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[Closed] Which city to relocate to UK?

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I do get Molgrips point on road riding from Cardiff as it isn't as good as other places. Oxfordshire for instance has some amazing road riding on quiet lanes with brilliant scenery and plenty of decent cafes to stop at.
Cardiff doesn't have that, although I did always enjoy riding around the Vale and the Valley climbs are a great test of your legs.


 
Posted : 28/07/2015 2:22 pm
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Which city/towns around Manchester, Leeds and Sheffield would be a similar size to Exeter?

Thanks

[url= http://www.lovemytown.co.uk/populations/TownsTable1.asp ]population list[/url]


 
Posted : 28/07/2015 7:46 pm
 murf
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Inverness!
A bit further north than you had hoped but you could fly down to visit family.

he population of greater Inverness grew from an estimated population of 51,610 in 2003 to 62,470 at the time of the 2011 Census.[1][5] Inverness is one of Europe's fastest growing cities,[6] with a third of the Highland population living in or around the city[7] and is ranked fifth out of 189 British cities for its quality of life, the highest of any Scottish city.[8] In the recent past, Inverness has experienced rapid economic growth - between 1998 and 2008, Inverness and the rest of the central Highlands showed the largest growth of average economic productivity per person in Scotland and the second greatest growth in the United Kingdom as a whole, with an increase of 86%.[9] Inverness is twinned with one German city, Augsburg and two French towns, La Baule and Saint-Valery-en-Caux.[10]

Inverness College is the main campus for the University of the Highlands and Islands.[11] With around 8,500 students, Inverness College hosts around a quarter of all the University of the Highlands and Islands' students, and 30% of those studying to degree level.[12]

In 2014, a survey by a property website described Inverness as the happiest place in Scotland and the second happiest in the UK.[13]


 
Posted : 28/07/2015 8:01 pm
 nach
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If I recall, Sheffield came out top in that survey 😛

It's just a bit of a pain in the arse when it comes to railway connectivity, compared to Manchester and Leeds.


 
Posted : 28/07/2015 8:25 pm
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Abergevenny, Town not a city but in a good spot, nice place to live and easy access to stuff you like.


 
Posted : 28/07/2015 9:41 pm
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Which city/towns around Manchester, Leeds and Sheffield would be a similar size to Exeter?

Halifax and Huddersfield are two that spring to mind and close to both Leeds and Manchester.

It might also be worth considering Bradford and the Aire Valley towns such as Bingley, Baildon or Saltaire - good riding from the door and easy access to Leeds and Bradford.


 
Posted : 28/07/2015 11:39 pm
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Don't move to the South West, there are no mountains and I've yet to find any technical riding outside DH trail centres. Dartmoor is mostly grass with a few tiny bits of nice woodland trails.

Get thee sen oop north!


 
Posted : 28/07/2015 11:41 pm
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[url= http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/property/11769047/The-best-places-to-live-in-Britain-for-you-and-your-family.html ]summarised by the tory-graph[/url]


 
Posted : 29/07/2015 11:18 am
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innit_gareth - Member
A little smaller than Cardiff, obviously, but Swansea is great. Gower on doorstep, great beaches and good riding (road) and with trail centres and natural stuff pretty nearby. I'd hate to move back to Cardiff now. Fairly bereft of culture though if that's your bag

The natural stuff isn't pretty nearby, it's inside the city limits. 😉 I'd suggest that if riding is the main concern then Swansea is hard to beat. How many cities can boast a range of techy DH style trails just a 15 minute ride from the centre, or waymarked trails 15 minutes in the other direction? (The advantage of lots of ex-industrial land being left to return to the wild.) I can ride my Mtb from the door every day of the week and barely repeat a trail, connecting them up with plenty of cycle paths. That's before thinking about getting in the car for a short drive to Afan, BPW, Brechfa, or any of the other trail centres or natural trails up in the hills.

Like Cardiff it suffers from being on the coast though - there is no riding at all to the south!

And lack of culture? Dylan Thomas, Harry Secombe, Bonnie Tyler, Man? What more do you want? 😆


 
Posted : 29/07/2015 11:48 am
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Wind Street on a Friday, more culture than you can shake a stick at 😆


 
Posted : 29/07/2015 11:51 am
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Ulverston, Cumbria. Pretty nice little town with a nice alternative feel, decent house prices, lake district on your doorstep for lots of gnar (maybe better than the peaks) and a tonne of jobs working on the submarines in Barrow - they are recruiting pretty hard at the moment and you could even get in on contract £30-70 p/h potentially through one of the agencies such as Jam recruitment, matchtech or faststream.


 
Posted : 29/07/2015 12:10 pm
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Smaller, but still a City, what about Plymouth? We are possibly being posted there from Birmingham. Dartmoor, the coast, plenty of semi cheeky trails on your door step, relatively cheap to live, what's not to like?


 
Posted : 29/07/2015 12:15 pm
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Chesterfield?

I think following Chesterfield with a ? is quite appropriate. As in Chesterfield why?


 
Posted : 29/07/2015 12:30 pm
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I'm an engineer not a prostitute haha

What sort of Engineering?

I live in Leeds, It's good. I have an irrational dislike to Manchester, not really sure why (I'm not naturally from Leeds and don't support Leeds United so it's not that).


 
Posted : 29/07/2015 12:41 pm
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[quote=Scamper ]Smaller, but still a City, what about Plymouth? We are possibly being posted there from Birmingham. Dartmoor, the coast, plenty of semi cheeky trails on your door step, relatively cheap to live, what's not to like?

plymouth?

the area is nice but plymouth itself is a bit of a dump.


 
Posted : 29/07/2015 12:42 pm
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A curve ball, Derby ... quite a nice place to live

Really?

I'm working in Cheltenham at the moment, quite taken with it really - well the surrounding area anyway.


 
Posted : 29/07/2015 4:55 pm
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plymouth itself is a bit of a dump.

A lot of the post-war suburbs are a dump but you'd have no reason to go there. It's getting a lot of redevelopment as well, in the two years I've been here it's gotten noticeably better.

The road riding is great, the beaches are great, the food is great but there are no proper hills or maximum nadgecore trails to be enjoyed if that's your thing.

Rents are very cheap too, on a phd student budget I [i]could[/i] afford a seafront penthouse or a flat in a Victorian fort that came with tennis court and boat mooring.


 
Posted : 29/07/2015 5:08 pm
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but there are no proper hills or maximum nadgecore trails to be enjoyed if that's your thing

i live 12 miles north of Plymouth, plenty of 'nadgecore' and real hills here...


 
Posted : 29/07/2015 6:40 pm
 jruk
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Exeter's ace for a small city - great riding all around, loads of brilliant food and drink suppliers, beaches etc. Best of all, minimal chippy northerners or cocky southerners.


 
Posted : 29/07/2015 9:55 pm
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Best of all, minimal chippy northerners or cocky southerners.

Northerners, chippy?
Meh.


 
Posted : 29/07/2015 9:57 pm
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I quite like exeter. Nice place. Looking at rightmove, I wouldn't say that houses are much cheaper than bristol. This looks nice though;
http://www.rightmove.co.uk/property-for-sale/property-35182920.html?premiumA=true


 
Posted : 29/07/2015 9:58 pm
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