We left California for New England because of the wildfires; the smoke followed us 3,000 miles away

Why you need to care about climate change even if you don’t (want to) believe it

Marc Hoag
17 min readSep 7, 2021

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Photo by PG&E

Four months ago, my wife and I realized a years’-long dream to relocate to New England from our beloved home state of California where I’ve lived essentially all my life, and my wife, since her emigration from Romania some twenty years ago.

I was fortunate enough to grow up and live in some of the finest ZIP codes along Northern and Southern California’s coastal paradise towns, yet I’ve had a love affair with Boston since my first visit in 2009 — the history; education; the culture; the European-ness — and my wife and I can’t even count the numerous reasons we’ve wanted to “try some place new” despite our unbridled love for SoCal, not to mention my roots back in idyllic Marin County just north of San Francisco.

But it was last summer’s fires that catalyzed our immediate intent to quit California, a decision made all the more urgent when we received the miraculous news that our first baby was on his way.

As I said to my wife during those first horrific days of smoke-filled skies in August 2020, just days before our five-year wedding anniversary, I was damned if I’d raise…

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