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Post by jgtheone on Nov 2, 2017 8:06:28 GMT -5
oh its great its so consistent
CONSISTENTLY SHIT
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 5, 2017 18:50:25 GMT -5
9C high today to be seen as a major success until mid-March
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Post by Deleted on Nov 6, 2017 20:03:18 GMT -5
9C high today to be seen as a major success until mid-March In fuckston 10 degrees is pretty much a rare beast until March as well.
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Post by Giorbanguly on Nov 6, 2017 22:32:32 GMT -5
Right now no qualms with the climate, but this is a placeholder until March/April when the weather is gonna be driving me up the walls What do you hate about your springs? The fact that they're really damn slow. It takes forever for the "Spring warmup" to come, sometimes it arrives in April, other times even in May. The possibility of having 40 inches of snow in March (happened this year). Then having 30F highs all throughout April (happened in 2015). And then getting shitty 40-50 degree weather in May with tons of cold rainfall, like in 2016. As a cherry on the cake, 2016 May went directly from 50s as highs into 90s, in the process skipping all the comfy 70 degree weather. Bloody hell, it was fucking annoying. I don't mind cold weather in winter, but once you start passing St. Patrick's Day, Easter, Earth Day, Cinco de Mayo, and it's still cold outside and dreary as hell, that makes me fucking pissed. By March, and especially by April, I just want fucking comfortable weather already, and Northeast US really makes you wait for it
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Post by grega94 on Nov 6, 2017 23:38:03 GMT -5
When I was a kid I used always complain about Seattle's climate, but now I've grown to love it. That being said I still think our winters are too rainy and dark, but I've grown to accept that.
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Post by deneb78 on Nov 8, 2017 12:10:22 GMT -5
I wish our winters were snowless at sea level... it really sucks that I have to worry about that.
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 8, 2017 13:47:43 GMT -5
I wish our winters were snowless at sea level... it really sucks that I have to worry about that. Today it felt like tundra winds and it was 4C, doesn't seem too pleasant either given I assume that's typical Vancouver weather
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Post by deneb78 on Nov 8, 2017 14:57:27 GMT -5
I wish our winters were snowless at sea level... it really sucks that I have to worry about that. Today it felt like tundra winds and it was 4C, doesn't seem too pleasant either given I assume that's typical Vancouver weather Yeah not too pleasant about 8C here.... needs to be at least 10C warmer.
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Post by lurkeroffate on Nov 9, 2017 6:41:58 GMT -5
It was warmer in early spring than late spring!
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Post by alex992 on Nov 9, 2017 13:40:44 GMT -5
We have a low sun angle right now (well "low" by our standards), quite early sunsets, and the vibe of that is all ruined by the fact there's a 90 F (32 C) heat index outside right now. Fucking fuck fuckity fuck fuck fuck this climate.
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 9, 2017 13:41:43 GMT -5
We have a low sun angle right now (well "low" by our standards), quite early sunsets, and the vibe of that is all ruined by the fact there's a 90 F (32 C) heat index outside right now. Fucking fuck fuckity fuck fuck fuck this climate. How is that even possible on your latitude this time of the year especially with all the sea moderation? The sea perhaps has the opposite effect, driving the dew points up and being warm enough to keep winter temps high I guess? Severe Gulf Stream impact? Woah, to be fair, Culiacán only 1 degree lower is even worse.
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Post by alex992 on Nov 9, 2017 13:50:43 GMT -5
We have a low sun angle right now (well "low" by our standards), quite early sunsets, and the vibe of that is all ruined by the fact there's a 90 F (32 C) heat index outside right now. Fucking fuck fuckity fuck fuck fuck this climate. How is that even possible on your latitude this time of the year especially with all the sea moderation? The sea perhaps has the opposite effect, driving the dew points up and being warm enough to keep winter temps high I guess? Severe Gulf Stream impact? Woah, to be fair, Culiacán only 1 degree lower is even worse. The ocean is what keeps us warm this time of year, lol. Wind is blowing straight from the ocean right now. Ocean temp is at 27 C (81 F) right now at Virginia Key, that won't moderate us at all lol. If we had land to our east instead of warm ocean, it'd be cooler here. The Gulf Stream also passes close to the east coast of FL, which does have some effect.
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 9, 2017 14:18:07 GMT -5
The ocean is what keeps us warm this time of year, lol. Wind is blowing straight from the ocean right now. Ocean temp is at 27 C (81 F) right now at Virginia Key, that won't moderate us at all lol. If we had land to our east instead of warm ocean, it'd be cooler here. The Gulf Stream also passes close to the east coast of FL, which does have some effect. Thinking about it, on your latitude, the peninsular position probably makes Miami be more like a tropical island, except for during those brief winter "cool snaps". How far north in Florida do you have to go to call autumns liveable?
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Post by alex992 on Nov 9, 2017 14:37:43 GMT -5
The ocean is what keeps us warm this time of year, lol. Wind is blowing straight from the ocean right now. Ocean temp is at 27 C (81 F) right now at Virginia Key, that won't moderate us at all lol. If we had land to our east instead of warm ocean, it'd be cooler here. The Gulf Stream also passes close to the east coast of FL, which does have some effect. Thinking about it, on your latitude, the peninsular position probably makes Miami be more like a tropical island, except for during those brief winter "cool snaps". How far north in Florida do you have to go to call autumns liveable? Yep, it's a tropical climate down here because the coolest month still has a mean above 18 C. I would say even Orlando is noticeably cooler than here, with average lows 4-5 C colder than down here for October-November, although Orlando is still very warm in October (average low of 19 C). Ocala and northwards has average lows of 17 C and lower in October, so I'd say Ocala on up northwards.
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 9, 2017 14:39:22 GMT -5
Yep, it's a tropical climate down here because the coolest month still has a mean above 18 C. I would say even Orlando is noticeably cooler than here, with average lows 4-5 C colder than down here for October-November, although Orlando is still very warm in October (average low of 19 C). Ocala and northwards has average lows of 17 C and lower in October, so I'd say Ocala on up northwards. C'mon Alex, course I know that What I meant is that seasonal swings in summer are lower than what probably could've been the case had it been inland? As for me: Daytona Beach looks quite... pleasant half of the year I could imagine staying there Nov-Apr!
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Post by alex992 on Nov 9, 2017 14:56:23 GMT -5
Yep, it's a tropical climate down here because the coolest month still has a mean above 18 C. I would say even Orlando is noticeably cooler than here, with average lows 4-5 C colder than down here for October-November, although Orlando is still very warm in October (average low of 19 C). Ocala and northwards has average lows of 17 C and lower in October, so I'd say Ocala on up northwards. C'mon Alex, course I know that What I meant is that seasonal swings in summer are lower than what probably could've been the case had it been inland? As for me: Daytona Beach looks quite... pleasant half of the year I could imagine staying there Nov-Apr! Well, yeah of course lol. If we had like 50-100 miles of land to our east instead of just ocean, it'd probably be like 3 C warmer in summer and 3 C cooler in winter or something like that.
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Post by AJ1013 on Nov 9, 2017 15:06:20 GMT -5
C'mon Alex, course I know that What I meant is that seasonal swings in summer are lower than what probably could've been the case had it been inland? As for me: Daytona Beach looks quite... pleasant half of the year I could imagine staying there Nov-Apr! Well, yeah of course lol. If we had like 50-100 miles of land to our east instead of just ocean, it'd probably be like 3 C warmer in summer and 3 C cooler in winter or something like that. At least we get cold snaps lol. Dec Jan and Feb are usually distinctly untropical even between cool snaps but other months are garbage outside of a NW flow event.
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Post by alex992 on Nov 9, 2017 15:12:37 GMT -5
Well, yeah of course lol. If we had like 50-100 miles of land to our east instead of just ocean, it'd probably be like 3 C warmer in summer and 3 C cooler in winter or something like that. At least we get cold snaps lol. Dec Jan and Feb are usually distinctly untropical even between cool snaps but other months are garbage outside of a NW flow event. There's always the potential to feel tropical here even in Dec-Feb when we get those strong SE winds which brings highs in the low-mid 80s and lows in the low-mid 70s. December 2015 was full of that.
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 9, 2017 15:14:12 GMT -5
If Miami is F guys: what is: Daytona Beach Jacksonville Beach ?
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Post by alex992 on Nov 9, 2017 15:44:58 GMT -5
Both still Fs lol. Jacksonville Beach maybe a D- on a good year.
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