I've also lived on both sides of the Columbia, and it's hard for me to differentiate between the 2 cities. Even if you move out to the Couve, you're still in the Portland metro, and you'll never forget that half the population of Oregon lives within minutes, not hours from you. Vancouver, USA may be the 4th largest city in Washington, but it's still very much a (forgive me) suburb of Portland.
@@Salmonskinbandaid if you’re talking about a downtown skyline-not really. I’d say the cascade mountains and trees more than anything dominate most of the areas skyline. None of the buildings are really that tall-Vancouver is mostly flat and you can’t see downtown from most of it.
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I've also lived on both sides of the Columbia, and it's hard for me to differentiate between the 2 cities. Even if you move out to the Couve, you're still in the Portland metro, and you'll never forget that half the population of Oregon lives within minutes, not hours from you. Vancouver, USA may be the 4th largest city in Washington, but it's still very much a (forgive me) suburb of Portland.
It really feels a bit like Gresham or Clackamas county in a lot of ways. Its both an offshoot and an escape!
Does Vancouver WA have somewhat of a skyline ?
@@Salmonskinbandaid if you’re talking about a downtown skyline-not really. I’d say the cascade mountains and trees more than anything dominate most of the areas skyline.
None of the buildings are really that tall-Vancouver is mostly flat and you can’t see downtown from most of it.
“Vancouver” rhymes with “mediocre.”
What does Portland rhyme with... poor land because of taxes?? 🤔
@@LivinginOregonandWashington it rhymes with “deport them.”
Trust me: I’m a rapper.