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Post by Ariete on Oct 4, 2017 6:25:24 GMT -5
Also, in my original post I said that I'll vote for Sweden, as Northern England is lacklustre in summer and spring. BUT if it was Southern and Southeastern England, in that case I'd vote for England.
Milwaukee: B+ Toronto: B (too chilly in spring) Sandusky: A- Rochester: B- (too snowy, too cool lows) Portland: B-/C++ (too cold)
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Post by Deleted on Oct 4, 2017 6:30:33 GMT -5
Southern Sweden by light years.
And I despise Scandinavian/Nordic climates anyway.
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Post by Deleted on Oct 4, 2017 8:43:49 GMT -5
Shame you don't live in Norrkoping, which is much more urbanised than your actual location ... and is farther from the open sea which affects September lows badly But will also moderate the highs. Anyway, judging by the stats I've clearly been unfairly throwing your Septembers in with other cooler Septembers on your latitude. But the fact remains, that despite your claims we can get 26C monthly summer highs, and most of the year is warmer here. Your advantage is having less stratuscrappus clouds
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Post by Lommaren on Oct 4, 2017 8:55:38 GMT -5
This is a hinterland, but nearer the sea proper. Having said that, since 2001 there have been ten July's with avg highs above 23C in this part of the country (Norrköping/Nyköping hinterland). That's simply not on in Wrexham
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Post by Deleted on Oct 4, 2017 9:05:35 GMT -5
True, but having a December with an average high of 13.1C is even more impossible where you are. The fact is that the improvements seen during your summer are nowhere near good enough to justify the brutal trade-off that is required from October-April. If you had summer average highs of 26/27C, then it would be a different matter
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Post by Lommaren on Oct 4, 2017 9:19:40 GMT -5
True, but having a December with an average high of 13.1C is even more impossible where you are. The fact is that the improvements seen during your summer are nowhere near good enough to justify the brutal trade-off that is required from October-April. If you had summer average highs of 26/27C, then it would be a different matter We maded 27C in the sun a lot bro, jajajajaja That's where I have my thermometres, why are you bashering my climate?
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Post by Deleted on Oct 4, 2017 9:21:49 GMT -5
True, but having a December with an average high of 13.1C is even more impossible where you are. The fact is that the improvements seen during your summer are nowhere near good enough to justify the brutal trade-off that is required from October-April. If you had summer average highs of 26/27C, then it would be a different matter We maded 27C in the sun a lot bro, jajajajaja That's where I have my thermometres, why are you bashering my climate? Haha bro, leave the north pole and come to Spain you can stay in my flat. I maded you a straw bed to sleeping on !
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Post by Deleted on Oct 4, 2017 10:05:52 GMT -5
Does Nykoping have a station or do you get the values from Norrkoping?
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Post by Lommaren on Oct 4, 2017 10:34:04 GMT -5
Does Nykoping have a station or do you get the values from Norrkoping? Oxelösund has a maritime one and Norrköping has one. I tend to look at both since Nyköping has warmer lows and slightly cooler highs than Norrköping Nyköping is mid-range there but tilting towards Norrköping due to it being 10 miles sub-inland by a couple of inlets from this location: this is Oxelösund for 2002-2016:
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Post by Deleted on Oct 4, 2017 10:48:10 GMT -5
So where is Baba getting the 1900 sunshine hours from? It seems a slightly optimistic estimate.
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Post by Babu on Oct 4, 2017 11:53:27 GMT -5
So where is Baba getting the 1900 sunshine hours from? It seems a slightly optimistic estimate. Nyköping is probably closer to Oxelösund. It's close enough to the coast for 1900h I think. On the 61-90 sunshine map, Nyköping has about the same amount of Stockholm which had 1820h in 61-90, so most likely 1900h in 02-16
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Post by Deleted on Oct 4, 2017 11:55:55 GMT -5
Fanciful.
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Post by Kaleetan on Oct 13, 2017 14:47:28 GMT -5
UK! Swedish winters are terrible, while the UK just gets clouds and rain.
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Sept 1, 2023 8:41:51 GMT -5
Southern Sweden
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Post by CRISPR on Jan 26, 2024 15:14:13 GMT -5
Southern Sweden- Winters are unfortunately cold in both, but Sweden at least has more Aurora (though not super frequent) and snowfall. Summers no contest for Sweden, hence my vote
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