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Post by Lommaren on Oct 28, 2017 18:07:37 GMT -5
Not sure what you mean by closing in on Dfc, as Tromsø (100 m) just falls into the Dfc cat. Cfc. Sorry, I was busy while writing
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Post by sari on Oct 28, 2017 18:41:58 GMT -5
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Post by Lommaren on Oct 28, 2017 18:49:20 GMT -5
Check the Eureka 1981 post I did earlier today to see that normal rules don't apply to that place But yeah, that looked like a scorcher! The summer when I was seven by contrast, didn't rise above 25C all summer and averaged 19C, jealous?
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Post by jgtheone on Oct 28, 2017 22:48:52 GMT -5
Beerman's favourite Melbourne year. (that January and September though ) A breakdown of the maximum temperatures so that you can see where it all went so wrong, which is pretty much that first half of January. The city had an avg high of 22.4°C, which was the coldest on record there too, and this is from 158 years of data. So HOPEFULLY this never happens again. Edit: This year recorded the coldest January, September and November average maximums.
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Post by Lommaren on Oct 31, 2017 4:57:31 GMT -5
So finally got around to do Topeka 2006 Quite a stunner indeed that year there! Hope you were well-shielded from that heat: that's something seven year old kids don't have to think about here, that's for sure The summer when I was seven didn't rise to 26C once
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Post by Lommaren on Oct 31, 2017 5:34:47 GMT -5
Bodø in 2008: Very, very mild: a 5.6C yearly mean for a place above the polar circle Oh and I've now also learned the code for ø on a Swedish keyboard "alt button + 0248" brilliant Oh and welcome to the Mediterranean 67N paradise, are you up for it ABNW?
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Post by Hiromant on Oct 31, 2017 6:35:36 GMT -5
Bodø in 2008: Very, very mild: a 5.6C yearly mean for a place above the polar circle Oh and I've now also learned the code for ø on a Swedish keyboard "alt button + 0248" brilliant Oh and welcome to the Mediterranean 67N paradise, are you up for it ABNW? Funny coincidence: the code for ° is alt+248. Arctic coastal Norway is ridiculous though, cold lovers there must feel so ripped off.
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Post by Nidaros on Oct 31, 2017 15:05:32 GMT -5
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 1, 2017 4:35:44 GMT -5
Stockholm 1990: The mildest winter ever there that February 1990 insanely mild month. Also a crummer-ish July but a brief recovery in August.
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 1, 2017 5:19:51 GMT -5
Riksgränsen's station at Katterjåkk in 2014: the northernmost ski resort that I know of (six miles NE of the innermost fiord of Narvik and about 15 miles from Narvik proper by air) had a very unique year in every aspect. January was the driest ever and unusually cold, but then July saw record warmth and record sunshine for an otherwise gloomy place. The in turn propelled the year into the sunniest ever at Katterjåkk
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 1, 2017 8:35:25 GMT -5
Røst 2010: rather remarkable considering how cold that winter was in Scandinavia that January there was 0.1C colder than its... normal Ultimately February showed up some winter at last.
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 2, 2017 5:49:14 GMT -5
Örebro in 2012: the craziest weather year I've experienced in person in terms of sheer unpredictability. One step forward-one step back spring, a proper crummer with a 12C high one day in June, along with a snowageddon in December when I took a run through a 20 cm snow cover that fell within a day through lake-effect snow
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Post by Deleted on Nov 2, 2017 15:50:49 GMT -5
the year when brekke set norways annual precipitation record.
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 2, 2017 15:51:43 GMT -5
Svenska Högarna (The Swedish Stacks) 20 miles east of the Stockholm "riviera" is an isolated island in the Baltic Sea that is uninhabitated and is at times difficult to reach due to the high winds. In 2002 however, it had a 19.2C avg low at 59N in August Probably lower than Utö, Finland that year but still!
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Post by Babu on Nov 2, 2017 16:22:57 GMT -5
Svenska Högarna (The Swedish Heaps) 20 miles east of the Stockholm "riviera" is an isolated island in the Baltic Sea that is uninhabitated and is at times difficult to reach due to the high winds. In 2002 however, it had a 19.2C avg low at 59N in August Probably lower than Utö, Finland that year but still! Not a lot of rain that August, nor April.
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Post by Donar on Nov 2, 2017 16:25:27 GMT -5
Sunniest year ever recorded in Germany:
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Post by Babu on Nov 2, 2017 16:45:22 GMT -5
Sunniest year ever recorded in Germany: Lol, September the sunniest month of the year.
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Post by Ariete on Nov 2, 2017 16:49:35 GMT -5
Svenska Högarna (The Swedish Heaps) 20 miles east of the Stockholm "riviera" is an isolated island in the Baltic Sea that is uninhabitated and is at times difficult to reach due to the high winds. In 2002 however, it had a 19.2C avg low at 59N in August Probably lower than Utö, Finland that year but still! Utö had the same 19.2C low in Aug 2002.
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 2, 2017 17:08:13 GMT -5
Not a lot of rain that August, nor April. Nope! The SE and Scania have this thing going for them to go full San Francisco during hot summers at times... Besides, I can't find open data for Umeå University for 2014
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Post by jgtheone on Nov 2, 2017 17:41:46 GMT -5
Sunniest year ever recorded in Germany: why is it so cold? is it elevated somewhat?
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