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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Dec 7, 2020 21:25:48 GMT -5
@josecanyousee97
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Post by Deleted on Dec 7, 2020 21:29:26 GMT -5
🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 holy crap those winters are snowy...the 85'F day in August also contradicts the image a lot of people around here have of Alaska even though I know that's probably about normal for them! Not the kind of climate I'd like to live in but it's definitely interesting.
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Post by jgtheone on Dec 8, 2020 8:09:02 GMT -5
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Post by Cadeau on Dec 8, 2020 13:24:45 GMT -5
Reykjavík, Iceland November 2020 - Copenhagen, Denmark November 2020 - Montréal, Québec, Canada November 2020 - San Francisco, CA, United States November 2020 - Honolulu, HI, United States November 2020
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Post by Deleted on Dec 8, 2020 13:40:25 GMT -5
🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 LOL, Reykjavik had their last 70'F high in June this year. What a sad climate. Meanwhile San Francisco didn't go above 72'F the entire month of July. And yet the general perception, at least around here, is that SF has a pleasant subtropical climate. Those summers would make me want to kill myself!
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Post by Speagles84 on Dec 8, 2020 14:48:18 GMT -5
@josecanyousee97 FFS did they have any time without snow on the ground this year? When I visited Skagway in September 2018, the snow line was probably 2000'
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Dec 8, 2020 14:53:43 GMT -5
@josecanyousee97 FFS did they have any time without snow on the ground this year? When I visited Skagway in September 2018, the snow line was probably 2000' Well, not much time without snow on ground but that is normal. September would be the start of snow on the mountains yeah. Here is April. Huge snow depth at the beginning but it melts rapidly:
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Post by Speagles84 on Dec 8, 2020 14:55:17 GMT -5
FFS did they have any time without snow on the ground this year? When I visited Skagway in September 2018, the snow line was probably 2000' Well, not much time without snow on ground but that is normal. September would be the start of snow on the mountains yeah. Here is April. Huge snow depth at the beginning but it melts rapidly: It was more rhetorical, but seeing 77" of snow in one month followed by 54" followed by 16", makes you think even early april would have a snow depth higher than 32".
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Post by ral31 on Dec 9, 2020 20:59:55 GMT -5
Waited a while before posting because NWS Lake Charles is showing missing data for Nov 26. Saw that the NCDC graph has data for that date so went ahead and determined averages myself. Also the lowest temp of the month was likely lower than 36F; it may have approached freezing before midnight of Nov 30 but the station was off-line at the time. High temps 2.8F above normal; low temps 0.1F below normal. Precip 1.26" below normal. Was dry much of the month, but had some rounds of heavy rainfall around Thanksgiving. Winter-like temps arrived at the end of the month. Lowest max: 50F Highest min: 63F 0 days with thunder (can't remember last time we had a thunderless month). Highest dewpoint: 70F Average dewpoint: 50F Lowest dewpoint: 24F
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Post by MET on Dec 10, 2020 9:35:55 GMT -5
Everyone thinks Buxton has the worst climate in England but there's a village four miles to the southwest called Flash, located at 490 meters (Buxton is 300 meters). There's no rain/sun data but the temps this year are as follows (compare to Buxton earlier in the thread).
Despite being nearly 200 meters higher, it appears to get only slightly cooler nights and is barely capable of getting colder than lower areas at night, in fact is often milder on the coldest nights. It's the maximum temperatures that appear to be suppressed. It also shows what a very mild winter we had going into this year as well as those numbers would be above average for Buxton.
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Post by Cadeau on Jan 21, 2021 9:16:48 GMT -5
▼ <Monthly Climate Anomaly over Japan>
▼ <Time Series of Temperature Anomaly>
▼ <Time Series of 10days Precipitation Amount Ratio and Sunshine Duration Ratio>
▼ <10-day Mean Sea Level Pressure>
▼ <10-day Mean 850hPa Temperature>
▼ <10-day Mean 500hPa GeoPotential Height>
▼ <10-day Mean Outgoing Longwave Radiation>
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