@Robin Roundtree
You've received a lot of good advice and, at least in one man's opinion, a lot of questionable advice. I concede I'm a bit conservative but look in the mirror and tell yourself honestly that you have practically no real estate knowledge and no real estate experience and then ask yourself is that's the footing you want to be on as a basis for totally disrupting your life and risking $250k. Business is about making good decisions.
I started in this business 40 years ago where you are today. Worse, I had virtually no money, no equity, and a wife who almost had a heart attack at the prospect of me leaving a job that helped us a lot but that I hated with a passion. Oh, interest rates at the time for Fannie/Freddie home loans were around 10% or a little higher having come down from 14% and then 12% to the 10%. These was a brief time prior to this where Prime Rate rose to OVER 20%.
Today you can't walk even 1 foot without tripping over real estate information, knowledge, and education. Back then, I believe there were ,perhaps, 2 books. Not wanting to stress my wife, I was super conservative and super careful (within the scope of my knowledge at the time) so that she would never panic. I started making money and, if I remember correctly, I never had real estate related loss for well over a decade. To this day, I've only had 2 losses and they totaled about $8k - a pittance when compared to the profits. BTW, I'm 95% retired - sold all the rentals, etc. If someone waves a juicy deal under my nose, I still jump on it. It's in my blood.
Bottom line, I can think of not one reason to jeopardize what you have, least of all in such a dramatic way as moving out of Idaho. Even if you live in a market that's almost impossible to do a deal in (e.g., it's very small and isolated) now is the time to get a lot more real estate and investing education and keep your eyes searching for something local that you can get the seller to finance. Even if the seller says "no", you start gaining experience in negotiation which will be a key to your success. If there is a REIA or meetup not too far, definitely join but be cautious until you get a solid sense of the agendas, knowledge and honesty of the participants.
There's lots of real estate investing education at BP, online in general, and with some noted investor educators around the country. Be cautious, almost all of the good educational courses are under $1K, the bad tend to run thousands of dollars.
Good luck, good skill, good knowledge.