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12-14-2007, 11:35 AM
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Junior Member
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Join Date: Nov 2007
3 posts, read 4,175 times
Reputation: 10
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Looking to move to Casper?
My husband is interviewing next week with a large company in Casper. I was curious if Casper is a good family oriented town? We have a 6 year-old that we like to do fun stuff with. Are the schools good? What about crime and drugs?
Is Casper boreing? Is there a mall? Resturants? Can anyone tell me about Casper, and the surrounding towns?
I can find a lot of info on Cheyenne, but not on Casper?
Thanks 
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12-15-2007, 02:28 AM
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rotaredoM
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Where Five Miles joins the Tongue, Wy
6,140 posts, read 4,315,885 times
Reputation: 2130
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From day to day, Cheyenne and Casper change as "The largest town". haha They used to post billboards, "Largest town". Now they've stopped arguing and have left it alone.
Casper is located at the top end of the wind tunnel. As such, you'll encounter a bit of wind from time to time.
Schools are great. Wyoming has some great laws in place to make sure the schools are acceptable.
Casper and malls. Well, what do you need a mall for? Personally, I stay away from malls. There are plenty of stores, mom and pop type, on every corner.
Crime? Wyoming is listed as the 5th safest state to live in.
We only have 500,000 people in the entire state. So towns of 60,000 to us, are big cities. Your looking at a big city. There is plenty to do there. Your kids will have a great time. But like any "Big City", drugs are a problem and you need to talk with your kids about them. I'm not saying the city is over run by drug addicts. I'm saying they are available, but talk with your kids.
I raised 6 of my 7 kids in this state. None of them touched drugs. But it was because we discussed it and weighed the pro's and con's.
Casper is a great place. Casper Mountain and the mountains around that are an excellent place for recreation. Hunting, fishing, skating on the lakes, snow mobiling, back packing, hiking, camping, or even just driving through and enjoying the sights. If you set at home and veg, the kids will create their own environment. If you get out and do something, they'll be fine.
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12-15-2007, 09:51 AM
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Member
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Join Date: Mar 2007
14 posts, read 16,779 times
Reputation: 14
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the large car company is that greiner
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12-29-2007, 12:10 PM
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Junior Member
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Join Date: Nov 2007
3 posts, read 4,175 times
Reputation: 10
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Well, we went to Casper, and I wasn't impressed. The town itself is mostly very old. There is a new part that is nice with Wal-mart and Starbucks. Downtown looks nice from a far, till you get there. I understand it is an old mining town but goodness, it needs a face lift.
And.... Liquor stores every few blocks. I don't think big cities have as many as Casper. That sends a message to me that may be it is depressing???? Am I wrong
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12-29-2007, 12:33 PM
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rotaredoM
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Where Five Miles joins the Tongue, Wy
6,140 posts, read 4,315,885 times
Reputation: 2130
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stacyLynn
Well, we went to Casper, and I wasn't impressed. The town itself is mostly very old. There is a new part that is nice with Wal-mart and Starbucks. Downtown looks nice from a far, till you get there. I understand it is an old mining town but goodness, it needs a face lift.
And.... Liquor stores every few blocks. I don't think big cities have as many as Casper. That sends a message to me that may be it is depressing???? Am I wrong
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Yes, I would say you were wrong. The reason I say that is in most states, liquor or beer or wine is available in grocery stores, 7/11, Mavericks, the local filling station, and liquor stores. In Wyoming, you can only purchase beer in a liquor store.
So when you count the liquor stores in your town, count the Safeway Store, the gas station, the 7/11, the Circle K, Wal-Mart, Sam's Club, K-Mart and any other place you can buy beer. You'll find that your town has as many, if not more.
We fought hard to keep Wal-Mart and Starbucks out of this state. Here, we make our coffee in our kitchen. And the neighbor comes over and knocks once, walks into the kitchen, grabs a cup, and helps himself.
What do you consider old? Doesn't have glitter and flashing signs and neon and mirrors in every store window? We kind of like old. New York can keep the glitter, the flashing lights and such.
This is Wyoming. It's a ranching and mining state. That's what gives it it's charm.
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12-29-2007, 03:25 PM
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Just A Regular Guy On The Radio Airwaves
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Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Southern Illinois
823 posts, read 725,093 times
Reputation: 210
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I may be moving to Casper in the near future... but it's just me (I'm 24 years old) and my beagle..
Any other information anyone has to share about Casper that might be important would be great if you'd pass it along.
Thanks!
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12-30-2007, 08:51 AM
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Junior Member
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Join Date: Dec 2007
2 posts, read 2,401 times
Reputation: 10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stacyLynn
Well, we went to Casper, and I wasn't impressed. The town itself is mostly very old. There is a new part that is nice with Wal-mart and Starbucks. Downtown looks nice from a far, till you get there. I understand it is an old mining town but goodness, it needs a face lift.
And.... Liquor stores every few blocks. I don't think big cities have as many as Casper. That sends a message to me that may be it is depressing???? Am I wrong
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Nothing personal but Wyoming isn't for everyone. I personally like it due to the lack of people (though at 1/2 a million, it's starting to get crowded) and the older un-"face-lifted"ness of it. City folk should probably not apply.
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12-31-2007, 11:00 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Jersey City
415 posts, read 431,964 times
Reputation: 66
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ElkHunter
We fought hard to keep Wal-Mart and Starbucks out of this state.
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That I don't like the sound of. I always got the impression that Wyoming was a bit Libertarian at heart.
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12-31-2007, 01:00 PM
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rotaredoM
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Where Five Miles joins the Tongue, Wy
6,140 posts, read 4,315,885 times
Reputation: 2130
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DessertRat
That I don't like the sound of. I always got the impression that Wyoming was a bit Libertarian at heart.
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Let me explain. Sheridan was full of mom and pop stores and employed a lot of local folks to keep them going. They were friendly, they knew the people, they greeted you with a smile and talked to you. They're not here anymore. Wal-Mart drove them into the dirt. Sure, Wal-Mart hires a person to greet you, smile, and shove a cart in your face. But those folks are hired and paid to act nice. Oh, and they're only part time so most can't get good health insurance or benefits because "Big Corp" is in town. There's several small buildings that used to be appliance stores, grocery stores, clothing stores and such that are empty.
We had a half dozen different little portable buildings around town where you could get drive up coffee, donuts, or pastrys. Had a bagel shop that people used to gather at. Most is gone now and the rest will be gone when Starbucks opens up.
The problem with both things is this. When we had a half dozen grocery stores and a blizzard blew in and knocked out power. Well, the person at the checkout knew how to count change and kept right on going. They could add, subtract, multiply and divide and be able to tally up your purchase and count out your change. They're closed now. You either shop at Wal-Mart or you starve. But when Wal-Mart looses power, they don't know how to count change because they're not trained for it. Plus, Wal-Mart management won't allow it. So everything comes to a stand still.
I'm not saying Wal-Mart is bad, but the way of dealing with people has changed in this small town.
Is it for the good? I dunno. All the stores we had before, you could get anything you wanted. They're gone. Now you can get what Wal-Mart wants you to get.
By the way. Politics got nothing to do with this. Politics is when we elect an official to represent us in Washington, pay them well, furnish a lot of stuff, and then they represent us by voting 42% of the time. We pay them 100% of the time though.
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