Member
Posts: 27
 Location: Pink, Oklahoma | My husband is in the Air Force and we are considering transfering from Virginia to Tinker AFB near Oklahoma City. If you live near there, or have visited there will you please give me your opinion of the area. We will also might need to find a place to board our three horses until we can find a place to purchase. Any suggestions on boarding facilities would be appreciated also. Thanks. Lisa |
Regular
Posts: 98
   Location: Baldwin City, KS 66006 | I just went to Shawnee, OK to pick up a new trailer and came down the turnpike from the North thru OK City. I stopped at Norman, OK to get fuel and my riding partner and I both agreed that we really liked that town. What I was was really nice. OK City is a nice place to visit but I wouldn't want to live there. I went to the OK State Fair about 5 yrs ago and was not impressed with the town then. What I saw was pretty run down and the State Fair grounds needed alot of updating. If I didn't have heavy family connections in KS I'd move to OK in a heartbeat but I'd go south of OK City. |
Regular
Posts: 94
   Location: south central pennsylvania | I vote for Oklahoma! Living my entire life 90 minutes from the D.C./Baltimore area, you can rest easy knowing the "beltway mentality" (I want it NOW!; eventhough I am blatantly WRONG, I will not admit it, and YOU must get me out of it; get out of my way, don't you know I am the only person that belongs on this road!; my child is perfect, and I will lie through my teeth to protect him/her when they have done wrong, etc., etc.,) will not be a part of Oklahoma living. We picked up a trailer in Chickasha, and visited Oklahoma City (Cowboy museum). We just happened upon a fairground holding a regional or state fair (forgot which). We watched the ranch rodeo. Let me explain to you the opening ceremonies - They sang the National Anthem - EVERYONE - hats off, hand over hearts. Next they PRAYED, yes PRAYED, for the safety of the participants, AND for our boys in IRAQ. Next they played Lee Greenwood's tribute to America as a rider rode the arena with the U.S. flag. Next, they paid tribute to an OLDER gentleman who had a long association with the ranch rodeo. I had tears in my eyes - I was so overwhelmed that these acts still existed in public places in our nation. We don't see such displays of God, country, patriotism, and respect for the elderly on the East Coast, particularly in my politically correct area - we are fighting to keep the words "under God" in the Pledge Allegiance at our schools! The material strappings of a place are not as important to me as the folks that live there. GO FOR IT! Brenda |