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Post by Met.Data on May 9, 2021 11:44:23 GMT -5
LOL really? Thought he'd be the first to go on about how "failed erection" its summers are. He said this about the summer of 2016 as well, which was a complete failure until mid-July. Maybe he was being sarcastic? Or talking about that one 33°C day in August. Not long enough to justify AC I'd think for most though.
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Post by Deleted on May 9, 2021 11:48:01 GMT -5
He said this about the summer of 2016 as well, which was a complete failure until mid-July. Maybe he was being sarcastic? Or talking about that one 33°C day in August. Not long enough to justify AC I'd think for most though. That summer only had 5 days of 30c+, so pretty close to normal. They were spread over a 2 month period as well, so it's not like you'd need the AC for a solid week.
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Post by Met.Data on May 9, 2021 11:50:16 GMT -5
Maybe he was being sarcastic? Or talking about that one 33°C day in August. Not long enough to justify AC I'd think for most though. That summer only had 5 days of 30c+, so pretty close to normal. They were spread over a 2 month period as well, so it's not like you'd need the AC for a solid week. I was in London in August 2016 (briefly, on my way to France) . Some buildings in the centre are designed to keep the cold out and do retain heat something awful, as the hotel was stifling. When I went to France, the place I stayed at had temps of 36°C for a week but it was actually cooler inside than the hotel in London. So in some types of buildings I can see AC being required in London.
Indoor climate vs. outdoor can be two separate issues in a location depending on building design.
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Post by knot on May 9, 2021 16:11:15 GMT -5
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Post by Donar on May 12, 2021 10:09:18 GMT -5
Yesterday evening I went for a walk when it was 14 °C and very light drizzle. I actually liked that weather very much.
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Post by tommyFL on May 12, 2021 12:24:55 GMT -5
Tracks of all hurricanes (category 1 through 5) in South Florida, dating back to the 1850s. Lower frequency from Fort Lauderdale to West Palm Beach, with peaks south of Miami and around Stuart. Link
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Post by tommyFL on May 12, 2021 13:14:54 GMT -5
Hurricane track densities for various east coast Florida counties, from south to north.
Number of cat 1-5 hurricane tracks by county (1850-present):
Monroe (Keys and some of the Everglades): 32 (0.009/sq mi) Miami-Dade: 19 (0.008/sq mi) Broward: 14 (0.011/sq mi) Palm Beach: 15 (0.006/sq mi) Martin: 18 (0.024/sq mi) St. Lucie: 11 (0.016/sq mi) Indian River: 7 (0.011/sq mi) Brevard: 9 (0.006/sq mi) Volusia: 7 (0.005/sq mi) Flagler: 6 (0.011/sq mi) St. Johns: 6 (0.007/sq mi) Duval: 3 (0.003/sq mi) Nassau: 1 (0.001/sq mi)
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Post by Ariete on May 16, 2021 6:48:07 GMT -5
Yup, leafing is late.
Helsinki 8 May 2020:
8 May 2021:
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Post by knot on May 21, 2021 3:59:40 GMT -5
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Post by nei on May 21, 2021 11:16:17 GMT -5
nice graph that shows the coastal effect keeps Boston chilly in spring
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Post by Met.Data on May 26, 2021 10:40:06 GMT -5
Was thinking about the typical pattern of temperatures in a northern English summer. Basically weeks and weeks of cloud and rain, then 2-3 sudden warm days.
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Post by Deleted on May 26, 2021 11:00:56 GMT -5
Was thinking about the typical pattern of temperatures in a northern English summer. Basically weeks and weeks of cloud and rain, then 2-3 sudden warm days. I've never ever seen a July like that in my life! Hopefully I never will too.
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Post by Met.Data on May 26, 2021 11:04:30 GMT -5
Was thinking about the typical pattern of temperatures in a northern English summer. Basically weeks and weeks of cloud and rain, then 2-3 sudden warm days. I've never ever seen a July like that in my life! Hopefully I never will too. That's July 2021 - I looked into the future.
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Post by Deleted on May 26, 2021 11:07:33 GMT -5
I've never ever seen a July like that in my life! Hopefully I never will too. That's July 2021 - I looked into the future. Don't say things like that. We don't need that negativity after the spring we've had.
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Post by Met.Data on May 26, 2021 11:08:44 GMT -5
That's July 2021 - I looked into the future. Don't say things like that. We don't need that negativity after the spring we've had. It's a joke.
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Post by Ariete on May 26, 2021 11:48:22 GMT -5
Was thinking about the typical pattern of temperatures in a northern English summer. Basically weeks and weeks of cloud and rain, then 2-3 sudden warm days.
That's Castlederp or Derry.
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Post by Met.Data on May 26, 2021 11:51:45 GMT -5
Was thinking about the typical pattern of temperatures in a northern English summer. Basically weeks and weeks of cloud and rain, then 2-3 sudden warm days.
That's Castlederp or Derry.
Or a bad Fuxton July. Of course it's a humourous exaggeration, although the pattern of many below average days with sudden spikes of warmth tends to be common in summer regardless of the typical mean temps that may happen.
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Post by jetshnl on May 26, 2021 14:06:37 GMT -5
Was thinking about the typical pattern of temperatures in a northern English summer. Basically weeks and weeks of cloud and rain, then 2-3 sudden warm days. That’s quite rainy as well. Did that occur in London to elsewhere in Britain?
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Post by Met.Data on May 26, 2021 14:11:09 GMT -5
Was thinking about the typical pattern of temperatures in a northern English summer. Basically weeks and weeks of cloud and rain, then 2-3 sudden warm days. That’s quite rainy as well. Did that occur in London to elsewhere in Britain? That was like a worse-case scenario example. It would be possible in the many higher parts of northern England. Would be a big record if that happened in London though!
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Post by Deleted on May 26, 2021 14:39:37 GMT -5
That’s quite rainy as well. Did that occur in London to elsewhere in Britain? That was like a worse-case scenario example. It would be possible in the many higher parts of northern England. Would be a big record if that happened in London though! The coldest summer month on record in London was June 1972, which was actually colder than the month above!
Avg max: 17.5c Avg min: 9.0c Rainfall: 15.4mm Sunshine: 166.3 hours
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