|
Post by Benfxmth on Jul 27, 2023 11:11:31 GMT -5
C+. Shitty cold dry nights in summer and probably fuck-all thunderstorms, but summer highs and record highs are OK.
|
|
|
Post by omegaraptor on Jul 27, 2023 12:13:31 GMT -5
B-, good temps most of the year but winters are too mild/stable and not nearly snowy enough
|
|
|
Post by Speagles84 on Jul 27, 2023 12:28:11 GMT -5
It's a no from me, D
|
|
|
Post by desiccatedi85 on Jul 27, 2023 15:23:06 GMT -5
A-, good temps, especially the highs, but it needs more rainfall even though the Mediterranean pattern is nice.
|
|
|
Post by firebird1988 on Aug 3, 2023 14:58:26 GMT -5
D+ winter too cool
|
|
|
Post by Benfxmth on Aug 3, 2023 14:59:49 GMT -5
I thought it would be a straight F in your books
|
|
|
Post by firebird1988 on Aug 3, 2023 15:01:06 GMT -5
I thought it would be a straight F in your books Doesn't have the severe cold snaps that the east does, it's in a higher hardiness zone than Atlanta or Dallas
|
|
|
Post by Benfxmth on Aug 3, 2023 15:03:25 GMT -5
I thought it would be a straight F in your books Doesn't have the severe cold snaps that the east does, it's in a higher hardiness zone than Atlanta or Dallas Don't need a map Just go by mean minimum annaul high temp 50°F+=B to A 45°F to 49°F=C 44°F or less=F Didn't include a D, using the college grading system here So Phoenix and Riverside in the B to A category, I guess that would put Miami, Orlando and Tampa there as well (only doing lower 48). Brownsville, TX barely gets a C (mean minimum annual high temp is 45°F) Jacksonville and colder get an F (mean minimum annual high temp in Jacksonville is 44°F). Las Vegas also just gets an F (also has a mean minimum annual high temp of 44°F) (Annual mean minimum high for 1991-2020 is 34°F)
|
|
|
Post by firebird1988 on Aug 3, 2023 16:02:49 GMT -5
Doesn't have the severe cold snaps that the east does, it's in a higher hardiness zone than Atlanta or Dallas Don't need a map Just go by mean minimum annaul high temp 50°F+=B to A 45°F to 49°F=C 44°F or less=F Didn't include a D, using the college grading system here So Phoenix and Riverside in the B to A category, I guess that would put Miami, Orlando and Tampa there as well (only doing lower 48). Brownsville, TX barely gets a C (mean minimum annual high temp is 45°F) Jacksonville and colder get an F (mean minimum annual high temp in Jacksonville is 44°F). Las Vegas also just gets an F (also has a mean minimum annual high temp of 44°F) (Annual mean minimum high for 1991-2020 is 34°F) That's still higher than Atlanta (mean minimum high 32°F) or Dallas mean minimum high 30°F)
|
|
|
Post by srfoskey on Aug 11, 2023 19:03:12 GMT -5
C
Too dry, especially in the warm season. Summer days and winter days and nights are too warm also.
|
|
|
Post by greysrigging on Aug 12, 2023 4:10:51 GMT -5
There's a lot worse out there in WWF Land... C+
|
|
|
Post by cawfeefan on Aug 13, 2023 8:48:16 GMT -5
B-, summers a bit too hot and dry for my liking and the autumn drop is a bit abrupt compared to spring
|
|
|
Post by Kaleetan on Sept 1, 2023 12:50:45 GMT -5
C+. Summer lows suck, and there's not enough rain, but it's definitely better than some places in the US
|
|
|
Post by CRISPR on Jan 26, 2024 15:08:48 GMT -5
C-, good warm-half year temps and sunshine, but the drought is a little excessive. Also too much of a biased summer distribution and diurnals (as unfortunate prevalent across sunny meds)
|
|