Toes@ani.social 3 hours ago
Only if you’re willing to live north of the 60th parallel.
(Assuming you retire in 30 years, trying to factor in their growing residential crisis)
Toes@ani.social 3 hours ago
Only if you’re willing to live north of the 60th parallel.
(Assuming you retire in 30 years, trying to factor in their growing residential crisis)
Patnou@lemmy.world 3 hours ago
No clue where that is. Was thinking in about 15 to 20 years. Are you up for asking you some questions if your from Canada
Asafum@lemmy.world 3 hours ago
Image
I believe they meant living north of the line in this image you might be able to find a house for that price (probably meaning: not likely.) but that far north is not going to be great for gardening.
OwOarchist@pawb.social 3 hours ago
But, hey, climate change is your friend here!
Patnou@lemmy.world 3 hours ago
I can always hot house them or whatever. Is it cold up there? Because I love the cold I keep my windows open and fan on when in the middle of winter. How is the internet speed in Canada? Or up in the parts posted? Which is the best company? Is there room for a part time job nearby or easy to go into town for basic needs and stuff?
Witchfire@lemmy.world 2 hours ago
If you’re serious about this you should visit for yourself, ideally in the middle of winter. You definitely won’t want to keep your windows open in the middle of winter. Yes it’s cold. This winter was particularly long for some reason, Toronto is only just getting out of winter and towns further north still have ice.
Toes@ani.social 1 hour ago
You’ll likely be limited to Starlink Internet service or xplornet. I hear the performance is fine but high latency and affected by poor weather.
Montagge@lemmy.zip 2 hours ago
Last frost is in mid June and first frost is the end of August. So you have a very short grow season. Not only that, but at that latitude you’ll have issues with daylight.
Winter temps will probably be around zero F or the negative teens C. Summer temps around 50-60ish F or 10-20ish C.
Internet will probably be satellite only.
adespoton@lemmy.ca 2 hours ago
First question: do you have Canadian citizenship or a route to it? Because if you don’t, the answer to your question is a hard “no”.
If you do have a route to citizenship: if you’re living north of 60, unless you’re in a populated area, you not only will be limited to satellite Internet access, you also won’t have electricity or water or road access — you’ll have to come up with your own solutions, which usually involve someone flying in gas, propane and other supplies a few times a year for an exorbitant price.
Property values in most parts of Canada seem to be doubling around every 10 years. So you’ll want to go on to realtor.ca and look for property currently selling for around $50,000.
When I went looking around 15 years ago, I found a property for that price in southern Manitoba that had Internet, power and a well, a nicely renovated house and 2 acres of land. Today of course, it would sell for about $200,000, and you’re looking at no less than $400,000 in 10 years. The nearest populated area was in the US.
Your best place to start looking is realtor.ca, combined with Google Earth. Then once you find some places for $50k or less, ask a chatbot questions about cost of food, availability of water, etc. in that area.
OwOarchist@pawb.social 3 hours ago
lol, yes – it’s very cold up there.
If you leave your windows open and fan on in the middle of winter there, you will die.
Asafum@lemmy.world 3 hours ago
I couldn’t say, I’m stuck in expensive-ass NY. I just knew what they meant by 60th parallel.