The 10 Best Places To Live In South Carolina
The 10 best places to live in South Carolina for 2018.
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South Carolina is a southeastern U.S. state known for its shoreline of subtropical beaches and marshlike sea islands.
Settled by the English in 1670, the colony named for King Charles I was split into North and South Carolina in 1710.
South Carolina's tourism industry has blossomed in recent years.
Coastal Charleston is a historic city, defined by pastel-colored houses, Old South plantations and Fort Sumter, where the Civil War’s opening shots were fired.
To the north is the Grand Strand, a roughly 60-mile stretch of beachfront known for golf courses and the vacation town Myrtle Beach.
South Carolina is known for its family-friendly and affordable beaches, warm weather and hundreds of golf courses.
The state is also home to many well-known schools, including Clemson University, the University of South Carolina, located in the state capital of Columbia,
the historically black South Carolina State University, Furman University, and a state-run military college, The Citadel, in Charleston.
Whether you prefer an exclusive lakefront golf resort near the Blue Ridge Mountains, love the historic charm of Charleston,
or dream of lazing in Lowcountry style on Pawleys Island, the state's diverse cities and regions cater to a variety of lifestyles and interests.
South Carolina also offers innovative healthcare facilities, a mild climate, a low cost of living, and ample outdoor attractions,
as well as a mix of arts, culture, dining, and entertainment opportunities. From nature preserves and golf courses to historic sites and shopping centers, it's easy to see the appeal of South Carolina retirement living.
Here are the 10 best places to live or retire in South Carolina for 2018:
1. Charleston.
2. Greenville.
3. Myrtle Beach.
4. Lexington.
5. Mauldin.
6. Mount Pleasant.
7. Tega Cay.
8. Clemson.
9. Fort Mill.
10. Seven Oaks.
Thanks for watching this video. I hope it's useful for you.
(This article is an opinion based on facts and is meant as infotainment)
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Falling Waters State Park
Falling Waters State Park features the tallest waterfall in the state of Florida! Located just outside the town of Chipley Florida, this beautiful state park includes very nice walking trails that take you through some sinks, and to the very cool waterfall that drops into an 80' sink.
We visited at a perfect time when the water flow was pretty heavy. A great place to stop and see if your traveling along I-10 through Northwest Florida.
100 Missouri Towns & Villages!
Photos from..
Adrian, Archie, Missouri City, Hannibal, Arrow Rock, Blackwater, Marshall, Chillicothe, Breckenridge, Cole Camp, Rocheport, Marceline, Sedalia, Jefferson City, Kansas City, Weston, Rock Port, Excelsior Springs, Mound City, Waverly, Tipton, Mansfield, Humansville, West Line, Cleveland, Mount Moriah, Powersville, Princeton, Unionville, Queen City, Kirksville, Milan, Jamesport, Gallatin, Otterville, California, Frankenstein, Clinton, Harrisonville, Blairstown, Centralia, Florida, Paris, Cuba, Hermann, Marshfield, Washington, Rescue, Spencer, Avilla, Stotts City, Halltown, New Madrid, Pocahontas, Perryville, St. Genevieve, Holt, St. Louis, Strasburg, Holden, Pleasant Hill, Levasy, Springfield, Amsterdam, Merwin, Drexel, Independence, Osceola, Plattsburg, Peculiar, Hallsville, Auxvasse, Mexico, Emma, Concordia, Versailles, Leeton, Avondale, Warrensburg, Savannah, Gunn City, East Lynne, Wellington, Lexington, Graham, Maitland, Skidmore, Quitman, Maryville, Faucett, Parkville, Wheatland, Hermitage, Buffalo, Long Lane, Phillipsburg, Lebanon, Cross Timbers, Warsaw, and Tightwad, Missouri. Extras: Glasgow, Knob Noster, and Kearney, Missouri.
The videos for these towns can be found on the Missouri Towns, Villages, and Historic Districts playlist on my channel. I have included a link for it below. Thanks for watching!
Wow! Airlines Apple Valley Minnesota Travel Guide Short
We made this video for the Wow! Airlines Summer Internship.
It gives a brief overview of some of the cool things in Apple Valley Minnesota.
Both Amy and I are students at the University of Minnesota - Duluth and were not able to start filming these shots until Wednesday May 2nd, the kicker is that we had a flight to Amsterdam leaving on Friday May 4th, so we really only had about two days to do the filming.
We are now currently in Vaxjo, Sweden (A sister city to Duluth Minnesota) uploading the edited video from a hotel lobby. :D
Some of the things you can see in the video are the transit system in Apple Valley (MVTA) and the Mall of America (Although not actually in Apple Valley we feel that you can't come to the south Metro and not visit M.O.A.), it also features the Minnesota Zoo which is home to hundreds of unique animals and right on the northern border of Apple Valley.
The video closes on several of our favorite places to eat from several different styles, including Sweet Treasures which some people may know from when they won Cake Wars in 2016.
We do not own the rights to the music used, it was created by bensound and can be found at bensound.com
Ginnie Springs, FL
Ginnie Springs is a great day trip or weekend trip out of Orlando Florida, that you don't want to miss! Kayaking, snorkeling, scuba diving, tubing, camping, fishing, whatever outdoor activity you are into, they have it! Full story on the blog ChasingWildgusts.com
Topgolf Orlando - driving range, entertainment, bar and more
In this Show Flashback, Andy grabs a club and checks out the new Topgolf Orlando entertainment venue on Universal Blvd.
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Charleston SC Bridge Road View Tour
Charleston SC Bridge Road View Tour
Charleston is the second largest city in the U.S. state of South Carolina, surpassed only by the state capital of Columbia. Charleston is the county seat of the modern Charleston County.
In 1670, Charleston was originally named Charles Towne. It moved to its present location on Oyster Point in 1680 from a location on the west bank of the Ashley River known as Albemarle Point. Charleston adopted its present name in 1783. In 1690, Charleston was the fifth largest city in North America, and remained among the ten largest cities in the United States through the 1840 census.
Charleston is known as The Holy City perhaps by virtue of the prominence of churches on the low-rise cityscape, perhaps because, like Mecca, its devotees hold it so dear], and perhaps for the fact that Carolina was among the few original thirteen colonies to provide toleration for all Protestant religions, though it was not open to Roman Catholics. Many Huguenots found their way to Charleston. Carolina also allowed Jews to practice their faith without restriction. Current trends put Charleston as the fastest-growing municipality in South Carolina. The city's metropolitan area population was counted by the 2010 census at 664,607 -- the second largest in the state -- and the 75th-largest metropolitan statistical area in the United States.
The city of Charleston is located just south of the midpoint of South Carolina's coastline, at the confluence of the Ashley and Cooper rivers, which flow together into the Atlantic Ocean. Charleston Harbor lies between downtown Charleston and the Atlantic Ocean. Charleston's name is derived from Charles Towne, named after King Charles II of England.
In 2011, Charleston was named #1 U.S. City by Conde Nast Traveler's Readers' Choice Awards and #2 Best City in the U.S. and Canada by Travel + Leisure's World's Best Awards. Also in 2011, Bon Appetit magazine named Husk, located on Queen Street in Charleston, the Best New Restaurant in America. America's most-published etiquette expert, Marjabelle Young Stewart, recognized Charleston 1995 as the best-mannered city in the U.S, a claim lent credibility by the fact that it has the first established Livability Court in the country. In 2011, Travel and Leisure Magazine named Charleston America's Sexiest City, as well as America's Most Friendly. Subsequently, Southern Living Magazine named Charleston the most polite and hospitable city in America. In 2012, Travel and Leisure voted Charleston as the second best-dressed city in America, only behind New York City.
South Carolina's Lowcountry holds a major place of importance in African-American history for many reasons, but perhaps most importantly as a port of entry for people of African descent. According to several historians, anywhere from 40 to 60 percent of the Africans who were brought to America during the slave trade entered through ports in the Lowcountry.
This has given the Lowcountry the designation among some as the Ellis Island for African Americans, although some dispute this term, as the Ellis Island immigrants arrived voluntarily as opposed to the Africans who were captured in the Atlantic slave trade.
According to Peter Wood in his book Black Majority: Negroes in Colonial South Carolina from 1670 to the Stono Rebellion, the successful cultivation of rice in the Lowcountry in the 1600s was a major factor in the importation of African labor. Sir Jonathan Atkins was quoted in 1680 as saying, Since people have found out the convenience and cheapness of slave labor they no longer keep white men, who formerly did the work on the Plantations. Joseph Corry, an Englishman who spent some time in what is now the West African nation of Sierra Leone, noted, Rice forms the chief part of the African's sustenance.
When further observation noted the skill of Africans in this region in cultivating rice, Africans from the vicinity of Sierra Leone and Ghana became especially sought-after by slave owners in the South Carolina Lowcountry.
The demand for Africans in the rice-growing regions was such that, By the time the (South Carolina) colony's Proprietors gave way to a royal government in 1720, Africans had outnumbered Europeans for more than a decade.
According to Elaine Nichols of the South Carolina State Museum, Sullivan's Island, an island near Charleston, was a major port of entry for enslaved Africans. Her paper Sullivan's Island Pest Houses: Beginning an Archeological Investigation (1989), detailed the phenomenon of Pest Houses, that were used to quarantine Africans upon their arrival, for fear that the Africans would have contagious diseases. The Africans would often remain confined from 10 to 40 days and 200-300 at a time would sometimes remain in isolation in the pest houses. By 1793, residents of Sullivan's Island demanded that the pest houses be removed from the vicinity.
Paul B. Johnson State Park Camping Hattiesburg, Mississippi
Paul B. Johnson State Park is about 14 miles south of Hattiesburg, Mississippi on Hwy. 49. Nice big campground with lots of recreation areas and water.
We are the Halvorsens, Lyle and Erin. We have been camping, rving and traveling our entire lives. We would like to share with you our reviews of private as well as local, state and federal camping facilities. We are reviewing how our Coleman Light LX Series 1605FB (2017) travel trailer performs. We will share camping hints and stops along the roads, as well as sharing some of our favorite camping foods and products we find helpful.
Follow us on Facebook and Pinterest: Halvorsen Camping Journal
503-St George UT, Contrails, Radiation, Traffic
This is St. George the county seat of Washington County, Utah.
We just crossed the Arizona border, near the tri-state junction of Utah, Arizona and Nevada. The city lies in the northeastern-most part of the Mojave Desert adjacent to the Pine Valley Mountains near the convergence of three distinct geological areas: the Mojave Desert, Colorado Plateau, and Great Basin. The city is named after George A. Smith, a Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints Apostle aka LDS. As of 2015, St. George had a population of 80,202, and the metropolitan area, defined as Washington County, had an estimated population of 155,600.St. George is the seventh-largest city in Utah and the most populous city in the state outside of the Wasatch Front.In 2005, St. George was ranked the second fastest-growing metropolitan area in the United States, behind only Greeley, Colorado. In 2010, growth slowed substantially due to the economic recession. Growth has since rebounded and St. George was declared the fifth fastest-growing metropolitan area in the United States in 2015. I expect this growth to continue.
Driving through here 20+ years ago, one of the things I loved about this area was the clear, blue skies. But something has changed. I’ve observed jet planes flying over this area leaving what some people call persistent contrails and other people call chemtrails.
The odd thing was that I saw these persistent trails behind three planes that were heading roughly south, laying trails that were spreading out and merging to cover the sky like a canopy. There is a regional airport in St George and many fly over the area from Salt Lake to Las Vegas or LA off to the west and flights off to the East that are probably from Salt Lake to Phoenix. There are many more planes in the sky than I’d ever seen before and nearly all of them leaving behind these spreading contrails that start to create a grey haze over the once blue skies here. I’d heard of chemtrails before, but hadn’t given them much thought, so I started looking up information on the topic. It soon became apparent to me that these trails I was seeing weren’t contrails. They had to be these chemtrails I've heard people talk about. To elaborate, contrails are related to the phenomenon that allows you to see your breath on a cold day. The moist, warm air from your breath, forms tiny, visible ice crystals as you exhale, which rapidly dissipate. In the same way, the moist air from the jet engine can form a trail of ice crystals when the temperature and weather conditions are right. These trails, however, rapidly dissipate. This was brought home to me just last week when I saw a regular jet liner in the air leaving a normal contrail. It was forming behind the plane, but stayed the same length as the jet moved forward. It didn’t persist.
I’ve seen planes leaving persistant contrails that were completely different than the commercial jet. The contrast was obvious.
I've also noticed these planes while driving to Las Vegas. There is an airforce base there.
There are many people who would say that chemtrails are a “conspiracy theory.”
This term is used to dismiss people who present evidence of suspicious activities without having to logically address their concerns.
I've never been one to dismiss things that offhandedly, but I’m also one who likes to do a little research before making up my mind.
I will leave it up to you to investigate all this for yourself and make up your own mind.
In the early 1950s, St. George received the brunt of the fallout of above-ground nuclear testing at the Yucca Flats/Nevada Test Site northwest of Las Vegas. Winds routinely carried the fallout of these tests directly through the St. George and southern Utah area were reported from the mid-1950s until the early 1980s
The following Sound track (Copyright and Royalty Free) is in this video.
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