I spent some time living with my grandmother in N. Florida, SW of Jacksonville, when my mother did a medical residency in graduate school. (Fun fact: Caeleb Dressel and I attended the same elementary school, but not at the same time.) I also visited and stayed with her often until she died right after I was married in the early 'aughts. I didn't mind the bugs/ants (and I've been hit by fire ants, LOL,), or the sandy soil, or the heat and humidity, or the flatness. I was very conscious, however, of the extreme racial segregation of neighborhoods, businesses, etc. in her neck of the woods. It wasn't legally enforced at that point (when I lived and went to school there, it was not quite twenty years after the Civil Rights Act of 1964 but red lining had done its work.) I had not lived anywhere like that before that, and over the course of the next 20 years of visiting, I never really saw it get better. Other parts of Florida I have stayed in since then have become more diverse, and the issue is less obvious, but I'm not sure about the more rural/non-coastal areas. I wouldn't want to live there again, though, even now.
Reflecting on that experience has led me to wonder if you've asked yourself questions other than those about weather, critters, and affordability: What do you value most about a community you want to live in? How does the community foster a culture of belonging, of neighborliness, of diversity? Do those values matter to you? I love the place that I live in now--not just because it's within walking distance to our downtown, and we were able to afford what we built because there was risk when we purchased as the neighborhood was re-developing-- but because our neighborhood has done a fantastic job of creating a community out of people with diverse viewpoints, family types, and lived experiences. We won the neighborhood lottery, in a lot of respects, and the people that I've found who have truly loved where they live are in places that have figured out to foster a true sense of community amongst all the people who live there.