Bagels VS Barns: 5 Biggest Differences between Upstate NY and Downstate NY!

chris.ha • March 28, 2022

Thinking about trading sirens for silence? Wondering what life’s like when your backyard is bigger than your closet? Whether you’re dreaming of chickens or just sick of schlepping your groceries up six floors, here are the five biggest differences between city life in NYC and the quieter pace Upstate:


1. ๐Ÿšถ‍โ™€๏ธThe Pace: From Hustle to Haaaahh...

  • NYC: Everyone’s in a rush — even the pigeons. Your coffee order better be ready before you say it out loud.
  • Upstate NY: People stroll. People wave. If someone waves at you in the city, you clutch your bag. Upstate? It means you have a new friend, possibly named Ed.


2. ๐Ÿ“ Space, Glorious Space

  • NYC: You’ve paid $3,000/month for 600 square feet and consider it a steal. A closet becomes your office, gym, and meditation space.
  • Upstate NY: You get a house. With a yard. And maybe a barn. And probably a dog, because now you have space for one — or three.


3. ๐Ÿš— How You Get Around (and How Often You Scream While Doing It)

  • NYC: Subway delays. Horns. The "fun" of parallel parking every six months. You can live here for a decade without touching a steering wheel.
  • Upstate NY: If you don’t have a car, you’re not going anywhere. But the commute? Gorgeous. Deer sightings beat subway rats every time.


4. ๐ŸŒณ Your Relationship with Nature

  • NYC: “I love nature,” you say, as you jog past three trees in Central Park surrounded by 400 other joggers.
  • Upstate NY: Nature lives with you. Like, literally. You’ll wake up to birdsong — and occasionally a raccoon in your compost.


5. ๐Ÿค Community Vibes: Stranger Danger vs. Farmer’s Market Hugs

  • NYC: You can live next to someone for five years and only communicate through passive-aggressive Post-its in the laundry room.
  • Upstate NY: People know your name, your dog’s name, and probably how you take your coffee. (They’ll also invite you to the pancake breakfast fundraiser whether you like pancakes or not.)


Thinking about making the move? Just know this: Upstate may not deliver at 2 a.m., but it does deliver peace, space, and a breath of fresh air that doesn’t smell like hot pretzel carts and taxi fumes.

By Jessica Mileto July 9, 2025
You packed your bags, waved goodbye to your landlord, and traded the screech of the subway for the sweet sound of crickets. Welcome to the Catskills, friend. But before you get too comfy in your flannel and start googling “how to raise backyard chickens,” there’s something you should know: There are rules here. Unspoken, sacred, weird rules. And if you want to fit in, you’d best learn them fast. Here are the most important ones: 1. The Wave Is Not Optional. Every time you pass a car on a country road, you wave . Doesn’t matter if you know them or not. It’s not a full city wave, either — it’s a subtle lift of the hand or a single-finger raise off the steering wheel. Fail to do this and you might as well have a bumper sticker that says, “I still live in Brooklyn emotionally.” 2. You Do Not Honk. Ever. Unless someone is about to drive into a ditch or hit a deer, you do not honk your horn . Honking is aggressive. Honking is for taxis. Up here, a honk is the rural equivalent of picking a fight. Your horn is for emergencies only — not for telling someone to move it at the stop sign. 3. You Always Check for Ticks (Everywhere. Always.) This isn’t so much a rule as it is survival. Forget to do this and you might end up with Lyme disease and a hefty vet bill (because yes, your dog is definitely getting ticks too). Country life is cute until you find one of nature’s hitchhikers attached to your ankle. 4. The Plow Always Wins. If it snows and you parked on the road, kiss your car goodbye. The town plow is coming and it fears no one. It will push snow with the force of Thor’s hammer, and if your car happens to be in the way, well… that’s between you and your insurance. 5. You Can’t Complain About the Internet. We all know it’s bad. We’re all suffering. But if you say it out loud too often, the locals will start to suspect you haven’t really committed to this life. Just smile, nod, and say something like, “It’s kind of nice to unplug, actually.” Bonus points if you say it while staring dreamily at a hummingbird feeder. 6. Always Accept Zucchini. In late summer, everyone has too much zucchini . It will appear in baskets on porches, in tote bags at yoga, even mysteriously in your backseat. Accept it graciously. Bake it into a loaf. Pretend you wanted five pounds of it. This is how friendships are forged. Final Thoughts: Learn the Code, Love the Life These rules might seem strange at first — especially if you’re used to apartment buzzers and seamless deliveries — but they’re part of what makes Upstate life magical. It's slower, softer, and filled with strange little rituals that connect us all, even when we're miles apart. So go on, raise that steering wheel finger. Someone’s waving back.
By Jessica Mileto July 8, 2025
We see you. You came upstate with wide eyes, a pre-approval letter, and a Pinterest board full of stone fireplaces and wraparound porches. But… you also asked if the farmhouse comes with central air. Here are the dead giveaways you’re a city person buying in the country — and don’t worry, we love you for it. 1. “Is This Septic Thing Like… Permanent?” Yes. Yes it is. It’s not a phase. Welcome to rural plumbing! And no, the septic inspection is not optional. Trust us on this one. 2. You Asked If the Wi-Fi “Is Like, Strong?” Listen, we get it. Remote work life. Zoom meetings. TikTok. But Upstate life also means learning how to aim your router at the mountain and sacrifice a sock to the internet gods during storms. 3. You Called 2 Acres “A Cute Little Backyard” That’s a homestead, babe. You’re about to own more lawn equipment than shoes. Hope you like mowing. Or… get real friendly with the local landscaping guy named Gary. 4. You Panicked the First Time You Heard Coyotes “It’s a pack! Do we call animal control?!” Nah, they’re just singing. To the moon. It’s their thing. You’ll learn to sleep through it… eventually. 5. You Toured a 19th-Century Farmhouse and Asked: ‘Wait… Where’s the Closet?’ These homes were built before people had stuff. You’ll be lucky if you get a single hook on the back of a door. Solution: vintage wardrobes or learn minimalism real fast. 6. You Brought Iced Coffee to a Showing in January. Iconic, but also: your straw froze mid-sip. Welcome to Upstate winter. ๏ปฟ Whether you're house-hunting in hiking boots or still using Google Maps to figure out where you are, just know: you’re doing great. Everyone starts somewhere. And you’re not alone — we all asked where the subway was at some point.
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