Postby Racetrackreject » Mon Jan 15, 2018 2:50 pm
I'm in East Texas, which is sort of a different animal than a lot of Texas. We're kind of the Southern Pines of Texas- it's hilly with evergreen forests and sandy loam soil. I'm an hour from a large city, either North or South, but the traffic to get to either is easy and rarely ever congested. It's cheap, it's green, it's not as humid as where I grew up (Coastal Texas only 2ish hours away), and pasture grows knee deep in the summers, hay is generally plentiful, and my horse has yet to spontaneously combust from heat.
When you said North Texas, I thought Panhandle because that is North Texas to me, but I soon realized you meant North Central Texas, the metropolitan area. If I were looking to move here, I would look at the distinct physical regions of Texas, see which one most closely matches what I'm looking for, then investigate it a little deeper with horse keeping and employment in mind. I'm likely a bit far South for what you want, but I second the suggestion above of Tyler. I love Tyler, except that there is really only one way around the city, the loop, which is congested pretty much 24/7. BUT, the outskirts of Tyler are lovely, the weather is good, and it's closer to horse things.
One thing to remember is that Texas is huge, really larger than most people can imagine until they get here. Things can be further away than what you are used to but no one here thinks twice about it.
I like East Texas because it's pretty and imo, great for horse keeping/nature/wildlife viewing, but there are frustrating things too.
As for the cost of living in Texas, it's highly dependent on where you live. My area has a very low cost of living. I bought my 15 acre farm with 4 stall barn, arena, welded pipe fencing, pond, paddocks with sheds, hay barn, and 3 bedroom, 2 bath house for under $175k. My pastures were lovely fertilized hay fields that may neighbor baled a few times a year. He would take my flatbed trailer, load it with hay, park it back under the tractor barn, and keep the rest for himself, which was fine since he paid to fertilize it himself.
Grass hay can be purchased when baled, out of the field, for $4-5/bale. Barn kept hay, in winter, can get as high as $10, but that's equal with feed store pricing and you can find it cheaper. Round bales go for $35-50 for grass hay, that's horse hay which you have to specify as there is a lot of cowy hay around. Alfalfa can be found and bought for $16-22 (75-90lb bale) a bale, but it's shipped in from out of state. My horse is on full board at an Eventing barn 25 minutes away for $350.00/month and that's all-inclusive with premium senior feed. He is in a large 2ish acre paddock with shelter and one other horse. He is brought in in inclimate weather, fed twice a day, blanketed/unblanketed, held for farrier/vet, hayed throughout the day as needed, medicated/given supplements, the full deal. The barn owner is a BHS certified instructor and pony club instructor.