How to start and try cohousing for a young Peruvian family?
From: lfischrup (lfischrupcomcast.net)
Date: Tue, 26 Nov 2013 08:11:12 -0800 (PST)
And . . . after you have checked out Portland, Oregon you can join us in 
Eugene, Oregon (90 miles south of Portland) where we are building Eugene's 
first cohousing community. We plan to break ground, Summer of 2014 and seek 
families now to join us in this next phase of developing our community, 
Oakleigh Meadow Cohousing. You can search for us on the Cohousing National site 
or visit our website: www.OakleighMeadow.org There are so many great options 
throughout the country. Best wishes and if you have any desire to live in the 
Pacific Northwest, come visit us. Laura 

----- Original Message -----
From: "Melanie Mindlin" <sassetta [at] mind.net> 
To: cohousing-l [at] cohousing.org 
Sent: Tuesday, November 26, 2013 7:54:00 AM 
Subject: [C-L]_ How to start and try cohousing for a young Peruvian family? 


Hi Alexis, 
Maybe you should consider Portland, Oregon. There are several cohousing 
communities there, it's quite inexpensive, lots of good city stuff and 
relatively safe from a disaster point of view. It's a bit of a long flight to 
New York, but there's a good airport hub with lots of flights. Last I heard 
there are cohousing communities with homes available in Portland. 
Boosting for Oregon, 
Melanie 

On Nov 26, 2013, at 3:16 AM, cohousing-l-request [at] cohousing.org wrote: 

> Message: 3 
> Date: Mon, 25 Nov 2013 20:34:26 -0500 
> From: Alexis Bellido <alexis [at] ventanazul.com> 
> Subject: [C-L]_ How to start and try cohousing for a young Peruvian 
> family? 
> To: cohousing-l [at] cohousing.org 
> Message-ID: 
> <CAOnm+WCiG_ZHhrkWwR+jis9NpWwOczw=nXQmZkwSh3Xbe-GiKA [at] mail.gmail.com> 
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 
> 
> Hi Katie, 
> 
> Nice meeting you and thanks for the information. 
> 
> DC sounds interesting and I'll start googling around to learn more. 
> 
> But I'm open to moving farther away from NYC if necessary as I know the 
> Northeast has a higher cost of living and being able to work remotely I 
> don't really need to be that close. 
> 
> I'm wondering, what other places in the US could be interesting to explore 
> from the cohousing point of view based on the priorities listed in my 
> original message? I wouldn't want to be too far away from civlization or a 
> big city as I'll need to fly and have access to other services (good 
> hospitals and public schools being the most important). 
> 
> I know there are many nice places in the US but it seems there's always 
> some kind of natural disaster happening somewhere: tornadoes, hurricanes, 
> fire, snow, etc. Or maybe I'm just being paranoid. I know no place is 
> guaranteed to be safe all the time; the NJ/NY area seemed to be relatively 
> safe until Irene and then Sandy happened. 
> 
> Best regards. 
> 
> Alexis Bellido 

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