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Re: Proposal of place to live

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Sorry to hear about your aunt. Incidentally I went ahead and sent an

email to Dean and she answered she still has a place there but

uses it just for the 'facilities' and sleeps outside!! I wish I had

that spunk or whatever it takes. I'm too afraid to venture out like

that.

>

> Thank you! Tomorrow I'm going to try to follow up on

> the recent updates. I had to check out for a couple

> of days because my aunt

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I know Colorado Springs, CO was mentioned in conversation by Dan and

Carmella, about a year ago. I met a woman from Colorado Springs right

before then at the Dallas airport and she said she never heard of

anyone having mold. OH, HOW I WISH THAT WERE TRUE STATEMENT FOR ME!!

I'm sure there is mold there but I was wondering if it meant it wasn't

a problem that people had much of there. She was about in her 50's I

would have guessed.

>

> This sounds awsome. I love the Colorado air. It has been mentioned

that North Arazona is a good area for this situation as well.

>

>

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I would guess a location where temperature was mild, so indoor and

outdoor temperatures are not so different and thus less temperature

differences inside of wall cavities. Also far away from flood prone

areas and hurricane areas as water damaged building improperly

remediated probably increase moldiness of area around them. Then

thinking of clean air in general. I think East side of the Rockies

because the Rockies stop the pollution from the Pacific coast areas but

not so far east that you get into farmland where you run into

pesticides spraying of crops. Then you just look for good building

practices, like not near ground water, land sloping, condition of

surrounding buildings, signs house has been maintained well, etc. You

get into the eastern part of the US and there is too much industry and

the air pollution that goes along with it. That is if you don't have

to worry about WORKING, or can do your work anywhere!!! I would lean

toward cooler, rather than warmer. One is personal preference and the

other is think it is less buggy and figure that would go down to the

microscopic level too, but??

I don't know about the coast line but if you can afford to live on the

coast though and sea breeze blows pollutants away and not a storm prone

area, that might be good too. I wonder if coastal area is mold-prone

or is sea breeze, salty air so does not promote water damage as much as

regular humidity. Just theorizing about that. It is beautiful area

and I love being on the coast. I doubt I could afford anything there

anyway.

>

> It's interesting because my friend who is suffering

> from mold toxicity has mentioned Colorado as one of

> the first

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