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Post by knot on May 9, 2018 9:06:36 GMT -5
Climate data are sourced from Gurnang State Forest @ 1,148 m AMSL (1933–1975). On account of its high elevation and western position about the ranges, Black Springs features a cool climate with mild, stormy summers and cold, squally winters with frequent snowfall from April to September. Since 1893, snow has fallen about five times during summer on the upper reaches of the Central Tablelands, most recently on 13th December, 2013. On 05 July 1900, snow was up to eight feet deep in Rydal, NSW (much lower in elevation). B+: perfect winters and nigh-perfect precip pattern and amount. Summers could be warmer.
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on May 9, 2018 9:11:08 GMT -5
B+ Just needs slightly cooler winters but that is a nice climate.
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Post by ilmc90 on May 9, 2018 9:23:23 GMT -5
B for the pleasant year-round temperatures. Precipitation is okay. Sunshine hours a bit higher than ideal but it's a trade off the moderate temperatures.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on May 9, 2018 10:22:21 GMT -5
What a load of bum
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Post by Lommaren on May 9, 2018 18:23:32 GMT -5
D+
Liveable but never truly great.
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Post by Steelernation on May 9, 2018 19:30:43 GMT -5
D. Too wet, summer too cool, too stable.
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Post by Beercules on May 9, 2018 20:29:17 GMT -5
E+. Cold year round.
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Post by knot on May 10, 2018 1:21:36 GMT -5
D. Too wet, summer too cool, too stable.The CT is anything but stable, which is why I love it so much Occasional summer snowfalls, potent heatwaves (5.2 days per year over 30° C, despite 23° C avg highs), severe and frequent thunderstorms etc...
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Post by Ariete on May 10, 2018 4:03:22 GMT -5
D+ due to poor crummers and winters, low temps awful year-round, record highs pathetic on Australian standards.
The amount of precipitation I do like.
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Post by jgtheone on May 10, 2018 5:17:23 GMT -5
D. Winters are pretty good, everything else is horrible.
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Post by Steelernation on May 10, 2018 14:06:35 GMT -5
The CT is anything but stable, which is why I love it so much Occasional summer snowfalls, potent heatwaves (5.2 days per year over 30° C, despite 23° C avg highs), severe and frequent thunderstorms etc... I was mostly looking at winter. Just an 8 C difference between the average and record high in January and not much more the other winter months. Looks like highs would range from just 2-3 to like 12-3 at most in July. That’s much too stable IMO.
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Post by knot on May 10, 2018 17:11:58 GMT -5
I was mostly looking at winter. Just an 8 C difference between the average and record high in January and not much more the other winter months. Looks like highs would range from just 2-3 to like 12-3 at most in July. That’s much too stable IMO. Indeed; the highs will range from about 0° C up to around 10° C at most in July; most days tend 3°-5° C, with some 8°-9° C outliers bringing the average up to 7.4° C.
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Post by Ethereal on Feb 16, 2022 6:24:48 GMT -5
D-
Istanbul winters in the winter. Sydney winters in the summer.
This is windward? Its rain data looks so confused, somewhat leaning leeward.
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Post by Benfxmth on Feb 16, 2022 9:31:26 GMT -5
D
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Post by knot on Feb 18, 2022 4:38:44 GMT -5
D- Istanbul winters in the winter. Sydney winters in the summer. This is windward? Its rain data looks so confused, somewhat leaning leeward. Yes, it's entirely windward. You must keep in mind that the farther north you go in AU, winter rainfall decreases altogether. So the winters are very wet for 34 °S.
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Jun 4, 2022 21:16:02 GMT -5
B- rating.
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Post by Cheeseman on Jun 5, 2022 6:21:46 GMT -5
D
Winters are better than here, though I'd imagine pretty gloomy; those crummers are just sad though. A subfreezing record low in January...c'mon really?
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Post by CRISPR on Feb 17, 2024 21:50:02 GMT -5
D, mainly just too cool and drizzly
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Post by Kaleetan on Feb 18, 2024 21:15:25 GMT -5
F. Freezing record lows in every month.
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