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Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Nov 22, 2017 18:21:56 GMT -5
Nice, cool Thanksgiving in our forecast tomorrow. Quite happy about the forecast. IDK. If Thanksgiving were too warm, it wouldn't feel quite right.
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Post by Ariete on Nov 24, 2017 7:53:10 GMT -5
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Post by Babu on Nov 24, 2017 8:58:13 GMT -5
Infoclimat is pretty bad for records, but obviously, when there's a random 40'C in March you can disregard that
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Post by alex992 on Nov 24, 2017 16:15:59 GMT -5
If Helsinki ever reached 30 C in March, I'd eat my own shit.
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Post by Babu on Nov 28, 2017 12:59:26 GMT -5
What's the closest to a mediterranean climate in thr Nordics?(precipitation-wise) there are lots of places in Sweden and Finland with less than 30 mm in April, and they can then have like 70-80mm in October. Is there any place that actually manages the classification? If not, what place comes closest ratiowise. There are probably places that have 3x the amount in October as in April-Sep, but that lacks the 30 mm criterion. Find them
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Post by Babu on Nov 28, 2017 13:20:26 GMT -5
Vaasa has 25/64 for a 2.56 ratio, and Kouvola 29/73 for a 2.52 ratio. That's the best I can find quickly. Will search more later
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Post by Nidaros on Nov 28, 2017 14:09:24 GMT -5
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 28, 2017 14:15:23 GMT -5
What's the closest to a mediterranean climate in thr Nordics?(precipitation-wise) there are lots of places in Sweden and Finland with less than 30 mm in April, and they can then have like 70-80mm in October. Is there any place that actually manages the classification? If not, what place comes closest ratiowise. There are probably places that have 3x the amount in October as in April-Sep, but that lacks the 30 mm criterion. Find them Røst? Seems like I was right
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Post by Babu on Nov 28, 2017 14:55:53 GMT -5
What's the closest to a mediterranean climate in thr Nordics?(precipitation-wise) there are lots of places in Sweden and Finland with less than 30 mm in April, and they can then have like 70-80mm in October. Is there any place that actually manages the classification? If not, what place comes closest ratiowise. There are probably places that have 3x the amount in October as in April-Sep, but that lacks the 30 mm criterion. Find them Røst? Seems like I was right Where'd you get Røst stats from?
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 28, 2017 15:13:45 GMT -5
Météo Climat I sourced it from there onto Wikipedia. Röst, Norway redirects you there too thanks to me
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Post by Ariete on Nov 28, 2017 15:14:27 GMT -5
What's the closest to a mediterranean climate in thr Nordics?(precipitation-wise) there are lots of places in Sweden and Finland with less than 30 mm in April, and they can then have like 70-80mm in October. Is there any place that actually manages the classification? If not, what place comes closest ratiowise. There are probably places that have 3x the amount in October as in April-Sep, but that lacks the 30 mm criterion. Find them The data I have for Finland no station is even close to being mediterranean. Oulu has an avg precipitation of 20 mm in April and 71 mm in July, but that obviously doesn't count as anything.
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Post by Babu on Nov 28, 2017 16:33:30 GMT -5
What's the closest to a mediterranean climate in thr Nordics?(precipitation-wise) there are lots of places in Sweden and Finland with less than 30 mm in April, and they can then have like 70-80mm in October. Is there any place that actually manages the classification? If not, what place comes closest ratiowise. There are probably places that have 3x the amount in October as in April-Sep, but that lacks the 30 mm criterion. Find them The data I have for Finland no station is even close to being mediterranean. Oulu has an avg precipitation of 20 mm in April and 71 mm in July, but that obviously doesn't count as anything. 2.56 is pretty close to 3, Idk
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Post by alex992 on Nov 28, 2017 20:59:02 GMT -5
Wouldn't a Mediterranean pattern suggest a wet winter and a dry summer? Or are you guys doing a 3:1 ratio for any season? I know some climates on the Mediterranean are wettest in October/November though.
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Post by Babu on Nov 29, 2017 2:18:33 GMT -5
Wouldn't a Mediterranean pattern suggest a wet winter and a dry summer? Or are you guys doing a 3:1 ratio for any season? I know some climates on the Mediterranean are wettest in October/November though. April is a high sun month, and October a low-sun month
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Post by Babu on Nov 29, 2017 11:49:02 GMT -5
Apparently this place makes it, however, as the July mean is 9.8'C, it barely nisses out on a middle S letter boke. With a 5 year later time period perhaps, but that might have more than 30mm of rain. Boke
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Post by alex992 on Nov 29, 2017 12:36:39 GMT -5
Wouldn't a Mediterranean pattern suggest a wet winter and a dry summer? Or are you guys doing a 3:1 ratio for any season? I know some climates on the Mediterranean are wettest in October/November though. April is a high sun month, and October a low-sun month I know that. But isn't Mediterranean more summer vs. winter instead of high sun vs. low sun? I know lots of Mediterranean climates in California are a good deal wetter, stormier and cooler in spring vs. autumn. I know a lot of places on the Mediterranean are wettest in October/November but in turn are driest in July and August. I don't think April being the driest month would suggest a Mediterranean pattern at all.
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Post by Babu on Nov 29, 2017 12:55:24 GMT -5
April is a high sun month, and October a low-sun month I know that. But isn't Mediterranean more summer vs. winter instead of high sun vs. low sun? I know lots of Mediterranean climates in California are a good deal wetter, stormier and cooler in spring vs. autumn. I know a lot of places on the Mediterranean are wettest in October/November but in turn are driest in July and August. I don't think April being the driest month would suggest a Mediterranean pattern at all. The thing isn't to have a mediterranean pattern, it's earning the S letter. It's ironic because these nordic climates are actually more W type, with dry winters and wet summers, but with enough seasonal lag to (almost) make April and October get the 3x ratio needed for being "mediterranean"
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Post by alex992 on Nov 29, 2017 13:04:45 GMT -5
I know that. But isn't Mediterranean more summer vs. winter instead of high sun vs. low sun? I know lots of Mediterranean climates in California are a good deal wetter, stormier and cooler in spring vs. autumn. I know a lot of places on the Mediterranean are wettest in October/November but in turn are driest in July and August. I don't think April being the driest month would suggest a Mediterranean pattern at all. The thing isn't to have a mediterranean pattern, it's earning the S letter. It's ironic because these nordic climates are actually more W type, with dry winters and wet summers, but with enough seasonal lag to (almost) make April and October get the 3x ratio needed for being "mediterranean" Ah ok, that makes more sense! I must've misunderstood what you wrote. Funny, even down here, October and April are a 2:1 ratio. 161 mm on average in October vs. 79 mm on average in April. April is our sunniest month by %.
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Post by Nidaros on Nov 29, 2017 13:29:49 GMT -5
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Post by Nidaros on Nov 29, 2017 14:02:04 GMT -5
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