Diamondback
I'll Lock Up
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Decent-sized airstrip, just in case... and a sensible legal environment for us who are serious about our "personal protection" tools (read: "Shall-Issue CCW" or better yet "Vermont/Alaska Carry").
IMHO, Clear Lake is somewhat touristy-resorty - packed-in lakefront homes, cutesy-poo Main St. - but a pleasant enough place all round. It has a satellite community called Ventura, with its own, much smaller, lake.I've not been there since 1992, but at that time, Clear Lake, Iowa, was a terrific vintage town. There's an old ballroom there (Buddy Holly played his final show there) that dates back to the big band era, and the downtown area had a great vintage feel. It's an old resort town and is a delightful place (or it was, as I say, in 1992).
I do not defend the strip-mall but we're not counting those little rowhouse stores with the apartments above as strip malls, even when they run a block at a time, are we? I'll cry.
but I really adore classic, walkable towns. I never realized how spoiled I was until it was gone.
One abandoned storefront but I think that is just inavoidable these days.
Must haves:
1. A soda fountain and/or a quality diner.
2. Baseball field ... nothing big, just little league size.
3. Nearby trout streams.
4. No access to television.
5. Its own newspaper.
6. A real hardware store.
7. Community center with theater productions, dances, etc.
8. A front porch on every house.
9. Mailboxes ... its been ages since I've seen a real mailbox.
10. A decent barber.
So, let's say we rate Delaware, Ohio.
Let's simplify it. On a scale of 1 to 10, how good a vintage town would you say Delaware, Ohio is?
Clinton, NJ