Bald_and_grumpy
Member
I was born and raised in Colorado, and I moved to Texas about eight years ago. And as anyone who has been to those states can tell you, garages are very different between the two states.
In Colorado, the garages are attached to the houses, and they usually have cars in them, since you have a basement in which to store your ****, and it's nice to keep your car warm on the winter and not have to deal with the snow and ice.
In southeast Texas, the garages are detached from the houses, and they almost never have cars in them. It's nice enough to leave your car outside, and you have to put your Christmas decorations somewhere, because there are no basements. At 16 feet above sea level, basements turn into nasty indoor pools.
So I have been able to combine the two garage styles. I now have a detached garage that has room for my 1960 F100 and all of my tools. Turns out, you don't really need to decorate for Christmas after all.
I have big plans for making my garage a nice place to be, and this website is the place I am going to steal all of my ideas from.
Thanks,
b-n-g
In Colorado, the garages are attached to the houses, and they usually have cars in them, since you have a basement in which to store your ****, and it's nice to keep your car warm on the winter and not have to deal with the snow and ice.
In southeast Texas, the garages are detached from the houses, and they almost never have cars in them. It's nice enough to leave your car outside, and you have to put your Christmas decorations somewhere, because there are no basements. At 16 feet above sea level, basements turn into nasty indoor pools.
So I have been able to combine the two garage styles. I now have a detached garage that has room for my 1960 F100 and all of my tools. Turns out, you don't really need to decorate for Christmas after all.
I have big plans for making my garage a nice place to be, and this website is the place I am going to steal all of my ideas from.
Thanks,
b-n-g