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Post by Deleted on Sept 17, 2017 5:58:12 GMT -5
i start this thread with a climate box for vindeln-sunnansjönäs, close to tavelsjö. there was a gap in the data from january-july 2000, so the "true" monthly average might differ a decimal point or so for these months.
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Post by jgtheone on Sept 17, 2017 6:35:10 GMT -5
I use these for monthly summaries, it's more up to date and I get an equal amount of + and - months. All data is from the BoM, the mean maximums and minimums can be found there. The sunshine hours were obtained off someone who had access to them.
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Post by Babu on Sept 17, 2017 7:56:01 GMT -5
i start this thread with a climate box for vindeln-sunnansjönäs, close to tavelsjö. there was a gap in the data from january-july 2000, so the "true" monthly average might differ a decimal point or so for these months. Wow! I have no clue as to how you managed that, but that's cool! Also, Umeå is such an obvious frost hollow considering the nights are colder there than in Vindeln in most months...
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Post by Ariete on Sept 18, 2017 13:04:20 GMT -5
Changed the records to match the Artukainen station since 2003 for consistency. But I've still have to use the airport's highs and lows. I have the means for Artukainen though, except a couple of months missing. Jan: -4.0 Feb: -4.0 Mar: -0.9 Apr: 4.8 May: 10.8 June: 14.9 July: 18.6 Aug: 17.3 Sep: 12.3 Oct: 6.2 Nov: 2.6 Dec: -0.9 JESUS what a frost hollow that Airport really is! Amazing difference in summer and late autumn.
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Post by Steelernation on Sept 18, 2017 16:55:36 GMT -5
Here's Rochester from 2000-2017:
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Post by Deleted on Oct 3, 2017 7:55:17 GMT -5
I don't have a huge amount of data, but this is my town's vomit inducing climate averages - sunshine hours are taken from the met office station as the local amateur station under reads by 15%.
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Post by Beercules on Oct 3, 2017 8:09:55 GMT -5
^^^ dude your town better have a good KFC and a multitude of bottle shops to survive that hell. "Vomit-inducing" is a compliment as far as I'm concerned The official Renmark Airport station has just been updated by the BOM, 1995-2017
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Post by Deleted on Oct 3, 2017 8:45:23 GMT -5
We have a KFC And plenty of alcohol supplies around here, that's for sure. But yeah I'd take Renmark's climate in a heartbeat.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 3, 2017 9:07:46 GMT -5
28 days with snowfall is quite a lot. i don't think gothenburg can match that, despite the significantly colder winters.
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Post by Beercules on Oct 3, 2017 9:31:09 GMT -5
We have a KFC And plenty of alcohol supplies around here, that's for sure. But yeah I'd take Renmark's climate in a heartbeat. Nice! I just looked up Buxton on Google Maps and wow the built up area looks very tiny for 22,000 people And it is roughly the same distance from Manchester by road as my old place in outer suburban Melbourne to the CBD.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 3, 2017 9:32:56 GMT -5
Yeah even compared with 10 years ago there seem to be a lot of people here, mostly old people. Manchester is about 40 minutes by road, 50 minutes on the train. It really is quite sad when Manchester can be said to have a somewhat superior climate to my hometown
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Post by Donar on Oct 3, 2017 10:27:11 GMT -5
My university town in northern Hesse:
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Post by Babu on Oct 5, 2017 14:11:26 GMT -5
I could've sworn we already had a thread like this but perhaps not, unless I'm blind of course.
Here you post climate data you've gathered yourself.
Ariete, do you perchance have a 2002-2016 Kokkola or Pietersaari? And is there any sunshine data for the coastal areas around 63-65'N? 2002-2016 preferably.
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Post by Ariete on Oct 6, 2017 0:31:00 GMT -5
There's the box: Sunshine stats are not publicly available. Have the 81-10 for Valassaaret, and that is 1854 annually. But of course it's an island, so the sunshine is higher than on the mainland. Could make a 02-16 weatherbox of it, it's quite a peculiar climate and the northernmost "humid continental" in Finland during the 81-10 normal period.
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Post by Babu on Oct 6, 2017 1:10:15 GMT -5
There's the box: Sunshine stats are not publicly available. Have the 81-10 for Valassaaret, and that is 1854 annually. But of course it's an island, so the sunshine is higher than on the mainland. Could make a 02-16 weatherbox of it, it's quite a peculiar climate and the northernmost "humid continental" in Finland during the 81-10 normal period. They seem to have a much narrower diurnal range. Highs are only warmer in May and July, but lows are warmer in every month. I wonder why that is. Do you know where in Kokkola the station is? Either it's just because Umeå Airport is a bit if a frost hollow, or it's perhaps that Kokkola since it's closer to the water gets a narrower diurnal range, but because it's located on a larger continent, its seasonal range gets larger as well, matching that of slightly more inland Umeå.
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Post by Ariete on Oct 6, 2017 2:28:10 GMT -5
They seem to have a much narrower diurnal range. Highs are only warmer in May and July, but lows are warmer in every month. I wonder why that is. Do you know where in Kokkola the station is? Either it's just because Umeå Airport is a bit if a frost hollow, or it's perhaps that Kokkola since it's closer to the water gets a narrower diurnal range, but because it's located on a larger continent, its seasonal range gets larger as well, matching that of slightly more inland Umeå. Probably because of the sea and the prevailing western winds. There's the location: goo.gl/maps/MXhy9mHS7d32
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Post by Ariete on Oct 14, 2017 15:32:11 GMT -5
Here's Mariehamn this century: And update for Turku:
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Post by Lommaren on Oct 14, 2017 15:33:28 GMT -5
Mariehamn looks a lot more like I'd expected it to look this century, especially with the skyrocketing summer lows with those short nights and proximity to a mild sea.
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Post by Babu on Oct 15, 2017 7:50:51 GMT -5
Lithuania really has shit climates compares to the other side of the Baltic. Even Finland is a lot warmer for the latitude, even though they're at the same side of the sea. Look at Klaipeda. Located on the larger continental landmass, you'd expect it to be more continental with warmer summers and colder winters compared to Sweden, but no, both winters and summers are cool. It is decently sunny though at 2000h. Sweden doesn't have any coastal sunshine recorders though, so it's hard to compare. Overnight lows are also very warm.
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Post by Ariete on Oct 15, 2017 8:07:26 GMT -5
Lithuania really has shit climates compares to the other side of the Baltic. Even Finland is a lot warmer for the latitude, even though they're at the same side of the sea. Look at Klaipeda. Located on the larger continental landmass, you'd expect it to be more continental with warmer summers and colder winters compared to Sweden, but no, both winters and summers are cool. It is decently sunny though at 2000h. Sweden doesn't have any coastal sunshine recorders though, so it's hard to compare. Overnight lows are also very warm. What years are those? edit: never mind. 2000-2017.
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