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Post by Lommaren on Dec 18, 2017 6:56:35 GMT -5
South FL would still be a shit climate. Only no thunderstorms, perhaps slightly moderated summers and a barren desert with zero frost potential
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Post by grega94 on Dec 18, 2017 10:08:32 GMT -5
I wonder what Seattle would be like, would it be similar to Miramichi, New Brunswick or would the surrounding mountains change things up? Would Seattle's winter averages be what it's like during cold fronts? if that's the case it would still be warmer than Miramichi since our cold fronts tend to be in the low 30s in the daytime and 20s at night. And would Seattle experience a hotter summer or is it to far north to be hot in the summer? and what about inland areas such as Spokane or Kennewick
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Post by Lommaren on Dec 18, 2017 10:44:12 GMT -5
I wonder what Seattle would be like, would it be similar to Miramichi, New Brunswick or would the surrounding mountains change things up? Would Seattle's winter averages be what it's like during cold fronts? if that's the case it would still be warmer than Miramichi since our cold fronts tend to be in the low 30s in the daytime and 20s at night. And would Seattle experience a hotter summer or is it to far north to be hot in the summer? and what about inland areas such as Spokane or KennewickSlightly more continental due to the mountains and less snow due to no Great Lakes being present. I'd say 27°/14° in July and -8/-17°C in January
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Post by Giorbanguly on Dec 18, 2017 12:35:48 GMT -5
Magadan would probably be a place many Siberians spent their summer holiday. Norway would be like Baffin Island is today and most of us would freeze to death within a year That would be extreme lol, it's at 60N so I can't imagine it would be too warm. Maybe it would be like a more continental Stockholm?
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Post by alex992 on Dec 18, 2017 12:38:15 GMT -5
South FL would still be a shit climate. Only no thunderstorms, perhaps slightly moderated summers and a barren desert with zero frost potential Ya. So no positives.
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Post by Giorbanguly on Dec 18, 2017 12:44:15 GMT -5
Florida would be like Baja California Sur in that case. Arid and desertlike. Nasty
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Post by alex992 on Dec 18, 2017 12:50:38 GMT -5
We'd have the same heat and humidity but without the rain, boke. We'd probably be a climate like Loreto: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loreto%2C_Baja_California_Sur#ClimateOvernight lows from November - April are better, but not enough to do the point where I'd like the climate more than my current climate. Way too dry and sunny and those summers are quite oppressive.
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Post by Giorbanguly on Dec 18, 2017 12:53:10 GMT -5
We'd have the same heat and humidity but without the rain, boke. We'd probably be a climate like Loreto: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loreto%2C_Baja_California_Sur#ClimateOvernight lows from November - April are better, but not enough to do the point where I'd like the climate more than my current climate. Way too dry and sunny and those summers are quite oppressive. Thing is Miami is a massive metro area...you can probably add a couple of degrees onto those summer lows thanks to the UHI. And the relative humidity is higher than in NYC, those 36C highs in the summers aren't even gonna be dry smh
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Post by alex992 on Dec 18, 2017 12:58:37 GMT -5
Yeah, instead of 96/78 for July and August it'd probably be more like 97/81 or something like that. An average high of 97 F is fine, but an average low of 81 F sure as hell ain't. I'd prefer an average low of about 70 F.
Average highs of 88-92 F and average lows of 65-70 F are ideal summer conditions for me.
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Post by nei on Dec 18, 2017 13:05:28 GMT -5
Florida would be hurricane-free but it would still get the same summer thunderstorm and dry-ish winter pattern
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Post by alex992 on Dec 18, 2017 13:07:40 GMT -5
I don't think we'd be totally hurricane-free. They do hit Baja California on occasion, though far less frequently than Florida.
We'd also be a hell of a lot drier.
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Post by nei on Dec 18, 2017 14:23:48 GMT -5
I don't think we'd be totally hurricane-free. They do hit Baja California on occasion, though far less frequently than Florida. We'd also be a hell of a lot drier. well close to hurricane-free. while I agree it'd be drier, I doubt it'd be Baja California-like; it'd have 2 warm seas + peninsula geography would encourage convection as storms would still form in the middle of Florida.
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Post by Lommaren on Dec 18, 2017 14:31:55 GMT -5
well close to hurricane-free. while I agree it'd be drier, I doubt it'd be Baja California-like; it'd have 2 warm seas + peninsula geography would encourage convection as storms would still form in the middle of Florida. So you think the Gulf coast would enable Florida to become the first ever tropical mediterranean climate due to its isolated position between two seas?
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Post by nei on Dec 18, 2017 14:36:46 GMT -5
well close to hurricane-free. while I agree it'd be drier, I doubt it'd be Baja California-like; it'd have 2 warm seas + peninsula geography would encourage convection as storms would still form in the middle of Florida. So you think the Gulf coast would enable Florida to become the first ever tropical mediterranean climate due to its isolated position between two seas? Honolulu has dry summers and is tropical temperature wise though not strictly Mediterranean. But I was saying Florida would still get summer convection due moist air over land getting heated and rising. Sea temperatures would be cooler so there'd be less of it.
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Post by Lommaren on Dec 18, 2017 15:35:41 GMT -5
Honolulu has dry summers and is tropical temperature wise though not strictly Mediterranean. But I was saying Florida would still get summer convection due moist air over land getting heated and rising. Sea temperatures would be cooler so there'd be less of it. Honolulu is semi-arid though but has that pattern
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Post by alex992 on Dec 18, 2017 15:45:46 GMT -5
I don't think we'd be totally hurricane-free. They do hit Baja California on occasion, though far less frequently than Florida. We'd also be a hell of a lot drier. well close to hurricane-free. while I agree it'd be drier, I doubt it'd be Baja California-like; it'd have 2 warm seas + peninsula geography would encourage convection as storms would still form in the middle of Florida. Baja California itself has peninsula geography and it's still very dry. Though it's not as wide as Florida. We'd probably still definitely be a semi-arid climate, especially with the low latitude and high evaporation rates.
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Post by grega94 on Dec 18, 2017 16:42:00 GMT -5
well close to hurricane-free. while I agree it'd be drier, I doubt it'd be Baja California-like; it'd have 2 warm seas + peninsula geography would encourage convection as storms would still form in the middle of Florida. Baja California itself has peninsula geography and it's still very dry. Though it's not as wide as Florida. We'd probably still definitely be a semi-arid climate, especially with the low latitude and high evaporation rates. and the low elevation would make it also drier, how would the water table even work in Florida, particularly in the south around the everglades.
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Post by deneb78 on Dec 18, 2017 19:11:55 GMT -5
Canada would end up having more favourable climates than they do now. Nova Scotia would be similar to the Med coast of France
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Post by grega94 on Dec 18, 2017 19:36:03 GMT -5
Canada would end up having more favourable climates than they do now. Nova Scotia would be similar to the Med coast of France nova scotia isn't on an inland sea, so it would be more like the Atlantic coast, still miles better then what it is now, but still kinda gloomy
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Post by rpvan on Dec 18, 2017 19:37:03 GMT -5
Canada would end up having more favourable climates than they do now. Nova Scotia would be similar to the Med coast of France Our area would likely be much colder during winter. Conversely, summers would probably end up warmer and more humid.
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