I'm going to try and give you three different stories here so you can get the idea that college is a different experience for everyone. but first... is your school even reputable for geography? having a school be good at what you want to learn is crucial. You're not going to go to Cal Poly to be a philosophy major and you're not going to go to DU because you want an engineering major. Schools stack what they're good in, and when you have a great set of professors in a given field then the experience and what you get from it will be better.
So story 1: My sister deferred a year after high school to ski. She was thinking about getting a teaching degree later. After a season she gets into Cal Poly b/c she wants to be a ski designer. She goes one semester, takes the winter off, then is back again in the summer. Somehow, two years in she doesn't want to materials engineering, but bio engineering. By the time she finally gets around to graduating she doesn't want to be an engineer. 6 years of work to get a BA in materials engineering and now she's taking classes at the local community college to prep to go to nursing school. SO... think about what you might really want to spend your time and money on. She went to one of the best engineering colleges in the country and now she wants nothing to do with anything she learned there.
Story 2: My boyfriend graduated HS and came so Summit and to please his parents, got is AS at CMC. We met, and somehow he convinces himself that he should finish his BA at CU Denver with me. Problem was, he wanted geography, or earth science, or geology... nothing UCD is good at. He should have gone to CU Boulder or Mesa State for the physical sciences. Needless to say, b/c UCD is not good with those, his professors sucked, then he got jaded, and now he's dropped out. Will he go back? He's waiting for CMC to get its 4 year accreditation. Will his life not be as successful without a BA? Not for what his life calling is. He's got a different mentality then most and will make his life happy and full without the typical money making pathways. However, he at least got an AS and gave another 1.5 years of trying for his BA.
Story 3: I graduated from UCD in 3 years with honors. Why, I loved it there. But I was in Political Science. I figured that if I never used my degree at least it taught me to think and write critically. UCD is GREAT with Poli Sci with a huge line up with professors and a great schedule. With the exception of my senior year, I only went to class two days a week... the rest I skied or worked... remember too, i graduated in three years. Now I'm back at UCD again for my masters.
CLIFF NOTES:
You've got a trade school story, a drop out story, and a grad school story. At least try for a little bit. And think about what YOU really want to study, do, and be.