +2

      oh i love monterey bay warning though they do have a few canneries so it can smell abit

  • @themoviedealers
    @themoviedealers Před 2 lety +41

    It is true that a lot of Californians are moving to Texas, but those are native born Americans. Huge numbers of immigrants from outside the US are moving to California AND Texas. Not just Latinos but also from Asia. California population is still increasing.

    • @frankiecantu9586
      @frankiecantu9586 Před 2 lety +9

      California's population is not increasing, it's actually decreasing that's why they lost congressional seats.

    • @RoxieMarquez_marroxeli
      @RoxieMarquez_marroxeli Před 2 lety

      @@frankiecantu9586 I think we lost like 2 seats

    • @aprilgrady6806
      @aprilgrady6806 Před 2 lety +2

      California's population has dropped roughly 182,000 people in 2020.

    • @siegelink9549
      @siegelink9549 Před 2 lety +4

      @@RoxieMarquez_marroxeli They lost 1 but that was because it was done in 2020. If it was done later it would have lost 2. NY also lost 1 and Texas got 2.

    • @ssjwes
      @ssjwes Před 2 lety

      Over 2 million people came from over 150 countries illegally into the US in 2021 over our southern border. The numbers are staggering. The size of a major city every year...
      Edit I'm fine with the countries south of us but I don't trust the rest of the world. This is the only hemisphere I worry about but our eyes are all over the rest of the world... If we did with south america what we do for asia we wouldn't have people that live south of us trying to get into this country. I'd rather make them rich in their home country than I would making asia rich across the sea...

  • @raylewis2121
    @raylewis2121 Před 2 lety +23

    A Native Texan, I love both states. Many friends in CA. Glad you will be able to visit both. Doubt you will be disappointed in either.

    • @rodneymacomber6337
      @rodneymacomber6337 Před 3 měsíci

      Best comment ever I was born in California. I’ve lived in several places lived in Houston for a year and a half and Arlington Dallas Fort Worth for 4 1/2 years. I love the people in Texas had a good time there. The worst part about Texas is the humidity the worst part about California’s politics so I just avoid the politics.

  • @nessa2481
    @nessa2481 Před 2 lety +19

    Haha! A fed & equipped army marched 900 miles. I am a Cherokee American. The army “helped” my ancestors march about 1,000 miles. It was forced, not fed, not equipped. Review the Trail of Tears sometime.

  • @Tateorsomething
    @Tateorsomething Před 2 lety +36

    Lmao! I live in Dallas. It's 190 miles to Austin. I make that trip at least a dozen times a year. My longest road trip was to Glacier National Park in Montana. That was about 3500 miles round trip.

    • @TXKafir
      @TXKafir Před 2 lety +1

      I'm in Dallas, too. Make the Austin trip quite often as both my wife and I have relatives there and now my daughter attends Texas State University in San Marcos.

    • @ktay2124
      @ktay2124 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TXKafir BOBCATS! my son graduated from there in 2020. We love the area.

    • @jajacobs100
      @jajacobs100 Před 2 lety +1

      Like we say here in Tx, "everything is just around the corner"! LOL

  • @sonyap3523
    @sonyap3523 Před 2 lety +26

    If you think 100+ degrees F is milder, then you've never been to Texas. It not only gets hot here, but add the humidity to the mix and it's almost unbearable.

    • @dsbeats5657
      @dsbeats5657 Před 2 lety

      corpus and Houston Jesus it’s like soup weather

    • @shrimpflea
      @shrimpflea Před rokem +3

      Yeah, Texas can be a hellhole. Death Valey gets insanely hot but there is nobody there.

    • @missylks1239
      @missylks1239 Před rokem +3

      @@shrimpflea No one in Death Valley but Coachella,CA is populated. That music festival, desert region of CA can get very hot in the summer.

    • @kidsontheblock2680
      @kidsontheblock2680 Před rokem +1

      Still not worse than the hottest recorded temperature

  • @mikecalderon5251
    @mikecalderon5251 Před 2 lety +32

    Cost of living. Texas doesn't have a state tax unlike many states. It's why many former Cowboys players who move to other teams stay and live in Texas.
    You can buy a home for half a million dollars that would cost 4 million in California. Truth.

    • @monicamcfadden9479
      @monicamcfadden9479 Před 2 lety +3

      Yep, neon Deion, Emmitt, Nate Newton, Irvin. Soooo many!!

    • @corvus1374
      @corvus1374 Před 2 lety +3

      It helps that Texas gets so much state money from oil wells.

    • @mikeet69
      @mikeet69 Před 2 lety +4

      @@corvus1374 Not as much as they used to before the oil bust in the early 1980's although fracking boom did add a lot of tax money.

    • @mikecalderon5251
      @mikecalderon5251 Před 2 lety +2

      @@corvus1374
      That has nothing to do with it. This was way before.

    • @mikecalderon5251
      @mikecalderon5251 Před 2 lety +1

      @@mikeet69 BS. This decision was way before what you're suggesting.

  • @colleenmonfross4283
    @colleenmonfross4283 Před 2 lety +43

    I was born and raised in California, went to college in Texas and lived there for 20 years but moved back to California for the last 16 years but still go back and forth to Texas a lot. I would say that the video is pretty accurate. The two states are very different from each other; California is much more beautiful with a great climate but Texas is more affordable, though that is changing now that so many Californian's are moving there for a lower cost of living or because their employer has relocated to Texas because Texas is much friendlier to corporations (their laws are much less restrictive and their taxation much less). The culture and politics of Texas is also changing dramatically with all of the influx of Californian's, among others. I don't see that as a good thing and neither do the Texans.

    • @Camaromanm6ss
      @Camaromanm6ss Před 2 lety +13

      Don't California my Texas lol

    • @lindseybarrow3070
      @lindseybarrow3070 Před 2 lety +4

      Californians should stay in California and clean up their mess instead of spreading it.

    • @ssjwes
      @ssjwes Před 2 lety +1

      I've already seen studies that showed the people moving here have been a net positive for Texas ruling political party. The data was pulled before covid though... Not sure how it is with the people coming now though.

  • @d1ndad0r95
    @d1ndad0r95 Před 2 lety +32

    As someone that was born in California and lives in Texas I found this very interesting

    • @EthanBSide
      @EthanBSide Před 2 lety +5

      Don't move to CO. Locals hate both.

    • @d1ndad0r95
      @d1ndad0r95 Před 2 lety +1

      @@EthanBSide Y I K E S. What's their problem with California and Texas?

    • @williambranch4283
      @williambranch4283 Před 2 lety +3

      @@d1ndad0r95 Rich Californios and Texicans, have ruined the metros and property prices in Colorado. Colorado was fine in 1970, even Denver metro with one million people then was manageable, now it is almost three million, ruined ;-( I should know having moved to Denver from California, twice ;-) Lived in LA metro first in 1962 ... 6.5 million people then, but not too bad for a kid in the better parts of town. There are 12.5 million there now. Definitely OK for tourism, in the rich places, when the kids are in school (no tourists) and weekdays (Californios are at work).

    • @d1ndad0r95
      @d1ndad0r95 Před 2 lety +2

      @@williambranch4283 Well that makes sense. If I go to Colorado I'm not saying one word about where I'm from

    • @RogueReplicant
      @RogueReplicant Před 2 lety +4

      @@williambranch4283 First off, they haven't "ruined" anything; the market is just doing its thing. Also, the two groups have only wealth in common. Most Commiefornians continue to vote the way that *ruined their home state* ffs. The fools think their political stupidity (they vote with their feelings) will somehow work out in another geographical setting, tf 😑

  • @theblackbear211
    @theblackbear211 Před 2 lety +26

    When he talks about the Sunbelt having "Milder" weather what he in fact means is "warmer winters" and more sun.
    Today, the 12th of October - the temperatures were a high of 29C and a low of 25 C.
    Lovely Phoenix, Arizona which has 211 clear days of sunshine a year often competes with places like Baghdad for hottest daytime temperature.
    All of these places exceed 40C at some point in the summer - some for extended periods.
    So, If sunny and warm / hot = mild to you, the weather is mild.

    • @denvergray8943
      @denvergray8943 Před 2 lety +6

      We literally just had our first "Fall" night where the temperature was truly below 50 F/10 C in Phoenix last night, in the middle of October, and it was only because of the big storm system moving across Nevada. It'll be over 90 F/32 C in a couple days, so definitely a bit more than "mild" lol

    • @theblackbear211
      @theblackbear211 Před 2 lety +3

      @@denvergray8943 :-) Just got off the phone with my in-laws in Chandler.
      My wife was raised in Tempe.
      I like to remind / warn people not from the US, that our concept of "mild" weather isn't quite the same as everyone else's.
      Kabir talking about 38C as unbearably hot
      is a great example-
      If he reads this, the temperature records in Phoenix are above 40C for every month except November - March, and the record for November is 36C and March is 37C... "mild"... LOL.... But definitely Sunny. :-)

    • @nessa2481
      @nessa2481 Před 2 lety +3

      I put on my first sweatshirt last night here in Dallas. It was in the 60’s this morning. Ugh - I love our hot summers! Not ready for winter!!!

  • @hardtackbeans9790
    @hardtackbeans9790 Před 2 lety +39

    14:50 Not only did they march 900 miles. They did it through basically desert. 18:16 The climate is nicer in many places in California. But the extremes are much worse there in other places. So even if it is hot as blazes here in Texas many times, the climate averages about the same. California does have some very cold climes also that the colder parts of Texas just don't get close to. If you want the stunning scenery you will want to go to California. There are some pretty places in Texas also. It is really hard to compare the two. Your idea to visit both is probably a good plan. 21:30 Tex-Mex is just Texas version of Mexican. Not much BBQ in it.

    • @positiveecho326
      @positiveecho326 Před 2 lety +6

      Tex Mex is Texan cuisine created by the settlers from Mexico and America before Texas ever became a state. Some even trace it back further to the Mission era. It’s a mixture of Spanish, Mexican, and American food. Tex-Mex is a Texas cuisine created by the settlers of that area not a Texas version of anything else. The settlers took pieces of their old cultures to create something new.

    • @williambranch4283
      @williambranch4283 Před 2 lety +4

      Colorado gold miners/cattlemen defeated the Confederacy in New Mexico, before the Californios got to El Paso ;-) Rebels almost got as far West as Tucson, and almost as far North as S Colorado. Features in the best Western: The Good, The Bad, The Ugly.

  • @jajacobs100
    @jajacobs100 Před 2 lety +8

    We've lived in Sugar Land outside of Houston TX for over 30 years. Love it here. Hurricane season is from June 1 to Nov 30th. The last major storm we had here was Hurricane Harvey in 2017.

  • @leecogbill5881
    @leecogbill5881 Před 2 lety +38

    Born and raised in Texas. Yes we give all other states crap for not being Texans. Old saying goes " Son, don't ask where someone is from. If there from Texas they'll tell ya. If they aren't don't embarrass them." So true

    • @ellenbryn
      @ellenbryn Před 2 lety +5

      Ha, my grandmother gave me that on a postcard which was hung over my bed growing up. Guess what? I was the only Yankee in my family, and now I've moved to... California. :D

    • @faiththomas1749
      @faiththomas1749 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ellenbryn being from California we have a saying “if you don’t mind crazy wether come here “ ( we have cold , rain, sleet , snow , sweat , heat , blistering heat and oh my god )

    • @jonathanwatson5818
      @jonathanwatson5818 Před 2 lety +3

      @@faiththomas1749 We have crazy weather but not nearly as many earthquakes or wildfires, come to think of it I have never experienced an earthquake in Texas.

    • @jonathanwatson5818
      @jonathanwatson5818 Před 2 lety +2

      @@faiththomas1749 Californians probably just moved here to Texas for our food though.

    • @McCuan51
      @McCuan51 Před 2 lety +1

      Texan here.... Property values are a TON cheaper in Texas. Whataburger and In N Out are both fast food burgers. They are ok and quite different from one another. My recommendation is if you can make it to Texas, try some BBQ, Tex Mex and authentic Mexican food. They are all fantastic here. One annoying thing about Texas is no high speed rail to criss cross this humongous state! Dallas Fort Worth to El Paso is approximately 10.5 hours, Houston 4.5 hours, far north panhandle, over 7 hours and to the East Texas border around 4 hours (all at 70 to 75 mph).

  • @babs3241
    @babs3241 Před 2 lety +25

    Hawaii is expensive because the real estate is very limited, and a lot of products need to be "imported" (not really, since it's the same country, but they need much more intense transport). New England is actually closer to the UK than New York, though I see what you mean in terms of which coast. The sun belt boomed once air conditioning made it livable. ;p

    • @xzonia1
      @xzonia1 Před rokem +1

      Yes, Alaska would also be expensive due to importing, but the oil industry there makes Alaska far more affordable to live in than Hawaii (as revenue gets paid out directly to residents there that offsets the cost of living there).

  • @mtf125
    @mtf125 Před 2 lety +15

    I'm from California (In Los Angeles) and tourism is very popular here. We like seeing visitors all the time.

    • @ashleymeggan
      @ashleymeggan Před 2 lety +1

      Do y’all have your own cars? Like aside from the Ferrari California… like, I always mean to watch your local news some time when I’m out there, but never get around to it bc I’ve slways wondered. Like, we have Texas editions of all our trucks and beer and stuff.

    • @mtf125
      @mtf125 Před 2 lety

      @@ashleymeggan Hmm that's a good question. We do have editions of our own stuff but vehicles I don't think so. Unless I misinterpreted your question?

    • @faiththomas1749
      @faiththomas1749 Před 2 lety

      @@ashleymegganif you’re ever in California there’s this restaurant called roscoes chicken and waffles , as a native Californian I actually like certain things about Texas
      Y’all have bull riding ( my favorite sport : you would think they bcoz I live in California I love the nba , well I hate it I haven’t watched 1 full season since the toronto raptors won the nba title )
      Y’all have better BBQ ( burnt ends )
      Y’all gave us music
      Y’all gave us moonshine

    • @xyzcomp08
      @xyzcomp08 Před 2 lety

      I think this means we're inviting Kabir 😃

  • @kylesummers1565
    @kylesummers1565 Před 2 lety +17

    That last clip was the River Walk in San Antonio I think. I've spent a lot of time in both states. California has the edge in climate and some great National Parks, but I would probably choose Texas for the friendliness of the people of all ethnicities. I live in New Mexico. Beautiful State, but many things to improve on.

  • @toodlescae
    @toodlescae Před 2 lety +9

    Doesn't mention our humidity here in Texas..in my area anyway. During the summer step outside and it feels like you stepped into a sauna. The only place I've lived where it was worse was Louisiana and I swear that in both states someone said "hugs welcome" and every species of bug misheard and thought we said "bugs welcome".

    • @sunnyfarrill7665
      @sunnyfarrill7665 Před 2 lety +4

      I've always laughed and told people the reason I look better than most my age, is because living in the coastal areas like Houston is like living in a 24 hour sauna. 😊

    • @toodlescae
      @toodlescae Před 2 lety +1

      @@sunnyfarrill7665 lol. I'll have to use that next time someone tells me I can't possibly be turning 60 next month despite the silver hair.

    • @sunnyfarrill7665
      @sunnyfarrill7665 Před 2 lety +2

      @@toodlescae I stopped coloring my hair when I realized I had really beautiful silver strands appear. I'm nearing 50 and I plan on being a silver fox.

    • @jajacobs100
      @jajacobs100 Před 2 lety +1

      You are right about the humidity and bugs!!

    • @wilbertmcbride498
      @wilbertmcbride498 Před 2 lety

      It DEPENDS On WHERE You ARE......I Talked To A man Who Lived in Anaheim California, Back in the Late 70's And he Said The HUMIDITY There Was BAD!!!!!!!

  • @carladams5891
    @carladams5891 Před 2 lety +9

    I live in CA and can tell you the cost of living is very high! The reason HI costs more is because almost everything has to be shipped in by boat or by plane. It was high in HI when I lived there from 94-97 and imagine it's only gone up. An hour and a half drive is nothing!! I have driven from where I live in Northern CA to 29 Palms in southern CA many times, about 7-8 hour drive. The longest trip was from Washington State to Massachusetts, west coast to east coast, took 5 days stopping every night to sleep.

  • @awelch31
    @awelch31 Před 2 lety +11

    Lol!! That’s your longest drive? Yep, things are a bit different here

  • @bobbyevans2416
    @bobbyevans2416 Před 2 lety +7

    Always love your videos man, I know it's a lot of work but just know we appreciate it and you!

  • @coyotelong4349
    @coyotelong4349 Před 2 lety +13

    9:00 We Arizonans are no strangers to dust storms haha
    Actually the Arabic word “haboob” for dust storms has come into the lexicon in recent years
    They LOOK way scarier than they actually are… The dust is really slow-moving. The biggest danger is from getting caught in one while driving since the low visibility can cause wrecks

  • @bridgetpaul663
    @bridgetpaul663 Před 2 lety +21

    Did you know that Texas used to have it's own Embassy in London? That's when Texas was considered its own country. As for weather it's usually hot and humid the closer you are to the coast; however, the exception was in February of this year when everything froze and there are videos on CZcams showing you how bad it was. Our energy grid isn't hooked up to the national grid. And for Tex-mex food go to San Antonio. If you make it here order some Barbacoa breakfast tacos and drink a Big Red soda with it. Its traditional fare. Great BBQ to but you can that all over Texas.

    • @sirmoonslosthismind
      @sirmoonslosthismind Před 2 lety

      yes, texas is all about letting people die in the name of freedom from reasonable regulation.

    • @neonpatriarchy9358
      @neonpatriarchy9358 Před 2 lety

      @@sirmoonslosthismind nah the United States regulations are tyrannical and i would never in understand any circumstances be under their grid lol at all these are the same people who can't even pay the debt off let alone actually take care of America so fuck no texas actually did their shit right and got their shit right you learn as you go and you grow from it fuck them niggas in Washington

  • @solace6700
    @solace6700 Před 2 lety +6

    The ocean used to cut through the middle of the US. The Texas cliffs you paused on are old corral reefs

  • @gregdavidson3834
    @gregdavidson3834 Před 2 lety +5

    Couple of weekends ago I drove from Houston to Fort Worth to see my #2 son and his family, 4 hours. Then a couple of days latter to Lubbock to see #1 and 4 sons, 4 1/2hours. Then the next day back to Houston 8 1/2 hours. #3 lives 30 minutes away. Will do that trip again this month. #1’s family just got to Lubbock from Virginia.

  • @melissabelle8626
    @melissabelle8626 Před 2 lety +8

    I live outside of Los Angeles. The houses in my area are currently selling for $550000 or more. There’s also a mansion in Los Angeles that is 160000000 in price. It’s crazy expensive.

  • @JETT_____
    @JETT_____ Před 2 lety +8

    The longest car ride you’ve done is only like a 1/6 of the way from Houston to El Paso

  • @jet07son
    @jet07son Před 2 lety +5

    no thats a normal reaction from outsiders of california , my friend moved from minasotta to cali and expected beaches but the first thing he saw when reaching california was the sierra nevadas ( mountains )

  • @sherryheim5504
    @sherryheim5504 Před 2 lety +12

    California has Death Valley and the Mojave Desert. Yes California has a lot of coastline and beaches but it also has the highest peak in the US with Mount Whitney. The middle of the state is an agricultural center like none other. California produces the majority of the food for the entire US. Texas is a huge producer of Oil and is an amazingly fertile state, put a stick in the ground and it will probably grow. Texas is also a big producer of meat as is California. California is larger than the entire UK but is only about half as big Texas. Texas has a much more humid climate than California with California (particularly Southern California) being an irrigated desert. A lot of people are leaving California due to the political climate. Also, a lot of businesses have left California for Texas due to the amount regulations placed on businesses in California where as Texas is much more business friendly and the minimum wage in Texas being almost only half of that in California. Hawaii is expensive because everything has to be shipped in, not much is produced in Hawaii beyond sugar cane and pineapples, minimal amounts of small fowl such as chickens and also pigs do provide a bit of home state food relief for the residents. I am a native of California and lived there for the majority of my life. Now I live in New Mexico so I have become much more familiar with Texas than I was while living in California. California and Texas are both very much like their own countries. Being born and living in California one becomes quickly rooted and the idea of anywhere else in the country having anything to offer that California doesn't seems like an impossibility. Produce is fresh and relatively inexpensive in California since it is produced there, keeping shipping costs to a minimum.

  • @denvergray8943
    @denvergray8943 Před 2 lety +12

    True blue islands like the Hawaiian Islands are always more expensive to live on across the board since you generally have to import most goods, even domestic products, across the ocean. And due to most islands' small size, there are much more limited job, housing, and commercial markets that increase competition and drive up prices. They also tend to have a lot of "paradise" tourism, with its luxuries and taxes that make it more expensive for residents.

  • @jnpsmama
    @jnpsmama Před 2 lety +12

    Having lived in both Texas and California, Texas humidity is too much. Fun fact: San Diego county is the size of Rhode Island.
    Also, the narrator’s mispronunciation of Presidio startled a laugh out of me. Never heard it said like that before. 😳😂

    • @honestytoafault
      @honestytoafault Před 2 lety +5

      Humidity or not...I would choose Texas over California any day

    • @58fcorley
      @58fcorley Před rokem +1

      The humidity in Texas is different, depending on which part of the state you live it.

  • @theblackbear211
    @theblackbear211 Před 2 lety +10

    Remember, the king of Spain's title was once "His Most Catholic Majesty"... The Missionaries were primarily Franciscan Friars.

    • @george217
      @george217 Před 2 lety

      Even Spain's Dictators were "Muy Catolico"...

    • @theblackbear211
      @theblackbear211 Před 2 lety

      @@george217 I try not to think to hard about that.

    • @tejida815
      @tejida815 Před 2 lety +1

      Somewhere I read that the California missions were placed a days donkey or horse ride from each other.

    • @theblackbear211
      @theblackbear211 Před 2 lety +2

      @@tejida815 They are indeed spaced roughly a days ride apart - from San Diego, To San Francisco with 2 more on the north side of the bay. 21 in all. Some of those would have been a rugged ride, back in the day.

    • @tejida815
      @tejida815 Před 2 lety +2

      @@theblackbear211 😊 Thanks!

  • @davidterry6155
    @davidterry6155 Před 2 lety +7

    Cost of living is less, no state taxes. The King Ranch is enormous

    • @ashleymeggan
      @ashleymeggan Před 2 lety

      The King Ranch is legitimately it’s own react. You can hunt from helicopters on the King Ranch. It’s history is literally as. Long as that of Texas. BUT, the Waggoner Ranch was the basis for the show Yellowstone.

    • @davidterry6155
      @davidterry6155 Před 2 lety

      The King Ranch is one of the major reasons for the Chisholm and Shawnee Cattle Drive Trail up through Texas, Oklahoma to the major slaughter houses in the Midwest. Kansas had access to the trains and could transport the meat to each of the coasts

  • @clevelandnative7175
    @clevelandnative7175 Před 2 lety +9

    My longest car ride was when we moved from Cleveland to SoCal, the only reason it took us more than a couple days was bc we only drove 12 hr/ day and we had our dog, but that was about 4828k.

  • @domothebro2435
    @domothebro2435 Před 2 lety +10

    Californian here, born and raised. The cost of everything is pretty expensive but aside from that it’s great where I am. I’m on the edge of the Bay Area (about an hour drive from San Francisco or Sacramento). Definitely a beautiful state and pretty nice people too, if only it could rain more

    • @ms_scribbles
      @ms_scribbles Před 2 lety +1

      Hey, same here! (Well, 45 minutes or so...or an hour and a half, depending on how the traffic is on 580. 🤣) Farthest town east while still being called the East Bay, rather than the Central Valley.

    • @iwillruletheworldyay
      @iwillruletheworldyay Před 2 lety +2

      hello my fellows im in sactown myself come give the capital a visit kabir we have the best tomatoes

  • @rebeccahanson6941
    @rebeccahanson6941 Před 2 lety +18

    Born and raised in California. Love it will never leave. I have visited Texas. I really liked Austin, not a fan of Dallas though. Texans and Californians smack talk each other but to be honest we probably all have way more in common than we think. People mostly leave California because of cost of living, it’s so much more affordable in Texas. But we still get so many people moving here it’s crazy. Both states have that because there is a lot of job opportunities.
    I live in Napa valley where all the wine is. You should check it out when you visit California. Northern California is so beautiful.

    • @cartmemes5034
      @cartmemes5034 Před rokem

      One day you’ll move to texas like the rest of em

  • @americansmark
    @americansmark Před 2 lety +7

    To put that 900 miles into perspective, I used to be an over the road trucker. Before electronic logs (when we could still get away with it) I drove from near Ghent, Kentucky (along the Ohio River) to Hooksett, New Hampshire (near Maine) in one trip without stops. It took 15 hours and was around 950 miles. And yes, it was a bad idea that I don't recommend, but I digress.
    I can't even imagine walking that distance. At roughly 30 miles per day over rough terrain with limited roads, that would have taken the California soldiers around 2 months of marching to arrive in Texas. By that point, they were probably too tired to fight. 🤣

  • @sheilabrown3579
    @sheilabrown3579 Před rokem +1

    The King Ranch is located in South Texas in Kingsville Texas right out side Corpus Christi Texas. King Ranch is approximately 830,000 acres. That is approximately 1,925 square miles and I am proud to call this area home. My little ranch backs up to the massive King Ranch.

  • @bsfrag962
    @bsfrag962 Před 2 lety +28

    I have lived in California and Texas. I would never ever choose to live in California again. But, California is a wonderful place to visit. I swear a person could spend 6 months vacationing there and still not see and experience all California has to offer. Biggest differences to me are that California is more diverse and very liberal. Texas is conservative and more 'Southern' If I had to choose a place in Cali to visit it would be Muir Woods or the Redwood Forrest national parks. My second recommendation would have to be to drive the Pacific Coast Highway - you'll need at least a week to 10 days to really enjoy it. To answer the question as to why people are moving from California, what I've heard is cost of living and politics.

    • @treetopjones737
      @treetopjones737 Před 2 lety

      The central coast has beautiful scenery.

    • @helensarkisian7491
      @helensarkisian7491 Před 2 lety +5

      Yes, cost of living and politics is the usual reason people want to leave California. The one problem with that is “Californication.” Californians often take their Californian political viewpoints (liberal, tax happy, and government control) with them thus turning their new location into what they left CA for. I’m in the Los Angeles area and will not be able to retire here - I could not afford the mortgage on my house, which is about 15 ft wide by 45 ft deep (roughly 4.5 m x 13.7 m.) Apparently it’s worth $400K. $400K !?!?!?!? California is just plain off the rails.

    • @michaelwaller7365
      @michaelwaller7365 Před 2 lety +3

      I grew up in L.A. & Marin County and I agree with on what you said about the beauty of the state. I was also smart and Escaped From L.A. in 1994 for Montana. DON'T bring Calif. here if you come.

    • @helensarkisian7491
      @helensarkisian7491 Před 2 lety +2

      @@michaelwaller7365 : Never! Why bring what I’m leaving?

    • @davidday2373
      @davidday2373 Před 2 lety +1

      Don't Texas my Austin.

  • @JETT_____
    @JETT_____ Před 2 lety +17

    Believe it or not most people in Texas welcome people from other states, the biggest conflicts occur over in state college football matchups and stuff like that

    • @davidcruz8667
      @davidcruz8667 Před 2 lety +2

      Except from California. Those escaping the problems created in California are bringing with them the attitudes that got them there in the first place. If you have California plates, you better be ready to adapt to Texas way of thinking.

    • @JETT_____
      @JETT_____ Před 2 lety +1

      @@davidcruz8667 lol

    • @davidcruz8667
      @davidcruz8667 Před 2 lety

      @@JETT_____ 😁

    • @lawrencetomlinson761
      @lawrencetomlinson761 Před 2 lety

      @@davidcruz8667 That would be think less and talk a lot. I'm sure you're well versed in it.

    • @davidcruz8667
      @davidcruz8667 Před 2 lety

      @@lawrencetomlinson761 I gather you think you know what I'm all about. Seems like I fit a particular stereotype in your mind.

  • @johnpavan3798
    @johnpavan3798 Před 2 lety +7

    W/ regard to Death Valley. It is gorgeous there during the winter (e.g. if you go there, go Jan-Feb, closest airport is Las Vegas, then a 2 hour drive). However, in the summer the road surface can get so hot that your shoes melt.

    • @RogueReplicant
      @RogueReplicant Před 2 lety +1

      How do car tires fare in the summer? 🤔

    • @johnpavan3798
      @johnpavan3798 Před 2 lety +2

      @@RogueReplicant Tires are intended to operate at a higher temperature than shoes, so they do fine.

  • @williambranch4283
    @williambranch4283 Před 2 lety +10

    Favorite place in California: Redwoods north of San Francisco. Favorite place in Texas: Riverwalk in downtown San Antonio, right next to the Alamo. Best: Fusion cuisine in California, BBQ in Texas. Good Mexican food from Cali, Arizona, NM and into Texas. Picante sauce doesn't come from NYC ;-(

  • @georgejackson4445
    @georgejackson4445 Před 9 měsíci

    first time watching your content your reactions are priceless! Thanks for producing great content!

  • @Peri2C
    @Peri2C Před 2 lety +6

    Texas has no state income tax and except for Austin is generally a lot more affordable. Cars and houses are cheaper in Texas.
    I live in the Dallas metro. We don't have the huge wild fires and earthquakes although we do have less severe episodes of both. For people who travel, it can be cheaper from Dallas and easier to manage than from major cities in California. We have the old airport, Love Field where Southwest Airlines is headquartered. We have DFW Airport on the west side of Dallas with direct flights to a good bit of major world cities like Sydney, London, Paris, Mumbai, etc. I can fly about 9 hours directly to London or Paris and the same to Honolulu. It's a pretty nice spot mid-continent to reach the rest of the US and with some cheap flights if people are savvy shoppers.

    • @katarinad1309
      @katarinad1309 Před 2 lety +1

      It’s cheaper cause no one wants to live there lmao. Lame state of wannabe cowboys.

    • @kathy2trips
      @kathy2trips Před 2 lety +2

      @@katarinad1309 - You watch too many cowboy movies! Texas is VERY diversified. And we just got two new members of the House of Representatives, so yeah people are moving here.

    • @mariosmatzoros3553
      @mariosmatzoros3553 Před 2 lety

      @@katarinad1309 Many companies and people are leaving California for Texas.

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 Před 2 lety +1

      @@katarinad1309 Don't forget that it's also the home of NASA, Texas Instruments, Dell Computers and a many other high tech industries. The Houston Medical Center is one of the leaders in medical research, and is located in the 4th largest metro area in the US.
      Also, we have plenty of *real* cowboys.

  • @hawx00145
    @hawx00145 Před 2 lety +5

    Well technically California was independent, but only for less than a month. Know as the Bear Flag Republic, it was unrecognized during the Mexican-American War until annexation

  • @twilightrave
    @twilightrave Před 2 lety +15

    As a native Texan I can honestly say it's probably the cost of living.

    • @rg20322
      @rg20322 Před 2 lety +1

      Texas rules in everything! I would never live in CA and currently live in MA - time to move.

    • @Dubhain
      @Dubhain Před 2 lety +1

      As a native Californian, it is cost of living, as well as an escape from fires. Most people I know trying to move are trying to escape the yearly black outs and evacuations.

    • @twilightrave
      @twilightrave Před 2 lety

      Yeah those fires are hell on y'all. Just make sure you golden state boys and girls prepare for the unmitigated shenanigans that are Texas.

    • @Dubhain
      @Dubhain Před 2 lety

      @@twilightrave Yep, Everytime the wind kicks up, we get a red flag warning. We've had two red flag warnings already this week, and we can smell fire from somewhere. It's always from somewhere. Oh, and now doctors and scienctists are talking about the long term damage breathing in the contaminated smokey air will have on our kids. Wooo, cancer. What kind of shenanigans in TX?

    • @lawrencetomlinson761
      @lawrencetomlinson761 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Dubhain So you have no problem with the grid failure and people freezing to death along with a dash of Covid denial.

  • @jairosoto3445
    @jairosoto3445 Před 2 lety +11

    Omg you’ve only gone 190 miles😭, yo as a californian that’s absurd yet I’m so jealous 😂. I drive 333 miles and leave the next day to drive another 333 to visit family or to pick up important papers or things I’ve forgot at my moms. Damn keep up the us vids we love you out here. Please keep us updated with our packages. Much love ❤️

    • @kabirconsiders
      @kabirconsiders  Před 2 lety

      Thanks Jairo :) Did you send me something?

    • @jairosoto3445
      @jairosoto3445 Před 2 lety

      @@kabirconsiders np bro, and not yet I’ve been traveling back and forth from cali to az but I’ve got the stuff ready to ship. Just got back to la a couple hours ago so hopefully I can send it before your first unpacking video

  • @rrisdfootage3344
    @rrisdfootage3344 Před 2 lety +5

    Oh awesome! You're reacting to Mr. Beat!!! I've known him since before CZcams was a thing (or before he even became a teacher).
    Cost of living and no state income tax is the main reason for the California flight to Texas. Yes, King Ranch is bigger than Rhode Island. Everything is "big" in Texas, BBQ is a religion, but there are almost no "Cowboys" (I'd wager less than half the state has ever even been on a horse).

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 Před 2 lety +2

      We basically, as a culture, sort of took that "Everything's bigger in Texas" meme and decided to run with it, going out of our way to make it true. Our state capitol building was deliberately made larger that the US capitol building.

  • @corvus1374
    @corvus1374 Před 2 lety +17

    The big difference between the two states is the politics. California is ultra liberal, Texas is ultra conservative.

    • @nessa2481
      @nessa2481 Před 2 lety +1

      I would not say Texas is ultra conservative at all. The rural areas are clinging, true. But our last elections, presidential, senate & governor - all the major metros were blue. & I am left leaning but from a conservative family. A lot of our boomers are still conservative but not as extreme as our governor or the media makes it seem, I don’t think.

    • @alishiaesmaily11
      @alishiaesmaily11 Před 2 lety +2

      Ummm, i would say Texas is more of a purple state.

    • @corvus1374
      @corvus1374 Před 2 lety

      @@alishiaesmaily11 Ha.

    • @tyreek.6815
      @tyreek.6815 Před 2 lety +2

      Texas isn’t really ultra conservative tho. The big cities are testing that every poll and every year. Lol. 😂

    • @ChefDuJour78
      @ChefDuJour78 Před 2 lety +2

      @@nessa2481 - lmao no they are not! In fact, majority hispanic cities have flipped to RED. CNN is lying to you. Lol

  • @kamirobey175
    @kamirobey175 Před 2 lety +4

    You get dust storms a lot in West Texas during March. They are just part of the scenery and you learn how to deal. The strange thing is that sometimes the dust storms have their own weather, and so it's not uncommon for it to rain mud during one of these storms. While Texas gets a lot of dust storms, it's only in Western Texas and the panhandle, usually and is nothing compared to Arizona's dust storms.

  • @camdoncherry4608
    @camdoncherry4608 Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome you did my idea! Came out great mate (-:

  • @treetopjones737
    @treetopjones737 Před 2 lety +4

    That's why Sacramento is the capital, closest town to where the gold rush happened.

  • @coyotelong4349
    @coyotelong4349 Před 2 lety +11

    Texas seems way more affordable to live at first glance… But those property taxes tho

    • @G-grandma_Army
      @G-grandma_Army Před 2 lety

      It IS much less expensive. Not if, ands or buts

    • @thisbeem2714
      @thisbeem2714 Před 2 lety +1

      True it is less expensive. Property taxes, in Austin, are crazy. ~$1000 a month for the area I am familiar with.
      But cost of living is definitely less.

    • @invizz0ninja
      @invizz0ninja Před 2 lety

      Property taxes are going up, because new homes are being built with the additional amount of people coming from states like California, New York and Illinois.

    • @waffles824
      @waffles824 Před 2 lety +3

      @@invizz0ninja no, that is not how propety tax works....Texas has been at 2 to 2.3 percent for many many years, not just since yalls propaganda media started blaming Cali for everything under the sun

    • @coyotelong4349
      @coyotelong4349 Před 2 lety +1

      @@invizz0ninja
      Try again. Property taxes in Texas were significantly higher than the national average long before the influx of people from other states

  • @alishiaesmaily11
    @alishiaesmaily11 Před 2 lety +28

    California is repeatedly ranked as one of the most beautiful states. There’s stuff to look at here. We have to worry about wild fires because most housing is located on hills and mountains. Another reason why housing is more expensive. The beautiful views people have fell their house. However, property tax here is only like 0.7 percent. In Texas it’s almost 2 percent. People always seem to forget that.

    • @sirmoonslosthismind
      @sirmoonslosthismind Před 2 lety +11

      yeah, the lazy stereotypes will fool you. people think texas is about freedom and that california is a nanny state, but california is the only state in the union where motorcyclists are allowed to ride in between lanes of traffic.

    • @waffles824
      @waffles824 Před 2 lety +11

      100% accurate...I own a home in Texas...2.2 percent property tax...Texas has one of the highest property taxes in the country...CA one of the lowest...Texans love to bring up "no state tax", while completely ignoring the high property tax. Another fun fact Texans like to ignore...taxes go up every year when property values go up...CA has a thing called Prop 13 that locks in the property value and therefore the taxes....This is why the upfront cost of property in CA is higher...but in the long term the CA home would end up being cheaper than all the taxes you pay for the TX home...But you will never get a Texan to get this thru their head....their willingness to listen and learn ends at "no state tax".

    • @laurencooper654
      @laurencooper654 Před 2 lety +9

      For a middle class home owning family you’ll pay less all in taxes in California than in Texas. As an Ohioan who moved to California I pay less income taxes now than I did in Ohio (Ohio has a messed up local income tax system that’s brutal). People rarely do the full math on these comparisons

    • @honestytoafault
      @honestytoafault Před 2 lety +4

      You also have sh*t on your streets along with needles and more homeless people.

    • @alishiaesmaily11
      @alishiaesmaily11 Před 2 lety +5

      @@honestytoafault almost 20 percent of California’s homeless come from out of state. Believe it or not we don’t observe the homeless as scum and use racist backward thinking tactics to resolve the issue. Also, California is not just downtown LA. We have more national parks then other state, pretty sure Texas falls closer to the bottom of the list. You’ll need to dig for a needle

  • @TheCosmicGenius
    @TheCosmicGenius Před 2 lety +2

    Here in Kansas City, during the summer of 2021, it was consistently 38° C & above - thoughout all of June, July, & Aug, & stayed up over 90° F (32° C) throughout September. No, 1/2 way through October, the temps are still close to 80°F (26° C) most every day. But, we'll probably have at least 1 snowfall before November arrives. . .

  • @gigih.hammer306
    @gigih.hammer306 Před 2 lety +6

    I'm German born and came to the States by marring a military guy. I live in Texas for years now. I been to California. Its beautiful there, but you couldn't pay me enough to live there. The earthquakes, the wildfires every year was enough for me not to want to live there. Texas has its own beauty, but coming from Germany it was quite a shock to me. All I seen was cactus growing every where and this weird looking trees, Mesquite. In my homeland you see flowers every where. The people sweep their sidewalks and keep Germany quite clean. One thing I don't miss about Germany is winter. Even though it looks very pretty watching big snowflakes fallen down, the amount of snow is unbelievable. I now watch it snow on TV, in Texas where I live we have mostly mild winters. Its seldom that we get a bad winter. One year we did and I managed to wreck my car 3 times. I never drove a car in Germany. My husband comes originally from Ohio. They have awful winters there. I was glad to leave Ohio and come to Texas. It took me some time to get used to Texas, but after you do, I love living here. The people here treated me with respect and kindness. Every once in a while I ran across some real a-holes calling me a Nazi. Guess everyone coming from Germany is a Nazi so they believe. I seen 32 States, but I'm now in love with Texas. My husband died 13 years ago, but I will stay here. Its my home now. All my people live in Germany. I'm the only one that ventured away from my home. I was shocked about all the creatures that come into my home. I'm talking about Scorpions. No matter how often I spray inside and outside, they will come into my house, besides other crawling things. I hate killing living creatures, but I have no problem now killing the Scorpions. When we first moved from the city to the country, I was freaking out over all these bugs that exist here. I used to write to my mother about all these things I experimented here. She wrote back saying you moved to an uncivilized country, come back home. The second night we lived here in the country I got stung by a Scorpion while I was in my bed. That thing stung me in my boob. At first I thought my husband was smoking and a spark flew over to me. I screamed, brushed it off and my husband got stung too. I sat all night long on my couch with my eyes wide open looking if it would come after me again. I would not go back to bed till I know my husband killed it and showed me the corpse. The dust storm you mentioned in this video we get them every year around March-April. It comes from the dry cotton fields out of Lubbock. All you can do is dust and dust and try covering up every small opening in your house. But I never seen a dust cloud that big as shown in this video. In Germany almost everyone has a small piece of land and flowers get sown there. Here I can not grow one plant. The ground here is not very fertile. Besides I don't have a green thumb like my sister has. 7 years in a row I tried growing tomatoes. Never got one good tomato. They either had little worms in them or they looked so small and shriveled up I would not eat them. Other people here grow beautiful tomatoes, so it must be me. So far I have killed every flower I tried to plant up here. I now gave up. Your video is very interesting and I learned some things I never knew before. Have a pleasant day, be safe and be healthy. Greetings from Texas.

    • @EvelynElaineSmith
      @EvelynElaineSmith Před 7 měsíci

      There are quite a few Texans of German descent particularly in Central Texas: San Antonio has a relatively large population of Texans of German descent, but small towns like New Braunfels, Brenham, & Fredericksburg are where one will find the greatest German influence. Additionally, Czech Americans live in West & Ennis; & Norwegian Texans live in Clifton. Austin also has a good many Texans of Swedish descent, & Wends live in the Temple-Killeen area. Most of these European immigrants moved to Texas in the 19th-century. Of course, Americans of Mexican descent live throughout the state while African Americans live primarily in East Texas particularly in places like Dallas & Houston; moreover, Nigerians have started moving to the Houston area. Of course, more than a few Texans can claim to be of Heinz 57 descent since many people have married outside of their original ethnic or religious group. P.S. ~ We're a friendly place that welcomes newcomers if they are also good neighbors!

  • @rohan1970b
    @rohan1970b Před 2 lety +8

    Reason people would move from California probably due to income taxes. California has huge personal income taxes and Texas doesn't have personal income taxes.

    • @pyrovania
      @pyrovania Před 2 lety +2

      I think it is really the housing costs. In the Bay Area, good luck finding a house for less than $1 million. In LA, good luck finding one for less than $500,000 that isn't in the ghetto.

    • @laurencooper654
      @laurencooper654 Před 2 lety +5

      All in taxes for a middle class home owning family it’s more expensive to live in Texas. And that’s because property taxes are astronomical in TX

    • @rohan1970b
      @rohan1970b Před 2 lety

      @@laurencooper654 How long have you lived in Texas. I did growing up (until I joined the Air Force at almost 22) but I never owned there. I've just never heard my family complain about the property taxes.... Is this a recent thing?

  • @katharrell3737
    @katharrell3737 Před 2 lety +4

    OMG! 190 miles?? I drive a truck local, and I drive 250-280 miles a day. 🤣 🤣 🤣

    • @kabirconsiders
      @kabirconsiders  Před 2 lety

      Wow.. thats a lot of miles! Do you listen to music/radio while you drive?

    • @katharrell3737
      @katharrell3737 Před 2 lety

      @@kabirconsiders Sometimes. I really take the responsibility of driving truck seriously, so mostly I'm focused. I avoid distractions. In the car, yeah, music on. 🎶

  • @moloko5
    @moloko5 Před 2 lety +3

    El Capitan is the name of the "chunk" in the Texas Guadalupe Mountains. It's also the name of a bigger chunk in Yosemite.

  • @ronluk76
    @ronluk76 Před 2 lety +19

    Dude, you should react to Geography King's "San Joaquin Valley- The Forgotten California". You will be blown by how much of the US agricultural economy is dominated by California"!

    • @ronluk76
      @ronluk76 Před 2 lety +1

      Even though I live in the Bay Area now, I've lived in the central valley before.

    • @alvaro4k
      @alvaro4k Před 2 lety +1

      I haven’t watched that video, but the crazy thing about a lot of the agriculture economy is that the hands on work is done largely by an immigrant population of workers with crap workers right and overall pay. The whole conversation about immigrants is interesting but if they were to just stop working in the agriculture fields it would cripple the US and largely affect the world food supply.

    • @missylks1239
      @missylks1239 Před 2 lety +4

      With the whole shipping issue right now, I feel safe to be in CA where so much food is grown and produced.

    • @ms_scribbles
      @ms_scribbles Před 2 lety +4

      Which makes me laugh my backside off when the right wingers try to claim we'll starve to death if there was a civil war. Dudes, we are the #1 agriculture producing state in the country! It won't be us starving.

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 Před 2 lety

      @@ms_scribbles The problem, for progressives, in a civil war is that Californian agriculture tends to take place in the most conservative areas. You know, the parts that keep talking about wanting to secede from California?

  • @mtz123ish
    @mtz123ish Před 2 lety

    Love both states. Nice comparison. Enjoy your commentary. Thank you.

  • @josephsoto9933
    @josephsoto9933 Před 2 lety +2

    Kabir.... I just finished driving 6700 miles in 10 days. I live in Florida and I needed to visit 3 more states to complete a Bucket List goal (visit all 50 states)...so I went to South Dakota, North Dakota and Montana. I then dtive over the Rockies and visited my favorite state, Utah. Buzzed down to the 4-Corners and El Paso, then dashed back to Florida.
    (I'm from L.A. and driving is in my blood...PS: I'm 74)

  • @AGDinCA
    @AGDinCA Před 2 lety +19

    California is just such a wonderful place. So many diverse landscapes, so many opportunities for adventure, so many lovely people! 😊

  • @TheCosmicGenius
    @TheCosmicGenius Před 2 lety +7

    Texas was an independent republic for just about a decade, but in that time there was an embassy established in at least one foreighn country, which recognised the sovereign state. That country was called, 'England', & there's still a plaque identifying the site of the embassy in London. 4 St James's Street London, England, SW1A 1EF United Kingdom

  • @raphaelpaz8476
    @raphaelpaz8476 Před 2 lety

    What you said in your beginning remarks all the above and a lot more

  • @reneedreamz3375
    @reneedreamz3375 Před 2 lety +3

    Grew up near Houston and now live in San Diego 😁 For visiting TX I recommend choosing when should be based on time of year.

  • @theblackbear211
    @theblackbear211 Před 2 lety +3

    Well, I've certainly bloviated my way through the comments - clearly I had fun.
    If you want to imagine the heat in Death Valley - set your oven to 55C once it's hot, then open the door and hold your hand in there.
    It is a truly desiccating heat - the humidity at those temperatures is a single digit number

  • @erict532
    @erict532 Před 2 lety +6

    Mild weather?🤣😂😂 he must not have ever been to Texas summer is ungodly🤣

    • @seahawksfan4204
      @seahawksfan4204 Před 2 lety

      So true

    • @victoriabriscoe8460
      @victoriabriscoe8460 Před 2 lety

      Yeah, summer is tough (remember, A.C. was created here!), but, we have 7 -9 months of pretty great weather in Texas. And spring is wonderful.

  • @WingManFang1
    @WingManFang1 Před 2 lety +1

    I live in San Antonio and this is accurate all of our locations are so different and varied on every level it’s literally like traveling to a new land at times just going city to city

  • @kimstyles5842
    @kimstyles5842 Před 2 lety +2

    Hawaii has to have all products shipped in or flown in. That includes lumber gasoline food and pretty much everything else.

  • @Lo.Tesla.Travels
    @Lo.Tesla.Travels Před 2 lety +5

    In California we just had a 70 billion surplus from the last year. We definitely have a huge GDP. But a 3 hour drive? I just took a trip where I drove about 1300 miles all at once. It took nearly 30hrs

  • @davidthieman8020
    @davidthieman8020 Před 2 lety +6

    Thanks for a great reacts to California VS Texas. Its was very interested. Note: Hawaii have to import almost everything, so that why its more costing to live there.

  • @stevenserna910
    @stevenserna910 Před 6 dny

    The "King Ranch" is the largest privately owned ranch in Texas. It has been in existance since the cowboy days.

  • @dianagarcia0
    @dianagarcia0 Před 2 lety +1

    My mom's half of her family are from El Paso, Texas. When she was a kid she moved to Los Angeles and stayed there all her life. I told her why did you move to L.A and not any city in Texas or other states around Texas?, she said L.A is closer to El Paso and that L.A has more things to do than Texas etc lol. But if she wanted to, she'll visit Texas during the holidays or summer. Visited El Paso years ago in the summer. Great experience, humid and just looked humble than L.A.

  • @Maggies87
    @Maggies87 Před 2 lety +7

    I’m a SoCal native who had a friend visiting from rural Texas. Friend: “How far is Hearst Castle?” Me: “3 1/2 hours.” Friend: “Yeah, but how many miles is it?” Me: “No idea.” Friend: “So how far is Disneyland?” Me: “1 to 2 hours. Depends on traffic.” Friend: “Yeah, but how many miles?” Me: “No idea.” Friend: “How far is the beach?” Me: “Topanga, 30 min. if you go early to park.. Zuma, 45 min.” Friend: “I guess you don’t know how many miles.” Me: “Nope.” 😂

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 Před 2 lety +3

      Most Texans don't bother counting in miles, either.

    • @ssjwes
      @ssjwes Před 2 lety +2

      I live in Houston Texas and also use time and not miles. Using miles seems limited in information. Times would be better when scheduling things and you don't make your daily plans by the mile..

    • @hannahbrown187
      @hannahbrown187 Před rokem +3

      I’m from Houston and we also talk about distance in terms of travel time. # of miles only makes sense if you’re somewhere rural where there isn’t traffic. Otherwise it’s too variable. I lived in the suburbs and worked downtown for a while, the drive was 40 miles but could take anywhere from 40 to 90+ minutes depending on traffic.

    • @bigtxinla
      @bigtxinla Před rokem

      So you live in the Valley. Woodland Hills maybe...

  • @Perfectly_Cromulent351
    @Perfectly_Cromulent351 Před 2 lety +3

    You definitely need to watch “Sideways”, the movie where the dude dumped the bucked on his head. Easily one of the best comedies of the last 20 years. It almost won the Oscar for best picture in 2005.

    • @lawrencetomlinson761
      @lawrencetomlinson761 Před 2 lety

      That movie started my fascination with Pinot Noir. My friends thought I'd become a wine snob. Funny thing is they had no problem making all three bottles disappear.

  • @teximexi836
    @teximexi836 Před 2 lety +1

    Hi, from Texas here. Texans actually don't have any issues with people moving here. From California or any other state for that matter. The issue that most Texans have is when people from other states move here trying to bring political policies from their state to ours. For instance we recently had to vote on a bill to ban any chance that state taxes could be implemented here because (mostly) Californian influenced attempts to have them instated. Hence the now coined phrase "Dont California my Texas". Not to say some policies from California or other states wouldn't be great here but certain things here in Texas culturally and politically are not welcomed here. We love our state. So much that we are often more patriotic about our state than we are about the country. So when people from the outside threaten to change it in ways that we dislike without even having lived here long enough to understand the culture or recognize all the benefits of living here for reasons recognized and unrecognized. We tend to get rather distraught. Again though we don't mind everyone coming here, the more the merrier I say. We just don't want them to turn our state into the state they left. They just might regret it and take us down with them. Much love from Texas!!! Hope you find yourself in our great state one day enjoying the culture, sites and some bomb ass Tex-mex, bbq and other delicious foods to be found here soon!!!✌

  • @rgalvshpbks
    @rgalvshpbks Před 2 lety +2

    I highly recommend that you pick a region and visit that one region. In both states it is impossible to visit the whole state on one visit. I also recommend looking into renting a vehicle or being prepared to use a ride service like uber or lyft, again because public transportation is not very accessible in either state. Also, don't forget to look for local cuisine because in both states it is pretty amazing

  • @redssracer4153
    @redssracer4153 Před 2 lety +6

    18:18 The man says California is classified as "warm, dry..." 😏🤣
    Warm, he said warm!!!🤣🤣🤣
    Sorry, I think the heat got to me a little bit....😏😁🤣😂

    • @faiththomas1749
      @faiththomas1749 Před 2 lety +1

      As a native Californian We don’t have heat …we have dry spells it can get as cool as 65 degrees and as hot as ….105 degrees yah hear me as cool as a breeze and a hot as a IRON GETTING SCALDED

  • @spacemanduke3404
    @spacemanduke3404 Před 2 lety +6

    I grew up in California's Central Valley. I jokingly call it 'the land of fruits and nuts-literally and figuratively'. Virtually anything grows there, as do the wierdos
    Yeah, wildfires. The foothills are green in the winter and black in the summer

    • @ms_scribbles
      @ms_scribbles Před 2 lety +2

      Yeahhh...Central Valley is our Mississippi. My mother used to say, "Fresno may be the armpit of California, but Bakersfield is the a**hole."

    • @RoxieMarquez_marroxeli
      @RoxieMarquez_marroxeli Před 2 lety +1

      @@ms_scribbles as a Fresno native I have heard the same we may in fact know each other...

    • @ms_scribbles
      @ms_scribbles Před 2 lety +1

      @@RoxieMarquez_marroxeli Maybe not. My parents were there for a couple years, but I haven't lived there since I was an infant. We moved to the Bay Area when I was three. I've got relatives in Coalinga, but we don't see them much.

  • @USMC-Goforth
    @USMC-Goforth Před 2 lety +1

    Hey when he was talking about Texas football stadiums that bottom picture is the Pasadena TX stadium by the refineries ( Veterans Memorial Stadium)

  • @TroysPop
    @TroysPop Před 2 lety +2

    Have lived in California since 1983 so not a native but feel like one. I must admit I didn't think this video was going to be so encyclopedic and expected a little more tongue in cheek comparison. Politically you'd think we are on opposite spectrums but truth be told most of California outside of the big cities is much more politically connected to Texas. Real estate here in California is now insanely expensive. 1,200 square foot homes here in Los Angeles are now going for over $1M, which explains why so many are leaving and moving to Texas where real estate is more accessible. The fact that Texas has taken upon itself the effort to repeal legalized abortion in the U.S. is also troubling. I have been to Houston, Dallas, San Antonio and El Paso. The River Walk in San Antonio is one of the nicest places there.

    • @treetopjones737
      @treetopjones737 Před 2 lety +3

      The cities where the majority of the population is. Texas is becoming INSANE under Abbott. GUNS EVERYWHERE WITH NO RESTRICTIONS, trying to make abortion illegal, and doing his best to KEEP COVID GOING. Oh yeah, and they want to teach schoolkids that "the slaves were HAPPY being slaves." SMH

    • @thisbeem2714
      @thisbeem2714 Před 2 lety +1

      @@treetopjones737 Yeah, you're not wrong....

  • @fourthgirl
    @fourthgirl Před 2 lety +4

    The Texas flag has one lone star. It's not Southern or Midwest, it's Texas. Texas goes its own way and is very proud of that distinction. Employment is the reason for people bouncing to California or Texas.

    • @wilbertmcbride498
      @wilbertmcbride498 Před 2 lety +1

      EXACTLY......It's NOT Southern, NOR Midwestern, It's The SOUTHERN PLAINS And The SOUTHWEST!!!!!!

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 Před 2 lety

      Texas is like a Southern boy that moved to the Southwest and married a lovely Mexican girl.

  • @Adrian-wd4rn
    @Adrian-wd4rn Před 2 lety +3

    I love hearing about how the brits were nearly dying over a few days of 100 deg. F weather (38c)...This past june it was 97-98-100-100-101-95 for the whole week..Many days it was just 90.. As I speak, this sunday it's going to be 84 deg, f. LOL.

    • @ellenbryn
      @ellenbryn Před 2 lety

      It's what you're used to, though. Also, Brits don't have AC, and a lot of their buildings feel a little stuffy by our standards since until recently the main thing they needed was to keep out the cold and damp on gray, rainy days.

  • @jerrysantos6484
    @jerrysantos6484 Před 2 lety +2

    He is correct. I am on my way to Whataburger for a # 4 all the way heavy Mayo with onion rings. 👍😎.

  • @linesbylisa3557
    @linesbylisa3557 Před 2 lety

    And in Northern California/ Central Valley where I live it’s a lot of grape vineyards, orchards& wetlands.

  • @kathygreenbean3132
    @kathygreenbean3132 Před 2 lety +3

    I live in Oklahoma. We have driven to Houston several times (a 9-10 hour drive). The reason to cruise out of Galveston. There is no state income tax in Texas, although property tax is higher than here. The biggest difference as far as cost of living: I heard Californians are paying about $4.50/gal gas. We pay $2.88/gal. Probably about the same in Tx. It is routine for many people to drive 30-60 miles to work in their own vehicles. Even in our own metro area of nearly a million public transportation is either nonexistent or spotty. Timing may be very inconvenient. It is not unusual for someone to drive 4-8 hours for a weekend visit to family or holiday!

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 Před 2 lety

      Gas tends to be much less expensive in Texas, due to large number of oil refineries here. We actually *export* refined gasoline to Saudi Arabia!

  • @laurataylor8717
    @laurataylor8717 Před 2 lety +8

    I have visited both states a number of times. One impression I've gotten from both states is the extreme level of state pride in each state. The extreme weather in each state is a deterant for me. A friend of mine moved to Texas and shortly after moving there her car was totaled due to a hail storm. I will take my blizzards over hail that can total your car.

    • @monicamar8616
      @monicamar8616 Před 2 lety +4

      California pride? Really? Never really came across that. Texas is well known for their people being so proud but never see that from Cali folks. Hmmm interesting. I would say New Yorkers have more pride that Cali people

    • @laurataylor8717
      @laurataylor8717 Před 2 lety +1

      It always seems when I meet people from Cali they act like there is nothing worthwhile east of the Rockies and everyone needs to come to there. They say the weather is perfect, you can do anything from surf to ski and the food is diverse.

    • @monicamar8616
      @monicamar8616 Před 2 lety +1

      @@laurataylor8717 as a New Yorker we feel the same. There is nothing west of the Hudson lol. I just never came across a Cali person so prideful. I mean it is a beautiful state and the weather is perfection ( minus the droughts) but Texans are legendary for their Texas pride. I guess it’s where “ don’t mess with texas” stems from.

    • @myrtlemaude47
      @myrtlemaude47 Před 2 lety +2

      @@monicamar8616 “Don’t Mess with Texas” actually came from a campaign years ago to stop littering. Signs were posted all along major highways.

    • @monicamar8616
      @monicamar8616 Před 2 lety +2

      @@myrtlemaude47 ahh thank you. Would never think that considering Texans like to show a tough exterior to the world especially the cowboy thing.

  • @curtisthomas3598
    @curtisthomas3598 Před 2 lety

    Kudos. Your knowledge of American history is impressive.

  • @hellsgate09
    @hellsgate09 Před 2 lety +1

    4:10 Anna Creek Station, here in South Australia, is the largest cattle ranch in the world; I think it's believed to be as big as New Hampshire?

  • @thepixiepicker111
    @thepixiepicker111 Před 2 lety +4

    You haven’t taken your trip yet, have you? I just recently found you so my timeline of when you said you were planning a trip to America is out of whack.
    The longest car ride I’ve ever taken was from Newport Rhode Island to Newport Beach California. It took five days, not pushing it too hard. I’ve been to the UK and mainland Europe several times but my favorite vacation is to pack up the car and the dog and head out on a road trip. Anything under an 8 hour drive is fine for a three day weekend. 😉

    • @kabirconsiders
      @kabirconsiders  Před 2 lety +2

      Planning to come over around March!

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 Před 2 lety

      @@kabirconsiders Spring and Fall (Autumn) are the best times to visit Texas, as far as weather goes.