Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments

CatumEntanglement t1_irl6s1l wrote

Take a drive up north in NH and Vermont this weekend because it'll be at peak color in the mountains. Specifically go toward the white mountains in NH or toward Stow in vermont. Central/South Massachusetts is about 2 weeks behind in peak leaf color. If you just want to drive around locally, I'd advise taking weekend drives on back roads around northern to western mass for the best color. Like around the Nashoba Valley, head toward Nashua, or take route 2 west toward Pittsfield.

16

BigDiggy OP t1_irl9myy wrote

Thank you!

2

CatumEntanglement t1_irldpiw wrote

I see you're from CA. Welcome to the best coast. No more unlivable droughts or giant wildfire outbreaks! You get seasons now and in 2hrs of driving you can be in 4 different states. Don't be discouraged by the New Englanders who get salty about the winter. People who never lived in a place where water restrictions were the norm and lakes permanently dried up, don't know how good they have it. New England is a good choice to transplant yourself.

9

BigDiggy OP t1_irleipt wrote

Thanks! The only drawback so far seems that cars rust with the salt on the roads, I’ve been trying to prepare myself. The seasons really have been beautiful. Can’t wait to explore everything now that I’ve settled in.

Also loving the history of New England!

3

CatumEntanglement t1_irlge91 wrote

Ehh people can be grumpy about that. A NE pro-tip that will save you lots of money down the road on car maintenance: get a monthly subscription to a car wash place. Go whenever there is a dry day and always get the undercarriage wash. Honestly, a monthly pass equals about 3 washes without the pass...so it's a deal to get the pass during winter months. The key is to time it after a snow storm (or a rain that rehydrates the road salt) and as soon as the roads dry out...get a wash. This is so you don't kick up more salt on your drive home in a freshly washed car. Why not a DIY? Go for it if you buy yourself an undercarriage roller that fits onto a hose, but you'd have to deal with mitigating a hose and faucet from getting frozen. The easiest is going to a wash facility.

My three favorite car wash locations (choose whichever washing style you prefer i.e. no touch vs touch):

Clean and Green car wash in Shrewsbury on rt20

Bonus is is a large number of car vacuums (free) that are strong. Clutch for winter grit getting into car carpets.

Ernie's touchless car wash

Scrub-a-dub Shrewsbury location on rt9

5

BigDiggy OP t1_irlhlqy wrote

Wow, definitely saving these for future reference. I bought a car just for my move to MA, would hate to see it rust.

4

CatumEntanglement t1_irlimqo wrote

I am super particular about my car and kinda OCD about keeping it clean. So I got you.

My favorite is probably the Clean & Green on rt20.

Bonus for this location, it's near the almost-ready-to-open Market Basket. MB is a NE specific grocery chain known for their great product and deals (there is a serious amount of customer loyalty too with the store). We're all excited for it to open. Clean&Green is also super close to my oft go-to grocery store, Wegman's. If you haven't been yet, I describe it as bougie-but-with-deals. Like if Wholefoods wasn't "whole paycheck". Extensive and very good quality produce. Excellent seafood and meat department. They have "Wegmans brands" which is a bit like Costco Kirkland branding. Has a liquor store extension with a huge variety of craft beer and ciders (both which we're known for in NE). It's, uhhh, also really close to a couple cannabis retailers like The Botanist.

I've lived on the west coast, midwest, and east...and by far MA is my favorite. Which is why I've lived here the longest and consider myself a fully adopted masshole. All of the NE mannerisms will seem grumpy or curt to you at first (like no one's going to be smiling at you or saying hello)...but it's because we don't deal with fake friendliness. We figure you are doing shit out and about and we're not going to get in your way because we have shit to do too. But new englanders are super genuine. If someone is friendly you can trust they're being real about it...and not doing it to blow wind up your skirt. Like if someone says they'll help you clear some snow off your driveway with their snowblower, they'll absolutely show up. If after a nor'easter storm, a tree falls down in your yard, someone will come over with a chainsaw asking if you need help clearing the mess. I think the cranky grumbling is part of the charm around here. Especially around Worcester, where cranky is an art form (but it wouldn't be Worcester without it).

3

BigDiggy OP t1_irlkb8j wrote

Hah! I have seen the market basket satire videos. I need to try both market basket and Wegman’s though.

I heard someone say that the difference between New England and CA is that NE is kind but not nice while CA is nice but not kind.

I have nothing but positive experiences with all the locals I have encountered. I bought furniture on Facebook market and I couldn’t fit a couch in the back of my SUV. I offered to rent a moving truck but the guy would have none of it. He put it in his truck along with a shelf I thought was cool and delivered to my place in the snow for free. Couldn’t believe it.

7

CatumEntanglement t1_irllzlr wrote

Yeah, absolutely go to Wegman's if you haven't been there. Probably the best local Indian restaurant is also in that shopping plaza down by the Ulta.

>I heard someone say that the difference between New England and CA is that NE is kind but not nice while CA is nice but not kind.

As once living in CA when I was a kid, this hits the truth so hard.

It's like the difference between a friend who is nice to everyone's face and is super sociable but will talk gossip behind everyone's back to stir the drama...vs...the friend who is aloof and hard to read but ends up being a loyal friend for life and is the one who will get your drunk ass home safe.

>I offered to rent a moving truck but the guy would have none of it. He put it in his truck along with a shelf I thought was cool and delivered to my place in the snow for free. Couldn’t believe it.

Hahaha....yeah litterally the least surprising thing to hear honestly. Like...my neighbor randomly called me last February at like 10pm because he made a chance purchase on a large screen TV at Best Buy for a ridiculously good open box deal....but has a sedan and couldn't fit it in his car. So he was in a precarious position on a cold night and definitely needed help to get it home. I was like, yeah that's fine. Like I didn't get an suv to NOT load random shit in it. It was random but kinda fun.

2

BigDiggy OP t1_irln7c0 wrote

What’s the name of the Indian restaurant? I just got Bollywood grill a few days ago. It was pretty good, I was surprised how negative the reviews were.

3

CatumEntanglement t1_irlnonn wrote

Kumars, but the Northborough location not Boston.

This was a tip originally given to me by a high school student who was doing an internship in my lab (and who was Indian and said when her family just wants something easy and takeaway that they go there).

Negative reviews are the norm because we are cranky and locals will always know of "that one other place that is a little bit better". Negative reviews sometimes are just a reflection of NE crankiness. Wait until to see someone post here on the local page asking for "the best local steak place in central MA" and it will look like a hilarious shit show.

2

BigDiggy OP t1_irli9a1 wrote

Between clean green and scruba a dub which is better for undercarriage wash in your opinion?

1

CatumEntanglement t1_irlk0t9 wrote

Both equally regarding undercarriage washing. IMO it's up to you how you like the final wash. Like I'd advise getting a single wash at both places then just taking a look at the results. Then compare that to other stuff like location convenience.

Like I appreciate all the great free vacuums at Clean&Green. Also as an aside, not everyone cares...but clean&green uses less than 15gal/car wash and uses earth friendly chemicals and solutions.

1

Few-Afternoon-6276 t1_irmk24h wrote

Who cares about car rust!

That thought pattern is akin to worrying about quicksand near desert areas in California….

Look around… there are MANY 20 year old cars still in the road…

Enjoy where you are.. there is no perfect place!

1

KadenKraw t1_irmqm6x wrote

They don't really rust much these days. That was more when cats were all metal. Mostly plastic now.

1