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Post by Lommaren on Mar 5, 2019 18:55:43 GMT -5
Charlottetown 2002-2018 with official Environment Canada numbers is here 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 what grade is that? This is the comparison with the previous normals of 1981-2010 Yahya Sinwar, quite a sizeable difference especially in winter, isn't it?
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Post by Yahya Sinwar on Mar 5, 2019 19:17:09 GMT -5
Charlottetown looks much nicer under those normals, a big part of it could be the fact the 80s are out of the record so this may be closer to climates not long ago in the past ( pre-1960) but with likely warmer summers than anything before! Summers warmed big time man! That’s really good and promising , pretty livable climate even if its seasons are still shit.
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Mar 5, 2019 19:26:36 GMT -5
Charlottetown 2002-2018 with official Environment Canada numbers is here 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 what grade is that? This is the comparison with the previous normals of 1981-2010 Yahya Sinwar , quite a sizeable difference especially in winter, isn't it? A+ fuckannn!!!
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Post by knot on Mar 5, 2019 23:08:49 GMT -5
Charlottetown 2002-2018 with official Environment Canada numbers is here 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 what grade is that? This is the comparison with the previous normals of 1981-2010 Yahya Sinwar , quite a sizeable difference especially in winter, isn't it? Beautiful climate!
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 6, 2019 7:44:22 GMT -5
One of the most discussed climates in the shoutbox and that has maded for many emojis This is Vancouver for the last 17 years of this millennium, the city that houses a certain 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 ! What on earth is wrong with the Augusts there? Not a single 30°C day in 17 years in spite of being at 49°N with a vast landmass to its east and Vancouver Island as a shield! Epic failure of crummers. March not going above 19°C even once with 10°C averages and October's record high being at 22.2°C are other real disappointments. The warmest month in this timeframe was 24.1/15.4, which sort of says it all when that's the warmest month in 17 years from a climate averaging just a degree below that! Merely three months even reached 30°C, with the July 2009 reading looking like a freak accident more than anything. Living near the sea in Vancouver is such a letdown given the averages just inland.
In spite of this, snowfall still is down to merely 30 cm per annum! This is a C- for me. Rather boring summers and horrible single-digit cold rain winters remaining, seemingly not even moving upwards, but still getting less snow by the minute. Sad! Interestingly enough, February has gotten drier, whereas March has gotten rainier. Summer droughts are more pronounced and unless something rapidly changes, Vancouver will be firmly mediterranean by any isotherm for 2001-2030.
AJ1013 , knot , Yahya Sinwar
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Post by knot on Mar 6, 2019 15:16:20 GMT -5
^Rubbish; much worse than standard Vancouver.
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 6, 2019 15:22:04 GMT -5
^Rubbish; much worse than standard Vancouver. I'd guess this one would suit you a fair bit better... a warmer modern Ottawa with stronger heat waves and winters nearer freezing than before.
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Post by knot on Mar 6, 2019 15:23:25 GMT -5
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 7, 2019 9:14:07 GMT -5
The most moderate climate of Canada's Arctic Territories, Whitehorse, the capital of Yukon for 2002-2018, with precipitation and snowfall being limited to the first eleven years due to Environment Canada somehow stopping to publish those numbers for the airport station thereafter. I didn't want to use another location nearby since the 1981-2010 normals show a sizeable difference between the airport and the suburb in the south-east for those factors.
The most notable part is how summer afternoons haven't gotten any warmer at all and is extremely stable with the 1981-2010 normals during daytime. Nights have warmed though and May as well, with 2015 actually being a Dfb year. Winters are a little bit less severe than before and way milder than anything else seen in Canada above 60°N. The Pacfic influence still doesn't change that it's got a front-loaded winter and summer to a rather strong degree. Either way, general perception of this climate would be quite similar to a sunnier and lower-latitude Kiruna, so 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 might like it a bit from that standpoint alone?
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Mar 7, 2019 10:53:17 GMT -5
yeah that is a solid B climate. Not quite my ideal but I'd like it.
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 8, 2019 19:55:58 GMT -5
Here are Ganders' full averages for the last 17 years by the way 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 , knot , thoughts? Here's the comparison to the 1981-2010 normals. Rather remarkable warming of July in comparison to the rest of summers. Sun strength seems to have a more important role in Newfoundland's interior by now, hence a lower seasonal lag for peak summer, even though the gap between June and July is ever-increasing. Winters are milder, but still solidly within the freezing category. Snowfall very high in general.
I'll give it a D+ overall.
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Post by knot on Mar 8, 2019 19:57:24 GMT -5
A–; handsome winters.
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Mar 8, 2019 20:36:23 GMT -5
Here are Ganders' full averages for the last 17 years by the way 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 , knot , thoughts? Here's the comparison to the 1981-2010 normals. Rather remarkable warming of July in comparison to the rest of summers. Sun strength seems to have a more important role in Newfoundland's interior by now, hence a lower seasonal lag for peak summer, even though the gap between June and July is ever-increasing. Winters are milder, but still solidly within the freezing category. Snowfall very high in general.
I'll give it a D+ overall. Cumworthy.
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 10, 2019 17:33:18 GMT -5
Windsor's Riverside right on the boundary with Detroit and a few hundred metres from Belle Isle's IndyCar circuit 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 is very familiar with! The epicmost IndyCar climate maybe?
Unfortunately, the montly data only contained .0 or .5 but it should be close enough and even itself out in the long run since .2 would be .0 and .3 would be .5 and et cetera.
By the looks of things, winters are largely unchanged in spite of a generally warmer climate, which should be good news for Ariete 's favourite global climate region. More annual rainfall however, which is a bit interesting. Is it an A+ calibre so far this century Ariete?
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Post by Ariete on Mar 10, 2019 17:40:03 GMT -5
Lommaren, A+ for sure! Nice that 5 months on average have a 30C+ record high.
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Post by rpvan on Mar 10, 2019 17:40:56 GMT -5
One of the most discussed climates in the shoutbox and that has maded for many emojis This is Vancouver for the last 17 years of this millennium, the city that houses a certain 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 ! What on earth is wrong with the Augusts there? Not a single 30°C day in 17 years in spite of being at 49°N with a vast landmass to its east and Vancouver Island as a shield! Epic failure of crummers. March not going above 19°C even once with 10°C averages and October's record high being at 22.2°C are other real disappointments. The warmest month in this timeframe was 24.1/15.4, which sort of says it all when that's the warmest month in 17 years from a climate averaging just a degree below that! Merely three months even reached 30°C, with the July 2009 reading looking like a freak accident more than anything. Living near the sea in Vancouver is such a letdown given the averages just inland.
In spite of this, snowfall still is down to merely 30 cm per annum! This is a C- for me. Rather boring summers and horrible single-digit cold rain winters remaining, seemingly not even moving upwards, but still getting less snow by the minute. Sad! Interestingly enough, February has gotten drier, whereas March has gotten rainier. Summer droughts are more pronounced and unless something rapidly changes, Vancouver will be firmly mediterranean by any isotherm for 2001-2030.
AJ1013 , knot , Yahya Sinwar Our climate has seen a steady decline over the past few decades. Only positive I can see from the change is warmer/drier summers. Every other season has gotten worse IMO. A far cry from the 1941-1970 average for sure.
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 11, 2019 11:05:57 GMT -5
While I was at it in Ontario, this is Toronto's Annex station for 2002-2018 Ariete , I reckon this is a stronger A/A+ for you than before with the warmer summers? It's a bit disappointing to see the lower snowfall, however. So for me, this has gotten a little bit worse than previously, although it's still a decent B/B- climate in my opinion.
Also, knot , is this one and Windsor good enough for A?
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Post by knot on Mar 11, 2019 12:00:27 GMT -5
Lommaren Not good enough for even A–; merely B+. Reasoning? Too dry during winter, as well as too muggy during summer—I actually prefer cool summers to muggy summers...muggy heat is a waste of heat.
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Post by Ariete on Mar 11, 2019 13:44:35 GMT -5
Lommaren, it sure is going for the better, but March and April are still way too cool to warrant an A. May is as well a bit too cool. April 2018 with 8.2/0.6C, and May 2017 with 16.2/8.9C cannot possibly be acceptable in an A climate. The Annex is B++
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Post by Steelernation on Mar 11, 2019 14:34:01 GMT -5
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