|
Post by Lommaren on May 5, 2018 4:27:01 GMT -5
Imeni Poliny Osipenko is one massively long name for a location, and it is the area in Siberia with the coldest winters that simultaneously is close enough to the Okhotsk Sea to receive sufficient seasonal lag to bring September to 10.5°C, which is remarkable considering how its winters actually are stunningly cold for its 52°N latitude, averaging out at -20/-34°C... E- for me, very good summers, but the rest is a bit shocking. It is closer to a standard E than to F however, with adequate indoor heating there's a possibility to just stay indoors all the time.
|
|
|
Post by knot on May 5, 2018 4:36:58 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on May 5, 2018 5:30:48 GMT -5
knot; I'd expect the location to receive about 110 cm of snowfall annually in spite of the dry winters and retain a very solid permanent cover from early November to late March. The reason of course being that cold air = more snow per mm precipitation
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on May 5, 2018 6:55:15 GMT -5
Fuckin' shit.
|
|
|
Post by Beercules on May 5, 2018 6:57:20 GMT -5
E
Le gay
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on May 5, 2018 8:27:00 GMT -5
Would you be of the opinion that Köppen was spot on in declaring this non-subarctic?
|
|
|
Post by Beercules on May 5, 2018 8:30:51 GMT -5
Would you be of the opinion that Köppen was spot on in declaring this non-subarctic? I'm of the opinion that he should've saved that extra bottle of Vodka for the next day.
|
|
|
Post by Ariete on May 5, 2018 9:07:15 GMT -5
This. It's not an F from me because you can manage to live there.
|
|
|
Post by Steelernation on May 5, 2018 10:55:09 GMT -5
E
|
|
|
Post by aabc123 on May 5, 2018 11:24:08 GMT -5
Those averages above are averages of 1948-2011. Here are averages of 1981-2010. It seems that it is getting milder there. My rating would be D/E. Summers are good albeit shoulder seasons too cold, not talking about winters.
|
|
|
Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on May 5, 2018 14:33:18 GMT -5
Imeni Poliny Osipenko is one massively long name for a location, and it is the area in Siberia with the coldest winters that simultaneously is close enough to the Okhotsk Sea to receive sufficient seasonal lag to bring September to 10.5°C, which is remarkable considering how its winters actually are stunningly cold for its 52°N latitude, averaging out at -20/-34°C... E- for me, very good summers, but the rest is a bit shocking. It is closer to a standard E than to F however, with adequate indoor heating there's a possibility to just stay indoors all the time. nice find Lommaren! I've never seen this one before. September is ridiculously warm for how cold the winters get. I give this one a B-. It loses points for long, too cold winters and not enough summer rain. Sunshine hours are absolutely perfect year-round though.
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on May 5, 2018 16:23:38 GMT -5
nice find Lommaren! I've never seen this one before. September is ridiculously warm for how cold the winters get. I give this one a B-. It loses points for long, too cold winters and not enough summer rain. Sunshine hours are absolutely perfect year-round though. Yeah it was very good! I think I'll definitely add it to my Siberian forecasts, a lot more interesting climate than Magadan Sounds like a plan, right?
|
|
|
Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on May 5, 2018 16:58:51 GMT -5
nice find Lommaren! I've never seen this one before. September is ridiculously warm for how cold the winters get. I give this one a B-. It loses points for long, too cold winters and not enough summer rain. Sunshine hours are absolutely perfect year-round though. Yeah it was very good! I think I'll definitely add it to my Siberian forecasts, a lot more interesting climate than Magadan Sounds like a plan, right? Good idea. Magadan isn't as interesting.
|
|
|
Post by knot on May 6, 2018 2:02:48 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by Crunch41 on May 6, 2018 11:35:30 GMT -5
It's close to Thompson or Lynn Lake, Manitoba. Summer looks nice, but winter nights are way too cold. C.
|
|
|
Post by alex992 on May 6, 2018 13:42:41 GMT -5
B. Summer is too dry and cool, it's a tad too sunny for my tastes. But a decent climate overall.
|
|
|
Post by Lommaren on May 6, 2018 13:43:40 GMT -5
It's close to Thompson or Lynn Lake, Manitoba. Summer looks nice, but winter nights are way too cold. C. Except those are subarctic and this isn't (Even though the locals would definitely tick that box if someone asked them).
|
|
|
Post by Hlidskjalf on May 6, 2018 13:53:00 GMT -5
Very interesting climate indeed. Those winters are almost as cold as Norilsk, although much shorter and the summers are amazing and quite long. Its also very sunny all the year, which makes it less depressing than here, even though I would freeze to death before the end of november. A for interest-level, but D- for comfort.
|
|
|
Post by Crunch41 on May 6, 2018 23:00:53 GMT -5
It's close to Thompson or Lynn Lake, Manitoba. Summer looks nice, but winter nights are way too cold. C. Except those are subarctic and this isn't (Even though the locals would definitely tick that box if someone asked them). Yes, they are subarctic, but they are closer than any Dfb climates in Canada as far as summer and winter temperatures go. Any climate with 4 months over 10C in Canada or the northern US is much milder in winter. The coldest I've found is Pickle Lake at -19.3C, but there's probably a colder one in the prairies. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pickle_Lake#Climate
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Apr 26, 2021 16:19:42 GMT -5
Old thread, but that isn't the coldest non-subarctic climate in the world. I have a good contender. Baruunturuun has an average yearly mean of -4.5°C (23.9°F). en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baruunturuun
|
|