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Post by AJ1013 on Jul 13, 2019 17:26:53 GMT -5
Credit to Crunch41 for making these! In this climate battle we have Highest min Tucson VS lowest max Tucson Hottest nights is a hot desert climate but with moderate rainfall in winter. Frost is unheard of and nights are over 80F for most of the summer. The closest climate twin is the Dead Sea, if Sedom had wetter winters it would be a good match. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_Sea. Lowest Max temperatures is "subtropical" but gets regular snow and has never reached 10C in January. There is a shorter wet season in February-April and a long one from June to October. Summer is very humid and stable with thunderstorms almost every day, but 30C is rare. Dalhousie and highland northern India is vaguely similar. Pick your poison
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Post by ππΏMΓΆrΓΆnππΏ on Jul 13, 2019 17:29:22 GMT -5
Cord prease
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Post by Steelernation on Jul 13, 2019 18:06:01 GMT -5
Theyβre both boring as fuck but at least one of them has some pleasant months. Hot it is.
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Post by AJ1013 on Jul 13, 2019 18:08:22 GMT -5
Theyβre both boring as fuck but at least one of them has some pleasant months. Hot it is. How is the cold one boring? It may suck but itβs objevtively not boring.
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Post by Steelernation on Jul 13, 2019 18:12:41 GMT -5
Itβs extremely stable, thereβs no variability, no heat, tiny diurnal ranges, it rains almost very day. You can except the exact same thing most days in that climate, so yes, it is extremely boring to me. The only pleasant months are January and May too while the other one has 6.
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Post by knot on Jul 13, 2019 18:50:20 GMT -5
Cold Tucson
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Post by Crunch41 on Jul 13, 2019 19:31:24 GMT -5
Cold, but both are terrible.
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Post by trolik on Jul 13, 2019 21:36:37 GMT -5
both bad but hot one is more preferable
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Post by tij on Jul 13, 2019 21:58:55 GMT -5
Guess the cold one, it's way too wet though. Dalhousie is quite gorgeous, my parents honeymooned there!
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Post by Deleted on Jul 14, 2019 1:55:43 GMT -5
Really unsure. Hot Tucson is much too hot in summer. It could be manageable if humidity isn't consistently high in summer but I don't like that it's arid. Cold Tucson has summers that are way too wet with pathetic heat records and cold winters.
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Post by AJ1013 on Jul 14, 2019 10:25:56 GMT -5
Really unsure. Hot Tucson is much too hot in summer. It could be manageable if humidity isn't consistently high in summer but I don't like that it's arid. Cold Tucson has summers that are way too wet with pathetic heat records and cold winters. What do you consider high humidity? In July and August, and maybe September, dews would be above 60F much if not most of the time in βHot Tucsonβ
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Post by Morningrise on Jul 14, 2019 12:59:29 GMT -5
They're both awful but I'll go with the cold version for having much nicer temperatures.
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Post by srfoskey on Jul 14, 2019 13:15:16 GMT -5
Cold Tuscon is way too rainy, but has decent temps, so I'll go with that one.
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