Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 26, 2020 9:29:04 GMT -5
Rutherglen is more subtropical. It has milder winters.
Most of the plants growing in Rutherglen will be rotting husks after the first winter in Raleigh.
|
|
|
Post by greysrigging on Dec 26, 2020 17:13:10 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Dec 29, 2020 21:43:40 GMT -5
Raleigh. Winter minima are colder but it's more subtropical in every other way. It has hotter summers with higher humidity, a higher mean temp, summer rainfall peak (albeit not a very pronounced one), and much wetter. Rutherglen is more of a dry temperate climate with subtropical desert influences. This.
|
|
|
Post by FrozenI69 on Dec 30, 2020 21:07:03 GMT -5
Rutherglen is more subtropical. Raleigh gets frozen precipitation every winter. Sometimes significant winter storms that dump several inches of snow in Raleigh and several feet in Boone and Gatlinburg.
|
|
Cevven
Senior Member
Posts: 35
|
Post by Cevven on Jan 20, 2021 21:29:44 GMT -5
Rutherglen is more subtropical. Raleigh gets frozen precipitation every winter. Sometimes significant winter storms that dump several inches of snow in Raleigh and several feet in Boone and Gatlinburg. Yup. Raleigh is technically in the subtropical zone based on latitude but Raleigh doesn't have consistently subtropical weather - it SHOULD but it doesn't because North America's geography and the teleconnections here makes places colder than it needs to be in the winter at lower latitudes.
|
|
|
Post by Cadeau on Jan 29, 2021 11:23:16 GMT -5
I think a majority of subtropical trees favor Rutherglen over Raleigh. However, Raleigh must have a more rushy vibe due to abundant rainfall over a year.
|
|
|
Post by greysrigging on Jan 29, 2021 16:28:34 GMT -5
I think a majority of subtropical trees favor Rutherglen over Raleigh. However, Raleigh must have a more rushy vibe due to abundant rainfall over a year. Trust me.... there ain't no sub tropical trees in Rutherglen.... plenty of grape vines with some notable wineries in the district. Plenty of stone fruit trees, not a lot of mangos or bananas....
|
|
|
Post by gordo on Jan 29, 2021 19:30:48 GMT -5
I'm going with Raleigh mostly due to it being wetter which would make things feel more subtropical like. Otherwise there's not that much difference.
|
|
|
Post by knot on Jan 30, 2021 16:35:17 GMT -5
I'm going with Raleigh mostly due to it being wetter which would make things feel more subtropical like. Otherwise there's not that much difference. You seriously buy into that long-discarded myth of "subtropical = wet"?? As already stated, the Subtropics i.e. Horse Latitudes are actually the driest regions on Earth.
|
|