Where to move in the US to avoid humidity?

Price is more negotiable than climate. I'm inclined to just build a house at this point, but I don't know where. The climate in the US appears to suck absolutely everywhere except in pozzed states. Alaska is great and not pozzed but it's owned entirely by the feds.
West Virginia. You will be in the middle of nowhere and you better have remote work with a sattelite hookup, but you can get lots of cheap land and the climate is mountainous so its not quite as bad on the coast humidity wise.


Example.

These large undeveloped tracts though will require considerable work. Don't be fooled. On top of building your house, you may also have to build its access to the nearest public access road and connections to the electrical grid. But This is where you can find that much land in your price range.
 
You're bitching about humidity and you throw out Oregon as a nice place? Cascadia is a literal fucking rainforest, just a cold one.

Unfortunately for you the nice part of the country pretty much is the subtropical part. But for faggots there are two places that should be reasonably acceptable. California is cancer socially but it's the ideal climate for human habitation, is basically "Mediterranean." San Diego stays at near optimal temperatures with a breeze and little rain year round. If you like the pleasant parts of Aquitaine, Catalonia, or North Italy I understand it should be similar to that.

South Texas, like around San Antonio, is hot but it's a dry hot.

Other than that, I don't know, go live in the Mountain West. But I'll tell you there's a huge difference between Mountain South and Deep South even though Koppen climate maps don't show it, the latter is consistently about five degrees colder, does not have hurricanes, does get snow, doesn't even look the same, ti's a different biome as far as I'm concerned.

The North is so cold it gets buried in blizzards and snow on a regular basis.
 
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Hmmm, so your dream state needs to be

Warm in climate to avoid harsh winters, but also not too hot or too humid
No deserts, there has to be water and greenry (which tend to not be too common in low humidity climates)
Large open areas of land available... but not too expensive
Red State with weak gun laws and homeschooling.

Sorry to say this, alleged Eurotrash, but you're kinda asking for a bunch of contradictory shit. You're already fucked trying to ask for "large open land and a nice house" for cheap, not even getting iinto "it needs to have mild summers AND mild winters" implication your self-sufficiency argument gives. The only places that come close are usually in bluer states, or are places you would ignore and classify as "deserts".

TL:DR
You're being a massive faggot trying to have his cake and eat it too, find an acceptable compromise and either learn to deal with harder winters, learn to deal with hotter weather, or just stay in Europe and deal with it.
 
Those are literally all deserts. I want a stream, some trees, air I can breathe without choking on, and some guns. Surely there's someplace not shitty in the US?


It's less the cost of living and more the cost of property. You're not going to get acreage in Alaska for less than a few million dollars, and that's before you build the house. Maybe if the Feds auction some more of the land, but I don't see that happening. The US Feds love fucking you all to death.
Idaho, as mentioned by others, is not a desert, it's more of a cold mountain forest zone. It's part of the Northern Rockies. Even otherwise there is stuff people call desert in Cascadia - Oregon and Washington backcountry - but it's really more like a high steppe like Eurasia, it's grassland that cows and shit live in.


Okay, let me put it this way, if you want to live in a moderate climate in a state that is conservative (so California is eliminated as an option) and presumably also has more cheap land, just go live in Kentucky. I promise you it is not as rainy or hot as you think, there is a world of difference transitioning from Deep South (muggy hellscape) through Upper South/Appalachia (what Kentucky is) into the North (winter hellscape).
 
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