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Post by Ethereal on Mar 20, 2022 2:50:17 GMT -5
I believe that Brunswick is the closest climate in the US to Sydney, even though it's still far off (considering it's persistently muggy, long summers). Sydney's sunshine hours are around 2600. Since Brunswick is close to Jacksonville, its sunshine hours will be around 2800 (or maybe 2700 by the standard measuring system as US sun hours are somewhat overstated).
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Post by desiccatedi85 on Mar 20, 2022 9:26:24 GMT -5
Sydney for having drier summers.
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Post by jetshnl on Mar 20, 2022 13:35:44 GMT -5
Sydney easily.
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Post by Steelernation on Mar 20, 2022 13:58:52 GMT -5
Brunswick. Summer is gross but the more storms, variability, cooler winters and chance of snow outweigh that.
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Post by tij on Mar 20, 2022 14:55:02 GMT -5
Sydney for having significantly more comfortable and pleasant summers, and for being able to grow subtropical plants with those winters.
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Post by Beercules on Mar 20, 2022 15:14:18 GMT -5
Brunswick for much better summers.
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Post by AJ1013 on Mar 20, 2022 15:50:24 GMT -5
Brunswick for better winters and more thunderstorms/variety
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Post by melonside421 on Mar 22, 2022 12:36:15 GMT -5
Sydney being much milder overall, so Sydney it is. Brunswick has its merits, but way too long of summer heat.
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Post by ๐๐ฟMรถrรถn๐๐ฟ on Mar 24, 2022 15:31:08 GMT -5
Brunswick by a hair.
I do prefer Shitney's summer temps but it's just a bit boring of a climate.
Brunswick is decently wet in summer so that is a plus (with those temps).
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Post by alex992 on Mar 24, 2022 16:10:38 GMT -5
Sydney for having significantly more comfortable and pleasant summers, and for being able to grow subtropical plants with those winters.Ummmmmm....Brunswick can grow plenty of subtropical plants. I choose Brunswick. More interesting climate overall.
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Post by greysrigging on Mar 24, 2022 16:23:08 GMT -5
Sydney for having significantly more comfortable and pleasant summers, and for being able to grow subtropical plants with those winters.Ummmmmm....Brunswick can grow plenty of subtropical plants. I choose Brunswick. More interesting climate overall. Perhaps its a reference to the odd killing frosts that impacts the Brunswick area....something that does not happen in Sydney unless 40 klm inland. Sydney can grow a huge variety of subtropical plants without fear of hard frost.
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Post by alex992 on Mar 24, 2022 16:36:44 GMT -5
Ummmmmm....Brunswick can grow plenty of subtropical plants. I choose Brunswick. More interesting climate overall. Perhaps its a reference to the odd killing frosts that impacts the Brunswick area....something that does not happen in Sydney unless 40 klm inland. Sydney can grow a huge variety of subtropical plants without fear of hard frost. True, but those are very rare in Brunswick. I guess it depends on what you consider a "killing frost". An average year drops to 25 F (-3.9 C) there, lots of subtropical plants can handle that with no issues, especially if it's just once a year.
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Post by greysrigging on Mar 24, 2022 16:44:33 GMT -5
Perhaps its a reference to the odd killing frosts that impacts the Brunswick area....something that does not happen in Sydney unless 40 klm inland. Sydney can grow a huge variety of subtropical plants without fear of hard frost. True, but those are very rare in Brunswick. I guess it depends on what you consider a "killing frost". An average year drops to 25 F (-3.9 C) there, lots of subtropical plants can handle that with no issues, especially if it's just once a year. A single -3.9c in the northern and eastern suburbs of Sydney there would be flora carnage. I guess the subjective term 'subtropical' can be applied to climate as well as to plants.......
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Post by Yahya Sinwar on Mar 25, 2022 10:34:28 GMT -5
Brunswick for being more tropical
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Post by greysrigging on Mar 25, 2022 15:37:03 GMT -5
Brunswick for being more tropical More tropical ? ......Mmmmm Ok......
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Post by Yahya Sinwar on Mar 26, 2022 7:46:12 GMT -5
Brunswick for being more tropical More tropical ? ......Mmmmm Ok...... Yes more . Sydney summers are practically spring like in Brunswick . Day after day in the 70s with rain ? Lol. Sydney is a comfortable oceanic climate . Also Brunswick average low is 2 degrees warmer than Sydney .
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Post by firebird1988 on Mar 26, 2022 7:56:32 GMT -5
Sydney for sure, Deep South summer's blow, 70s dewpoints and rains almost every day, fuck that
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Post by Ethereal on Mar 27, 2022 1:04:31 GMT -5
More tropical ? ......Mmmmm Ok...... Yes more . Sydney summers are practically spring like in Brunswick . Day after day in the 70s with rain ? Lol. Sydney is a comfortable oceanic climate . Also Brunswick average low is 2 degrees warmer than Sydney . That happens during La Nina years (like now), between February and March. It really depends on the summer. Sydney's climate changes every 4-5 years, sort of like a cycle. Lol. The summers from 2014 to 2020 were above average and now they're a bit on the cool side due to La Nina. But as you know, the western/inland suburbs are far hotter. Sydney is not comfortable at all (if you mean the summer). We have humid summers, although not to the Deep South level. The CBD is even more muggier than the western/inland suburbs due to its proximity to the warm sea. Summer nights, even in these moist La Nina years, can be sticky. Trust me. Melbourne is more comfortable in the summer, despite its 40C days thrown in (but hey, that's dry heat).
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Post by Benfxmth on Mar 30, 2022 8:43:09 GMT -5
Brunswick
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Post by CRISPR on Feb 23, 2024 4:38:16 GMT -5
Sydney easily.
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