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The Water Cooler
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Thinking of moving to beautiful Oklahoma
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<blockquote data-quote="Snattlerake" data-source="post: 3747518" data-attributes="member: 44288"><p>The geography is incredible in Oklahoma. You can pretty much divide the state into quarters using I-35 and I-40. Then there is No Man's Land. The panhandle is as flat as a pool table mostly with scattered rolling hills and a few valleys in the far west by Boise City. They say that is where the longest straightest road is in the U.S. Most of NW Oklahoma is cultivated farmland supported by small towns which are supported by scattered bigger towns of 50K or more. The larger towns are usually an hour or so away from about anywhere in Oklahoma. We have the sand dunes of Waynoka, the Great Salt Plains of Cherokee, Alabaster Caverns in Freedom, Gyp Hills or Gloss Mountains near Fairview all surrounded by pasture and farms a large percentage spoiled by the view of the new state tree.</p><p></p><p>[ATTACH=full]260421[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Snattlerake, post: 3747518, member: 44288"] The geography is incredible in Oklahoma. You can pretty much divide the state into quarters using I-35 and I-40. Then there is No Man's Land. The panhandle is as flat as a pool table mostly with scattered rolling hills and a few valleys in the far west by Boise City. They say that is where the longest straightest road is in the U.S. Most of NW Oklahoma is cultivated farmland supported by small towns which are supported by scattered bigger towns of 50K or more. The larger towns are usually an hour or so away from about anywhere in Oklahoma. We have the sand dunes of Waynoka, the Great Salt Plains of Cherokee, Alabaster Caverns in Freedom, Gyp Hills or Gloss Mountains near Fairview all surrounded by pasture and farms a large percentage spoiled by the view of the new state tree. [ATTACH type="full"]260421[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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Thinking of moving to beautiful Oklahoma
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