This is a personal post about David and me. Another title for it might be: "Good news and bad news".
Let's start with the bad news to get it out of the way. Due to a recent decrease in my income (one of my jobs cut the money I get from them by about 75%!), we can no longer afford to live in our beautiful, but really rather large, house. This means that we will have to sell it and buy a smaller, less expensive place. We had hoped that we would never have to move again, but we will, and quite soon.
The good news is that our house has gone up some in value (we'll get more details about this over the next week or so, hopefully) and that this gives us the opportunity to live in a climate that will be more suitable for us. Our biggest complaint about Tsfat has always been about how cold it gets here and how long it STAYS cold (that, and the wind and rain!).
Since we have to move anyway, we figured we might as well pick a place with weather we preferred. All my work in online, so that is not a factor. So, we went through a process of elimination. The coastal plain, from Shlomi in the North to Ashdod and Ashkelon down near Gaza, is significantly warmer in the winter, but it's WAY too humid in the summer, something that neither of us likes at all. The Jordan River valley, from Metulla to Beit Shean is also too humid. Jerusalem is not much warmer than Tsfat. Besides, Jerusalem and Tel Aviv are both MUCH too expensive and MUCH too urban for us, as well. Be'er Sheva is dryer but still a little more humid than we like, and, besides that, neither of us is crazy about it either. Mitzpe Ramon (in the middle of the Negev) is very dry, but it's also a bit chilly in the winter, since it's at a fairly high elevation, at it, too, has little appeal to us.
Those of you familiar with Israel can now see what is left: Eilat! Eilat is mild and dry in the winter, getting very little rain at all. Of course, it's VERY hot in the summer, but it's also a very dry heat, and it does cool off at night. Besides, both of us find Eilat to be an interesting city. The geography is interesting, with the dry Eilat mountains immediately back of the city (to the west), the Arava Valley to the north, and the Red Sea on the east and south (with Aqaba, Jordan, and the mountains of Edom to the east). Eilat is also a nicely laid out city, with broad boulevards, easy parking, and very little traffic, even at the height of "the season" (we were there on the 26th of December!).
A little research on real estate prices convinces us that we should be able to get a place there with 2 or 3 bedrooms that we can afford. It won't be a villa, but it should be nice for us, and it will be cheaper to heat and cool, as well.
Of course, there's much to do to make all this happen. We must contact a realtor here and get the process of selling our house started immediately. We must also contact a realtor in Eilat to find a place there. And we have TONS of packing and cleaning to do before we can move. It will probably take at least 2 or 3 months to make all of this happen, but we're convinced that it CAN be done, and that our lives will be better at the end.
We'll miss the North, and we will especially miss our wonderful congregation, Emet V'Shalom, in Nahariya. But Israel is a small country, and we should be able to make trips to the North several times a year without much trouble at all (and without busting our budget).
So, in the end, this is mostly good news, and we're actually beginning to get excited about the possibility. I'll try to remember to keep you posted as the process moves forward.
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3 comments:
Hey why didn't you say something on Friday? We'll miss you.
Hi Arlen and David,
My last post seemed to disappear when I clicked "preview."Maybe it went through, maybe not.
I enjoyed your analysis of places to live, factoring in the humidity element. I didn't know Psfat was cold for so long. Eilat will be quite a change in that regard, as well as the summer heat. But dry as you point and which I didn't realize. I wish I could help you in the moving process. It sounds like a huge project. Congratulations on your new life! Jerry Gerash
Best of luck with your plans for the future! We are also looking at the possibility of moving, so I would like to hear how this goes for you.
Barry (Dov)
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