AVOID Moving to the Florida Keys UNLESS You can Handle These 9 FACTS

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  • Опубликовано: 20 май 2024
  • AVOID Moving to the Florida Keys UNLESS You can Handle These 9 FACTS - Are you thinking about moving to or buying a 2nd vacation home in the Florida Keys?
    Well before you make the move towards the florida keys listen to all of these hard facts to see if you could handle them before living in the florida keys. If you want to know the pros and cons of living in the florida keys this is the video for you!
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    We work with clients from all over the world that are buying those vacation homes in the Florida Keys and we ABSOLUTELY LOVE IT! Reach out to us day/night/weekends ANYTIME because we got your back when Buying a home in The Florida Keys!
    Sunnie SanLorenzon and Lee Sanders - Florida Keys Realtors
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    Learn more about the Florida Keys:
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    www.visitflorida.com/en-us/ci...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florida...

Комментарии • 866

  • @Zebracorn46
    @Zebracorn46 Год назад +16

    "Buying that 2nd home in the Keys"🤣😂
    Me, living off oatmeal and beans for the last two weeks (and grateful).

  • @ralphledger1221
    @ralphledger1221 Год назад +46

    Excellent video. As a resident of Big Coppitt (mm10) I would like to give you my list. 1). Cost of housing down here. A single bedroom tiny apartment will cost $2000 a month. And if you are a service person you can never get ahead financially. People will rent a house and pack 4 or 5 people in it to share the rent. 2). Beaches. Most of the beaches down here consist of coral muck. If you are picturing Daytona beach like beaches they are few and far between. We boat out to sandbars mostly. 3). Homeless people in KW. Tons of them. And young homeless. I think they have the Jimmy Buffet ideal of Paradise and when they get here it aint so great if you are broke. 4). If you buy a home and leverage it through a bank you will most likely be mandated to have Wind, Flood and other coverages which can cost you 5 to 10 grand a year easily. 5). Contractors. Oh lordy IF they respond to a phone call be prepared for the worst. The work ethic down here is horrible in most cases. I'm sure there are exceptions but so far they have eluded me. Ok with that said we love it down here but after 8 months we need to get off the rock and head north. Do your research and have realistic expectations. Jimmy Buffet doesn't live here he just makes a living singing about "Paradise" and lives elsewhere.

    • @chillwill5080
      @chillwill5080 Год назад +5

      You nailed it. I used to spend a few months per winter there, but now I have found far better places farther north in Florida.

  • @klaudiasmutny2802
    @klaudiasmutny2802 Год назад +22

    #1 negative should have been the cost of property insurance :)

  • @ernieforrest7218
    @ernieforrest7218 Год назад +3

    Well notice that pretty much all of these type videos are made by those who are in the real estate business.
    It so happens that i was a realtor/builder myself and had my own business for 40 years prior to retiring to the Keys.
    But, there are things about the keys your not apt to learn from anyone but yourself from the experience of actually living there.
    I had about 15 years experience of visiting there before moving there full time in a new home i had built in the late 90s.
    I lived there full time for a period of 10 years in one of the nicest communities in all the keys, that being Duck Key.
    #1 shopping is very limited, other than basic need items like food shopping, and even that is limited.
    So you will find yourself making periodic trips to the Miami area for that.
    Ask any parent with school age kids about the schools.
    Check out the quality of the local hospital, and the medical staff there, and especially the number of (good) sober doctors.
    Miami is a very long trip when theres a serious medical emergency.
    I know these things from personal experience, but no real estate agent will tell you, even if they know.
    There is also no place to go once your there.
    Many of the places you can go to are tourist trap places, and Key West is a perfect example.
    Fact is that with a few exceptions, the entire keys is a tourist trap.
    Take a close look, (tacky) might well be the best word to describe it.
    Back to the fishing, there is world class fishing here in Florida other than that offered in the salt water.
    But you wont be finding that in the keys either.
    If you enjoy good quality entertainment be prepared to find it elsewhere.
    As for the fishing, i happened to be a licensed charter captain myself, and worked at that during the busy seasons at the Hawks Cay Resort.
    But especially during the winter months, there will often be periods of a week or more where you wont go out at all due to strong winds. And for a period of time after the water conditions can be very poor for fishing.
    So it isnt always the paradise many think it is in that regard.

  • @zaphodsrealm1549
    @zaphodsrealm1549 Год назад +13

    The "no see-ums" drove me off Sanibel Island, especially when the wind dies down.

    • @jackiestowe6987
      @jackiestowe6987 Год назад +1

      I spent a week on Sanibel. We “shelled the sea shells” there. It has the most shells on the beach 🎉ever! That beach has more shells than any other beach. They say it’s the trade winds that bring them to that area. I had so many I went for the micro mini shells, they are the tiny, perfect shells, just the little versions. I could pack more home to Oklahoma. I will say the “sand fleas” are rough there, make sure u pack the bug spray!

    • @fjb4932
      @fjb4932 Год назад +1

      @@jackiestowe6987 There IS a difference between "no see-ums" and sand fleas. . . . .

    • @jackiestowe6987
      @jackiestowe6987 Год назад +1

      I know there is but they still bite u.

  • @johnwilliamsscuba6487
    @johnwilliamsscuba6487 Год назад +30

    When I was in the Coast Guard I was stationed at Islamorada back in the 1990's and loved it, went back last year and it has changed so much. Not all for the best.

    • @seahagkeylover
      @seahagkeylover Год назад +8

      I lived on Big Pine for many years went in May driving down the hwy it was a different experience it went from class to trash I was so embarrassed that it went down and BP looks like a prison island with that gaudy fencing for the deer which I hardly ever witnessed on on the hwy in 12 years

    • @johnleaman9899
      @johnleaman9899 Год назад +3

      I owned KWST Paradise Productions in the 1990’s. I also worked for a non-profit and implemented child safety programs for the sheriff’s department from 1974 to 1994. Key West has taken on a new personality. Yes it is not affordable for most. Police officers seem to come and go. On the other hand I believe Key West firefighters 🚒 have a history of multi generational occupation. They are compounds of homes owned by families for 75 years or more. For them, their homes are paid for, and they can live comfortably. Lot of scams in shops on Duval St. I did ❤ my time there.

  • @segurosincero4057
    @segurosincero4057 Год назад +8

    Sometimes it gets so humid here you have to jump in the pool to dry off.

  • @barbaravyse660
    @barbaravyse660 Год назад +19

    Heat and humidity in Florida is brutal. And it feels like you’re 10 inches from the sun.

    • @terrypikaart4394
      @terrypikaart4394 Год назад +2

      That is correct!. My parents moved down there, mom was in key west dad in venice. That was 1998, i bet i havent ben there 10 times. Cant stand the heat and stink. Michigan weather is great for me..

    • @lareeseblaque8303
      @lareeseblaque8303 Год назад +1

      Right 🤣🤣😂

  • @MsMadmax1
    @MsMadmax1 Год назад +121

    You forgot to mention the cost. My spouse and I went to Key West for our 25th wedding anniversary and absolutely fell in love with it. We're not big drinkers but we loved the history of the island, we went to all the museums and the Little White House. I can't think of a place with more breathtaking sunrises and sunsets, plus I'm a sucker for beaches and the ocean. Fortunately, I don't get seasick. We stayed at Edan House directly across from The Artists House and I highly recommend it. We would sit at the tiki bar in the back and talk to the bartender about what it's like to live in Key West. He told us it was too expensive for him and his girlfriend to live there--that they live on one of the other keys and commute every day. I flipped through the available real estate listings and unless you're earning a million dollars per year, you can't afford to live there. Most of the people who work there, live on another Key and a few live in Homestead which is the last town before you leave mainland Florida for the Keys. We're at the point of being retired so the only way we could afford to live there would be to live on a houseboat or find a place to park an RV/Tiny Home. Even the rent is outrageous. I could live with all the other negatives but not the enormous price tag.

    • @dj33036
      @dj33036 Год назад +7

      I remember paying ten dollars for four sticks of butter at Winn Dixie and that was back in 2010!

    • @robertscheinost179
      @robertscheinost179 Год назад +9

      I was stationed in KW when mike was starting his B+B, call it what you will. I can assure you it took a lot of bales of Marijuana to put that place together! It's no surprise that most of the businesses on Duval St. (and other streets in KW) got their cash by smuggling. The act itself goes back to the days of the Wreckers, Most smuggle and most look in the other direction. It IS KW, after all. I hope your "Historical tour" had the burial grounds in your sight seeing agenda. "You can't take it with you so spending it on grave markers" must have been the unofficial motto.

    • @jefferyepstein9210
      @jefferyepstein9210 Год назад +6

      Definitely a wonderful place to visit. You are right about the expense of living there. No way even an upper middle class person could afford to live there.

    • @cecileroy557
      @cecileroy557 Год назад +5

      Same thing has happened in St. Augustine - people who work in our restaurants etc. now can't afford to live here anymore. And the traffic has gotten horrendous the last several years..
      One of the bummers about home prices and rents being high is that the "characters" which make a place unique have had to move out...

    • @andydetweiler766
      @andydetweiler766 Год назад +3

      Buy a sailboat

  • @tomhesse2015
    @tomhesse2015 Год назад +12

    I owned a home on Cudjoe Key for 17 years. The mosquitoes were my big problem. Even during the day they were all over you. Everything else I was fine with but it is very transient if you find friends they could be gone in a month. Having your family there is a plus.

  • @keyratcane66
    @keyratcane66 Год назад +20

    I have lived in the keys for the last 50 years of my life, and will die down here.

    • @OllieRidesAk
      @OllieRidesAk Год назад +2

      I’ll stay in Alaska forever but was just talking to my wife today about another Florida vacation this would be the right time of year to do it for us. Last time we went in June and the heat and humidity was almost too much.

    • @norsemanshorn3988
      @norsemanshorn3988 Год назад +1

      That's the spirit!👊😎✌️

    • @Hapenparadise
      @Hapenparadise Год назад +2

      @@OllieRidesAk get with him and switch houses for vacation ❣️😎🌴

    • @OllieRidesAk
      @OllieRidesAk Год назад +1

      @@Hapenparadise I doubt anyone would trade the keys for Alaska in the winter. Unless they really wanted to see the northern lights it just wouldn’t be worth it. LOL

  • @USA__WILL
    @USA__WILL Год назад +23

    Humidity is a deal breaker for me. Love Florida but can't handle more than a week of humidity

    • @franklee2683
      @franklee2683 Год назад +1

      Amen. Im here,left KW but still in Fla. Spring,winter,fall is....great. Summers are BRUTAL. And I was born here....

  • @clemdane
    @clemdane Год назад +26

    It would be silly for me as an Arizonan to say I can't move to the Keys because of the sun! But the humidity is something I would have trouble with. I grew up with humidity in New Jersey summers and I can't even hack that anymore. Not to mention mosquitos! Lastly, I can't handle snakes and alligators.

    • @eddihaskell
      @eddihaskell Год назад +1

      If you live in Key West or an urban part of the Keys you don't have to worry about the snakes or gators. The mosquitos are no worst than South Jersey in the summer, just watch it at night. The humidity is bad from May - November (Hurricane Season) but I find thunderstorms and rain refreshing in South Florida. I would not live in the keys because its boring. I prefer Palm Beach County. But its fun to visit.

    • @leslievey8453
      @leslievey8453 Год назад

      Bahahawaha.

  • @BadMonkeyTouring
    @BadMonkeyTouring Год назад +4

    Back in the '90s, I lived in Big Pine while working at hospital on Stock Island, in Key West. I loved every minute of it. We had rented a house on a canal, so we had the boat parked out back. We made full use of it nearly every day. I still enjoy the occasional trip down to the Keys.

  • @janispayne5570
    @janispayne5570 Год назад +12

    I’m a northern girl, love snowstorms and fireplaces, wood smoke and hot chocolate. 😊

    • @classicsciencefictionhorro1665
      @classicsciencefictionhorro1665 Год назад +1

      I bet you're a Payne to live with.

    • @annminadeo3471
      @annminadeo3471 Год назад +1

      I’m a mountain mama too! I can’t stand humidity.

    • @clairewyndham1971
      @clairewyndham1971 Год назад +1

      Northern Wisconsin here. I visited the Keys 20 years ago in February. Not my idea, but it was a job. 7 days of oddities. I was very very glad to leave. I am sure there are many people who love the area, obviously, but I just never even felt the urge even once to return. I mean, I personally didn't have a bad experience with anything but the snakes, frogs..oh man the frogs! Little ones, medium ones, big ones. Red frogs, green, purple, blue..hundreds of them..nope. not for me. I love the snow. I enjoy the cold. I love 4 seasons. In fact, its snowing here right now..

    • @LABoyko
      @LABoyko Год назад

      @Classic Science Fiction & Horror. I am sure a total Payne in the @$$ to live with during a blizzard when the hot chocolate, fire wood runs out.

  • @mar0364
    @mar0364 Год назад +13

    I’m a Floridian. Surprised you didn’t mention homeowner insurance.

  • @reynaldorivera743
    @reynaldorivera743 2 года назад +13

    Great video . I was down in the Keys July 2021 great time totally in love with the Keys .Can’t wait for next December 👍👍👍

  • @noninoni9962
    @noninoni9962 Год назад +4

    I've lived on Florida's west coast all year 'round for decades (minus military time) and trust me when I say, "anywhere in Florida will have high heat and super high humidity that's absolutely brutal from about mid-June through October!!!!!!

  • @stevewalther2293
    @stevewalther2293 Год назад +3

    I live in SW Florida and many of us would love to move to Idaho...Montana...Colorado...just bored with the heat and the sun...the whole State is flat....flat....flat....gets old quickly...

  • @j0ellyfish
    @j0ellyfish Год назад +25

    All I gotta' say. I was born and raised in Key Largo. Know the area like the back of my hand.
    Just be nice to it. Keep it alive as it is.
    So many corporations are flooding in and making it a second Miami and it sucks.

    • @classicsciencefictionhorro1665
      @classicsciencefictionhorro1665 Год назад +1

      I saw the movie. Wonder if gangsters still hide out there.

    • @j0ellyfish
      @j0ellyfish Год назад

      @@classicsciencefictionhorro1665 Never saw it. Never saw gangs, either.

  • @d.j.savick
    @d.j.savick Год назад +27

    I have visited the Keys many times and the only thing that was difficult for me was one you didn't mention. The mosquitoes. Most of the bars and restaurants are outdoors and the Black Salt Marsh Mosquitos would come out right after sunset. On the beach, it's not so bad but further inland they can be numerous and aggressive.

    • @chillwill5080
      @chillwill5080 Год назад +3

      No See Ums are far worse than mosquitoes.

    • @nsh1980gmail
      @nsh1980gmail Год назад +1

      Both are terrible whenever you are near salt estuaries in Florida but bug repellent works

    • @phillamoore157
      @phillamoore157 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yup. It's impossible to describe the bugs to someone that's never experienced it. That's why people don't wear cologne....at least at outside bars (a mistake a made ONCE when I first moved here). No-seums are something that only Satan himself could've created. Those did NOT come from God. The exist to do one thing....make our lives indescribably miserable. And, that's Florida, in general, not just the Keys. But, if it was dry, with no bugs, FL real-estate prices would be worse than CA's.

    • @MrCoffeekelly
      @MrCoffeekelly 4 месяца назад +1

      @@phillamoore157 go north if you think mosquitoes and noseeums are bad in Florida. You can't even open the door here in the fall without hundreds of noseeums getting in the house.

    • @phillamoore157
      @phillamoore157 4 месяца назад

      @@MrCoffeekelly Not sure how far north you're talking, but I grew up in Ohio, and vacation'd all over MO, MI. It could all be bad at certain times, certain places, but it was also nothing more than a bad inconvenience that could be solved with bug spray, and a camp fire. But, I've NEVER experienced anything like what I experienced down here. It was bad enough to where we almost cancelled the trip. I had a picture my wife took of what my back looked like for a really long time after that trip. I looked like I got attacked by nerve gas, and had those little scabs for weeks after I came home. The strange thing is that, depending on where you go it's a different bug having the same catastrophic effect. In central FL it's "love bugs", in lake county on the Harris Chain of lakes. I think just about any hot, humid, stagnant body of water, with no breeze, can be a potential apocalyptic disaster, and you have to choose where/when you go VERY wisely...or, choose clothing wisely. But, if you have to live with ANY-thing even REMOTELY comparable to what we experienced down here, I'd probably wind up moving. Something else I learned is that noseeums are a COMPLETELY different beast than mosquitos. In many cases, I never felt mosquito bites till the next day. Noseeums are just miserable, demons that feel like a needle poking you thousands of times all over your bod, at the same time. And, they dont' give a d*mn WHAT spray you have on, bare skin is fair game to those hateful little creatures. Anyway...I'm rambling. Hopefully, 2024 will be a better year for inconvenient pests! 👍

  • @paulawhalen293
    @paulawhalen293 Год назад +1

    Lived there from 1973 to 1985. Loved every minute of our life and all the wonderful friends. My gripes….humidity, mosquitoes, hurricanes.

  • @yardarm5
    @yardarm5 Год назад +2

    Thanks for summing up so nicely. Islamorada has been a 14day vaca for years now and it’s been hard to beat. Many thanks to the local businesses that provide such an accommodating environment.❤

    • @fjb4932
      @fjb4932 Год назад +2

      You keep supplying the money, they'll keep supplying an accommodating environment . . . .

  • @el-Cu9432
    @el-Cu9432 Год назад +17

    The heat/humidity combination can be deadly.

  • @davidbenner2289
    @davidbenner2289 Год назад +3

    So far you make it sound great! I was born and raised in East, Southeast Asia and the Western Pacific islands. From the early 1950's onward. I'm stuck between the two forks of the beautiful Shenandoah River, in the breathtaking Shenandoah Valley of Virginia! In the Black Bear Capital of Virginia!

  • @robertscheinost179
    @robertscheinost179 Год назад +52

    I was stationed in Key West for two years so I have a little different perspective than most people about the keys. It's a great place to visit for a week or two in the winter but that is about the end of any good thing about the Keys. If you are not retired and even if you are, the rentals and purchase prices are about 3 times as expensive as the State I live in. That's saying a lot because I live in one of the most expensive States (Connecticut). Most people have to rent with 2 or 3 other people and plan on paying most of your wages to your landlord. The whole of the Keys are just one big tourist trap. plan on paying resort prices for every day prices. Then there are the tourists. Every two weeks a new crop visits. Don't forget the Cruise ships that dock and gorge their cargo of day trippers loose for the day. Thank god I was stationed there over 50 years ago when the Keys were "sleepytown". I went back in 1996 for a military reunion and hardly recognized the place! Still, everybody should visit the Island Chain for a week or two. It will make you appreciate your home base and you can say you visited the longest whorehouse, about 130 miles top to bottom. Most important, your happiest day will be the day you leave the Keys and head home!

    • @chillwill5080
      @chillwill5080 Год назад +4

      this is true. I live in KW a month or two each winter, usually excited to finally arrive because the drive is grueling, and it's nice weather. But it sure is nice to put it in my rear view mirror and get home to normality also.

    • @dmbalsam
      @dmbalsam Год назад +5

      We spent two winters, recently, in Key West. They have cut way back on the number of cruise ships that come in.

    • @chillwill5080
      @chillwill5080 Год назад +5

      @@dmbalsam It's because the government stepped in and limited the length of the ships which previously blocked the Coast Guard facility.

    • @samfeikema9447
      @samfeikema9447 Год назад

      Longest whore house, that's one I'll need to remember for future use.

    • @TomBTerrific
      @TomBTerrific Год назад +7

      Many tourist places are like that. What makes a place initially desirable ends up ruining them. I lived in Hawaii for about 4 year also in California, Nevada, Oregon Montana,Florida, Idaho and Tennessee. All those states have incredible spots in them but over time as they are discovered they become less desirable. It’s a shame really

  • @rubytuby6369
    @rubytuby6369 Год назад +5

    I live in Marathon for about three years. The constant wind started to get to me after a while, always seemed like it was blowing.

  • @hawkeye98
    @hawkeye98 Год назад +47

    Lived two years in key west and decided to move after Irma. Yes everything he mentioned is true. One thing he left out on a people note is that the keys, and especially key west, the people are extremely cliquish. You want notice it as a tourist but when you live there it’s quite apparent.

    • @chillwill5080
      @chillwill5080 Год назад +4

      People are nuts there.

    • @cgrape22
      @cgrape22 Год назад +5

      I used to live there and was married to a native conch. You are right it is very cliquish, but in fairness there are so many tourists that you have to have some boundaries. Also, there is a high Cuban ancestry there too that contributes to this sense of native identity. I loved living there but I’m not sure if I could handle the seasonal influx now, must be ten fold since I was there riding my bike after work to the beach for an afternoon swim & cocktail!

    • @chillwill5080
      @chillwill5080 Год назад +18

      @@cgrape22 It's a commercialized rathole, like ghetto disney. It's fun to see the pretty lights and sights, but you really don't want to look behind the curtains.

    • @hawkeye98
      @hawkeye98 Год назад +5

      @@cgrape22 it was really nice in the “off” season. Or let’s say slower. You could actually have a nice dinner and drink with the wife without a bunch of cruise ship hood rats screaming up and down the street.

    • @denisekerry4555
      @denisekerry4555 Год назад +7

      Now y’all know how us northerners here. Live northern lower MI. Memorial Day rolls around marking all the people coming to their summer homes cuz they can’t stand the summer heat. We wish they would stay home!!! Get that it’s important for tourism and business profits. But y’all are uppity AF. Stay home!!!

  • @kylepope3326
    @kylepope3326 Год назад

    Seems like a really nice community to be a part of, thanks for the info!

  • @bonnford9164
    @bonnford9164 Год назад +5

    I've lived in the south my entire life. Louisiana, Houston Tx., and Ft. Lauderdale 46 yrs now Nocatee, Ponte Vedra, Fl.Jacksonville area so I am use to it but we moved to the Jacksonville/ St. Augustine to escape the perpetual spring/summer. here are just too many bugs in the keys.

  • @smith899
    @smith899 Год назад +7

    We moved to Cocoa Beach three years ago and LOVE it!
    My assessment:
    Positives-
    We LOVE the little lizards, geckos, whatever they actually are!!! They are so cute! (We do not have the iguanas.)
    As a beach town, it is not as warm as inland, so the temperature is very comfortable. In three years, it has not been above 92°F. It rarely gets to 90°F. I lived in Alabama for 30 years. July and August were 90+ every day.
    Very few mosquitoes or flies!!!!! I am guessing the ocean breeze is hard to fly against. IDK why, but we love it!! You can have a meal outside and not see a fly!
    Cocoa Beach is a small town. I ride my bike to most things. In three years, I have put less than 10k miles on my car.
    Negative-
    Yes, the humidity is uncomfortable at times, but nothing is perfect. I can change my top four or five times a day in the summer, because it is so wet from sweat. I’ve never experienced this any place else, but I just bought light, inexpensive tops, and they get washed a bunch. 😂
    RUST! Everything with any amount of metal rusts! I don’t care what the manufacturer says, it will rust very fast! Just plan on it. There are days you can see the salt spray in the air.
    In conclusion, we love it here, but we loved Alabama just as much the 30 years we lived there. Every place has its good and bad.

    • @kyrareneeLOA
      @kyrareneeLOA Год назад

      No flooding or storms? I would be so afraid of losing everything in a storm

  • @senecalakevette1234
    @senecalakevette1234 Год назад +52

    After vacationing there for many winter breaks and seriously thinking about getting a place there in retirement, the final straw that changed our minds was the homeless problems in Kew West. You can't go anywhere without the panhandling, begging, and the worse was people taking a dump in broad daylight on the sidewalk when you try to walk. The cops don't care and won't do anything. I'll go elsewhere.

    • @mikerieck306
      @mikerieck306 Год назад +4

      I lived there for 8 months back in 1976. There were always bums there because it is warm all the time but there wasn't a lot of begging. Fortunately they weren't taking a dump on the sidewalks. The conchs are interesting...I think everybody was sleeping with somebody else's husband or wife.

    • @WeimaranersAreTheBest
      @WeimaranersAreTheBest Год назад +9

      Sounds like San Fran

    • @Moonewitch
      @Moonewitch Год назад +3

      Are you serious!??? 😳😳😳

    • @sassynfree884
      @sassynfree884 Год назад +12

      Key West is NOT “The Keys”! It is ONE Key.

    • @lillieberger2883
      @lillieberger2883 Год назад +2

      Sounds just like San Diego.

  • @kennethmendenhallii1598
    @kennethmendenhallii1598 Год назад +4

    1) Red tide
    2) Red tide
    3) Red tide
    4) Key Deer speed zones
    5) Red tide
    6) Red tide
    7) Red tide
    8) Red tide
    9) Expensive gas

  • @cjb7525
    @cjb7525 Год назад

    I lived in Key West for 2 years and loved it. I used my bike 90% of the time to get around the key. Drove anytime I had to leave town. This was in 2012-2014, I never noticed any issues with homeless etc.

  • @patriciawightman4561
    @patriciawightman4561 2 года назад +219

    If you hate nature, the smell of the beautiful ocean, hate lizards and normal creatures just trying to survive, would rather have fires, tornados or floods and need to stay in a materialistic mode please stay home!! We locals love all that stuff and don't need haters.

    • @juliejensen7370
      @juliejensen7370 Год назад +12

      It's a better place to visit if you're not rich.

    • @steveellis1191
      @steveellis1191 Год назад +4

      Except friggin iguanas.

    • @dmitryshevchenko6815
      @dmitryshevchenko6815 Год назад +20

      No, we haters think you need some diversity in your fairy tale world. We’re coming with our worst habits!

    • @KeyLargoDude
      @KeyLargoDude Год назад +5

      Or if you enjoy getting hypothermia in you family room! 😂 feel free to stay where you are !

    • @anthony6522
      @anthony6522 Год назад +27

      The smell is not the beautiful ocean, it basically smells like swamp water.

  • @troy9er
    @troy9er Год назад +4

    I have had family in Sarasota since the 60’s! Great for a visit but not for year round living. 😉

  • @user-ib1dd9er2l
    @user-ib1dd9er2l 2 месяца назад

    appreciate the honesty - lots to consider- thanks

  • @Rosary716
    @Rosary716 Год назад +10

    Just visiting has become too expensive. $175-225/night for a very basic room. Out of my league now. 😢

    • @NikonChicFL
      @NikonChicFL Год назад +3

      Yeah….even the upper keys is that much. Hubs and I started going to st augustine as the prices were not worth it. Plus was not enjoying the vibe in key west.

  • @martinwagner9610
    @martinwagner9610 Год назад +1

    I enjoyed your video. The costs - and the crowds are negatives. Such a beautiful place though!

  • @howardfine2209
    @howardfine2209 Год назад +4

    i grew up in key west during the 1970s-80s.was there when the cubans came over in the early 80s,wild times man.

    • @stj971
      @stj971 Год назад

      👍 yes it was!

  • @shannonbrophy3687
    @shannonbrophy3687 Год назад +4

    I would also bring up the water quality is bad so drinking water will be purchased at the store.

  • @phromic
    @phromic Год назад +2

    I have no intention of living there and building a home ever ,but I always thought it would be a fun vacation . from what you have said , basically confirms this lol . no where is perfect but I have grown accustomed to the polar opposite climate and I am land locked ( do not get me wrong there are rivers and lakes near by ) . I would feel like I was in a different country , just no passport needed .

  • @joeseeking3572
    @joeseeking3572 Год назад +17

    For me, the major con for purchasing in Key West is the isolation. I like to travel and like variety. 3-4 hour (painful and frustrating, depending) drive to MIA or a limited selection of flights out of KW. Yes, I can get to O'Hare, DFW and Atlanta and anywhere from any of them, but it just adds time. Beautiful and I could just about afford what I'd want, yet......

  • @mikejenkins4598
    @mikejenkins4598 2 года назад +6

    Too crowded in the winter that's why I sold out and back to my Creek in North Florida .

  • @DcnWayne
    @DcnWayne Год назад +7

    Nice Vlog.
    Hoping to be a snowbird someday. So far we've only spent three weeks on Largo in December. A few days the humidity was heavy; can't imagine what it would be like in the summer.
    BTW, one of your "snakes" was actually a Golden Spotted Eel (we're divers).
    Blessings.

    • @georgewashington7444
      @georgewashington7444 Год назад

      Orlando south is a flat, smelly swamp hell. The 2 weeks a year when the air is clear and humidity low it is pretty cool though.

  • @sammolloy1
    @sammolloy1 Год назад +1

    I spent a week at Bahia Honda State Park in 1974 and loved it.
    There were only about 20 “regular” homeless on Sunset Pier. One wore a flea collar.
    I loved the old homes with louvres on the ground floor windows.
    I believe “thinking fourth dimensionally” is good advice, and I have no desire to even visit the Key West of 2023

  • @roivosemraiva
    @roivosemraiva Год назад +1

    I lived on Duck Key back in the 70s and 80s..after many years, of Hurricanes (Andrew the worsel, Wild Tourists season every weekend, James Bond film makings crews , flood rains , fearless frozen iguanas, Cuban Crocodiles (not gators)in my fruit garden, Mosquito Season , and power outages ..we moved to Mid Florida... I used to see hundreds of Key Deer all about the Key. Wonderful creatures. Many would die from vehicles. I loved those years..good report...before internet...

  • @karentyler4117
    @karentyler4117 Год назад +3

    Where I live here is like Paradise Sunny 75 while whole county is 35up north I moved here I live it sunny sunshine 🌞 I'm off antidepressants

  • @charlymcguire345
    @charlymcguire345 2 года назад +7

    Owned a home on Big Pine for 20 years till the massive property tax reformation in 2008..ran many folks out of the keys.

  • @campfireaddict6417
    @campfireaddict6417 Год назад +19

    Lived in the Keys for 5 years, Big Pine, Islamorada, Marathon, Key Largo. Hunted lobster, fished, partied, swam, worked, explored, had fun, had hard times too but I never saw an iguana maybe because we left in 2000. Just caught the last of the wildness. Houseboat Row had recently been removed, sadly. I wonder if the chickens are still at Blue Heaven in Key West; big money has destroyed so much of the character. The Key deer will always be there. Only saw one gator and that was at the "Hole", saw tons in the Everglades.
    Lived through Hurricane Georges, it was a mess for a long time.
    I certainly wouldn't even dream of buying property down there under any circumstance. Insurance is way too tricky, rules, regulations, laws are as well because only the filthy rich can afford it and they're so easy to exploit. It really was a highlight of my life to live down there, I'll have to admit, and the best was the pals, the buddies, the friends, the gatherings, and going to the Dry Tortugas!

    • @erica4862
      @erica4862 Год назад +4

      Yes the chickens are still at Blue Heaven… I ate there last night :)

    • @franklee2683
      @franklee2683 Год назад

      I was there for awhile myself, just after Mariel ,met some of the Mel Fisher crew as they were still looking for the "Atocha" (Todays the day!),houseboat row still very much active and there. Im talking early 1980s. Had a friend,Bob Marks whose family owned a huge chunk of the east end of the island,near Stock Island. I can tell you were there and enjiyed it ,from your detailed description. I had a bit of culture shock,wasnt my ideal locale. Family was rooted though,I left. Oh yeah,I hung with the daughter of the family that owned/sold Sloppy Joes bar (she said,lol). Stacy,if you are out there...Peace.

  • @markbartlett3642
    @markbartlett3642 Год назад +14

    Was kinda shocked there was no mention of mosquitoes, was there and decided to go the distance of the keys made it as far as key largo and spent the night and was absolutely ate alive from the mosquitoes and while living in Cocoa beach was overrun by love bugs......enough Fla. for me

    • @monsantofungaro5704
      @monsantofungaro5704 Год назад +1

      The mosquitos in Cocoa Beach were so big they had ticks on them! Huge!! Lol

    • @markbartlett3642
      @markbartlett3642 Год назад

      @@monsantofungaro5704 Lol I know your right

    • @classicsciencefictionhorro1665
      @classicsciencefictionhorro1665 Год назад

      Mosquitoes are especially bad in the Keys because they lived near nuclear waste from an old nuclear sub that had a leak in the 70's. Key West skeeters have evolved to be 50% larger and to require more blood to survive. They themselves are NOT radioactive and they don't glow like some claim, but they are hard to kill.

  • @clemdane
    @clemdane Год назад +3

    I do get seasick, but I LOVE the ocean and boating and dream of living by the sea where I can sail all the time

  • @CaptainCraigKWMRZ
    @CaptainCraigKWMRZ Год назад +8

    I've lived in Key West for 37 years.
    It was great in the 80's, good in the 90's and thru about 2010. Then the oil spill and a couple bad storms and Yankees hit the island...
    Now if you are not ultra rich or your conch grandma left you a house, you can't live here.
    Besides, the reef is dead, the fishing is horrible and the water is full of fecal matter.
    Oh, and the healthcare is non-existent.
    So, sorry. You missed it.

    • @chillwill5080
      @chillwill5080 Год назад

      You nailed it, drunken white trash and dead reefs is pretty much it. Most of the locals are government employees so everything is paid for for them to be there.

    • @bonniehowell9206
      @bonniehowell9206 Год назад +1

      I lived there in the early 2000's and left in 2008. You're absolutely right and while I still have fond memories, the last time I went there on vacation it wasn't the same.

    • @stj971
      @stj971 Год назад

      Sad

  • @muggins9389
    @muggins9389 Год назад +8

    Don't forget the largest demographic of the keys, the bugs... Scorpions, fire ants, venomous spiders, mosquitoes, cockroaches, ticks, fleas, sand fleas, ect... Oh, and don't dare touch any frogs...... Also, the gators are not a problem, you leave them alone, they'll leave you alone. it's the salt water Crocodiles you have to worry about.... if you have pets, or small children, don't let them play by the edge of any canals unsupervised.....

  • @throughmyeyes...
    @throughmyeyes... Год назад +11

    Two things not on your list, and they can coexist, if you have little patience or are in a hurry, may not be for you, also the traffic, more than once I sat on Long Key bridge for hours because of an accident, so just realize schedules and appointments are made to be broken, and "keys time" is a real thing, if you enjoy the hustle and bustle of city life, you'll find yourself quickly frustrated with the pace of the locals...

    • @chillwill5080
      @chillwill5080 Год назад +2

      Most of the locals are kooky grifters either living off government paychecks or by scamming tourists, yes it's frustrating.

    • @bonniehowell9206
      @bonniehowell9206 Год назад

      @@chillwill5080 I have learned that the hard way ,but definitely have some interesting stories.

    • @classicsciencefictionhorro1665
      @classicsciencefictionhorro1665 Год назад +1

      I was a local years ago. We would move slowly 1) because we could 2) because we knew it pissed off tourists. Sometimes tourist would offer us a big tip to move faster. We took the money but still did our own thing. Locals need tourists but still hated them, if that makes sense.

  • @garypellerin5576
    @garypellerin5576 Год назад +3

    Didn't mention congestion, tourist and traffic, they go hand in hand. Bars and restaurants are full all the time and parking close to them near impossible. But the worse one is that thin ribbon of asphalt called A1A. It's the only way in and out. A major accident can shut the road for hours. God help you if it happens while you are on the seven-mile bridge. Oh, and EVERTHING is more expensive.

  • @marywinn8953
    @marywinn8953 Год назад +3

    I grew up in S. Florida from 59 to 88.We then moved to N.Central Florida. Left there in 97. Headed West. Florida just got too crowded for us.

    • @stj971
      @stj971 Год назад +1

      Too hot for me especially central FL.

  • @duffsmith8692
    @duffsmith8692 Год назад +5

    I have lived in Key Largo since 2010 and I am more interested in the native plant and animal composition. I wish more people were here who cared to look up things in field guides and realize what special things we have. There are volunteer workdays for coastal cleanups, native tree planting and invasive plant removal and you can meet and network with really great people doing that. The animal issues are a source of friction, and some of the insect problems are tied to that. If you are more educated and emotionally mature about these issues, the Keys need you. Some will disagree.

    • @norsemanshorn3988
      @norsemanshorn3988 Год назад

      I just came upon a video the other day about a flower that mosquitoes can't stand. I'll try and find it. Don't the iguanas eat bugs? So that's kinda a necessary evil I guess. I wonder how often they reproduce? Are they any good to eat? New Orleans plates up a very lean grass fed protein healthier than turkey chicken or pork. It's called Nutrina. It's a herbivore that eats only grass. "Muskrat." 😅 I've so much to learn.
      Real key lime pie in the keys is one for the bucket list. Peace...

  • @sassypants5716
    @sassypants5716 Год назад +2

    I live in Florida and have been to the Keys a couple of times. Although very pretty, I would never live there. Traffic can be horrendous, too many tourists, everything is expensive, and living there would make you a sitting duck for hurricanes.

  • @valeriegarrity5773
    @valeriegarrity5773 Год назад +4

    Great video. We were there Christmas 2019 (just before COVID). My husband and I camped in RV park while my son and his wife stayed on Duval St. Had a blast, then came home and hubby came down with COVID before anybody knew what it was.

    • @chillwill5080
      @chillwill5080 Год назад +1

      Key West looked like a set from the walking dead three months later when I left there, no traffic and crazy police road blocks at top of the keys just made it all surreal.

    • @classicsciencefictionhorro1665
      @classicsciencefictionhorro1665 Год назад

      He might have had monkey pox. That was prevalent in the Keys.

  • @jeffreydeaton4097
    @jeffreydeaton4097 Год назад

    i was down there 2 years ago and loved it the heat and the sun dont bother me none cause im from the deep south. Im a sucker for the beaches and the ocean. Some of the people that live there whole life thought me and my brother was from there asked if we wanted to move here but we just dont have that kind of money to make the move there

  • @j.a.p0589
    @j.a.p0589 Год назад +3

    You didn’t mention how expensive it is to live there. Cost of living is extremely high

  • @jencast3423
    @jencast3423 Год назад +8

    Lived in Florida since 1983 I’m from New England and I left for a few years but I came back because this is the greatest place to live and we have the best governor in the nation

  • @deniseslusher4251
    @deniseslusher4251 Год назад +2

    No see ums!! I spent 6 months at Key West...survived on Benedryl. LOVED our stay, but but allergy made it rough.

    • @deniseslusher4251
      @deniseslusher4251 Год назад +1

      And the rust. Our vehicle started rusting out...even the refrigerator in the cabin was rusting.

  • @curtishyde1842
    @curtishyde1842 Год назад

    Names Curtis Hyde I happened to found your Channel by pure happenstance now I like what I heard on the nine bad what do you got for the nine good and by the way I am now subscriber one show and I'm impressed I'm also a native Florida boy it was raised in the Honduran Bay Islands

  • @Mach11976
    @Mach11976 Год назад +1

    Indian Rocks Beach was just perfect for me. I lived in Florida for 25 years, and watched it change for the worse. Had to move out unfortunately but the change saved my old ass lol

  • @pierrelarocque3214
    @pierrelarocque3214 Год назад +2

    One road in and one road out. The perfect scenario to be locked in. I was stalled for more than an hour because of a dump truck with locked air brakes, very trivial indeed, so just think about anything serious like a hurricane blown bridge. Wow !!! You are now a prisoner. No food resupply, no fuel and so on and so forth. Hell in paradise.

    • @bonniehowell9206
      @bonniehowell9206 Год назад

      True. If there is a fatality on the overseas highway, hopefully you can turn around before you're stuck there for hours. That happened to me once and had to call out of work.

  • @Rosary716
    @Rosary716 Год назад +6

    I had a sweet little trailer in Islamorada. In 2017, Irma threw it into the ocean. All gone.

    • @dj33036
      @dj33036 Год назад +1

      I can't remember the name of the trailer park but you probably lived in the same one I did. I was there for five years and fortunately I sold my place in 2015. I feel sorry for the people that bought my place, they lost everything. I think it was mile marker 94.7 or there abouts.

  • @jeremymiller6830
    @jeremymiller6830 Год назад +3

    I’ve lived in key largo for almost 6 years now and I do a lot of commuting between here and marathon for my work. I’m shocked no one has mentioned the traffic being a negative. It can take up to a hour just going through islamorada.

    • @johnmurray6007
      @johnmurray6007 Год назад

      Seriously, it takes forever to get anywhere. How can you not mention that. It’s bearable for a one week vacation but to live there, no thanks.

  • @MizzAugust7
    @MizzAugust7 Год назад +2

    Native Born Fla. You need LOTS of money. Well over $5,000.00. Look at the Florida Keys Craigslist, because you wont believe the rent costs there. Rent in the Keys is 3 times what you think high rent is. Also Savings, A way to bring in Income still as you move (it can be done) Im sober, not many men interested in that, But, it actually Helps :) Many people come to the Keys to party , but to stay you need a job that pays Very well.

  • @noneofyourbizness
    @noneofyourbizness Год назад +1

    seasonal changes should not be taken for granted, though they easily are.

  • @ranakeen9884
    @ranakeen9884 Год назад +5

    09. The sun
    08. The humidity
    07. Jobs are service oriented
    06. No flowers iguanas eat them
    05. It smells weird
    04. Hurricanes
    03. Snakes and alligators
    02. Fewer schools
    01. Water is very choppy seasick!

  • @ImTheDudeMan471
    @ImTheDudeMan471 Год назад +1

    I live next to MCAS Miramar. I don't think there's a more temperate place in the U.S. (Winter 57 F/Summer 72, no bugs, low humidity). The F-18's are a bit loud but I'll take it.

  • @RatedArggg
    @RatedArggg Год назад +3

    Humidity + heat makes me feel like I'm being broiled. Add mosquitoes and fleas and I'm out of there.

  • @jefferyepstein9210
    @jefferyepstein9210 Год назад +2

    The one thing I don't like is that there is not alot of public beach area in Key West.

  • @robsongomes4646
    @robsongomes4646 Год назад +3

    I'm from Brazil. I see this beaultiful place on the Netflix series Bloodline.

  • @susansharp112
    @susansharp112 Год назад +1

    Worst place to live for hurricanes. That road to get out is a mess. I was in hurricane Andrew. 250 Mike per hour tornados

  • @mattp4079
    @mattp4079 2 года назад +6

    Don't forget about flood and hurricane insurance.

  • @Sixbears
    @Sixbears Год назад +5

    I love the Keys, but for me the only way I can afford it is to live on a small sailboat. Haven't been since 2019 but this year might be different.

  • @michiganengineer8621
    @michiganengineer8621 Год назад +7

    I went through basic during the summer in Orlando, "Black Flag" days due to high heat/humidity were the norm which was nice because it meant no double timing 🤣 Then I was stationed at Mayport (on USS Saratoga) for 4 years and didn't mind the "comparatively mild" humidity there on the ocean. House insurance and the restrictions on building (even if you COULD afford to buy a patch of vacant land) are the big strikes against the Keys for me.

  • @__-io7yh
    @__-io7yh Год назад +4

    as someone who lives in south miami……these are not cons these are just facts of life. to the keys i go!!!

  • @bogger44fl
    @bogger44fl Год назад +3

    I got island fever after a week. No open fields or open areas.

  • @RoyalFlush7096
    @RoyalFlush7096 Год назад +1

    I lived onRamrod Key for 2 years, I had boats, living on open water, money, and vehicles…I was bored to tears.

  • @PeacefulPalms-Islamorada-xc6zv
    @PeacefulPalms-Islamorada-xc6zv 3 месяца назад

    Great video!!

  • @RobertLeather
    @RobertLeather Год назад

    I wasn't so much put off by the heat and humidity. I'm from the North West of England and out summers regularly hot 105f with 100% humidity.

  • @ladydragonrider421
    @ladydragonrider421 Год назад +2

    THAT'S MY OLD HOUSE! THAT'S CONCH KEY ! the white house to the right of the yellow house. I owned that house from 84 to 99 ! I was a commercial lobsterman and a professional scuba diver.

  • @deejayaviva
    @deejayaviva Год назад +1

    Moved to Tavernier 3 years ago, and never ever looked back. I thrive here.

  • @timsears951
    @timsears951 Год назад +2

    Screw Florid in general ...you couldnt pay me enough to live anywhere in Florida

  • @wjb111
    @wjb111 Год назад +1

    Conch Key in the back drop. Love it!

  • @wedomusic.
    @wedomusic. 2 года назад +1

    good stuff =)

  • @oscardelta1257
    @oscardelta1257 Год назад +1

    We live in central FL as a native of Florida I can say I wouldn't want to live in the keys, it nice to go there now and then to fish in islamorada etc but traffic is horrendous because land is at a premium. We dont have the iguanas in central FL.

  • @guywhyre2543
    @guywhyre2543 Год назад +2

    GREAT , informative video. I had a LOT of great meals in Key West, too. Including a fantastic sandwich at Kelly McGillis' {from Top Gun fame} place (Kelly's Caribbean Bar, Grill & Brewery). By the way, Hawaii is the Southernmost part of the USA. The Keys are the most southern part of the Contiguous 48 states.

    • @marvinbone1379
      @marvinbone1379 Год назад +2

      Guy, I consider myself a geography buff...but I did NOT realize that !! If that had been a Jeopardy question, I woulda missed it.

  • @ronaldboyd3751
    @ronaldboyd3751 Год назад

    I'm from Florida and have been to Key West and the islands several times. All you brought up is true but the expense is something you should emphasize more. It is expensive to live there. Most of the service people have to ride an hour or more on the bus each way to work.

  • @capedoryus
    @capedoryus Год назад +1

    Retired? Medicare? Avoid HMO or PPO. One doctor and any specialist is an overnight trip. Half the population can't afford to ever have the stability of home ownership. Got 5 million saved it's a great alternative to big FL developments.

  • @jasonmickel2356
    @jasonmickel2356 Год назад +34

    As a Florida resident for 20 years now , your video hit a few points but not many . I love in central Florida and been to the keys tons of times …3 times this year alone . Number one of your list and this is coming from Florida keys residence is the inconveniences for things like your cars , doctor availablity , specialist etc. these 9 reasons are for the entire state of Florida not for the keys specifically..juts saying

    • @brianwagner9518
      @brianwagner9518 Год назад +5

      you are saying what i was thinking great point. a guy from idaho giving advice on living in florida

    • @scronx
      @scronx Год назад +5

      I find his talk extremely interesting, and look at all the discussion it's evoked.

  • @moosefactory133
    @moosefactory133 Год назад

    I just came back from the keys and the thing i notice was wild roosters everywhere from Key West to Key Largo. Even though the roosters and chickens are not native to the keys, they are a protective animal species.

  • @toniwalser3989
    @toniwalser3989 Год назад +14

    I am originally from Miami. Loved Miami, but decided to move to keys with my husband and son due to his family of several generations lived there. I can tell you several things, cost of living is ridiculous, jobs there pay very poorly, there is no shopping other than expensive boutique stores. Shopping consists of k-mart, bealls and a tjmaxx. After living there a few years even my son was very agreeable to get off "the rock" as they call it. We ended up moving to somewhere else in Florida. I will say that the keys is a nice and fun place to visit, but not to live. While I was living there, I saw many transients come and go once they realized they had no time or money to enjoy the keys. Lastly, you're right about the clique and lots of nepotism with jobs. I will say key west is a nice place to visit, especially going out on the water. Sorry, also the food isn't good. Miami has amazing food.

    • @debradowling800
      @debradowling800 Год назад +1

      I referred to it as life on the rock also. Left thirty years ago and never went back, just hated it.

  • @jeaniechampagne8831
    @jeaniechampagne8831 2 месяца назад

    You're right about humidity in the south in general. Way of life Baton Rouge, La. Lawd lawd! Nice video.

  • @cleopatra862
    @cleopatra862 Год назад +2

    I moved from Naples, and Marco Island 🏝️ Florida. I can’t stand the humidity.. used to play golf 6 days a week. Um.. it’s ok.. I enjoy the mountains in AZ and if I wanted to go to the beach.. I can take a vacation, but no thanks to Florida ever again.

  • @robertdavis5714
    @robertdavis5714 Год назад

    Did not know about the Green Iguanas, which I personally would enjoy seeing. Hurricanes yes, but you do not have Earthquakes and have lived close to epicenter for 1971 and 1994 here in screwed-up Calif and EQ's suck, what they do not mention is 2 yrs of aftershocks you have to live thru, and they always happen between 1-4 am. This is where I want to Live.