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Post by greysrigging on May 29, 2022 20:46:39 GMT -5
Four very different climates !! Mitchell, SD Climate Mitchell has a humid continental climate, the Upper Midwest, with cold winters and warm sometimes humid summers. Mitchell is located in Tornado Alley, so thunderstorms, often spawning tornadoes, can be expected. Mitchell, QLD Climate Mitchell has a humid subtropical climate with hot summers and cold winters by Queensland standards. On 15 August 1979 Mitchell recorded a minimum temperature of −9.4 °C (15.1 °F), which is the third coldest temperature ever recorded in the state. Mitchell has the largest overall temperature range recorded in Australia (56.2°C, -9.4°C to 46.8°C). The town gets an average of 157.5 clear days annually. Mount Mitchell, NC Climate The summit area of Mount Mitchell is marked by a warm-summer humid continental climate (Köppen Dfb), with mild summers and long, moderately cold winters, being more similar to southeastern Canada than the southeastern U.S. Mitchell Plateau, WA Climate Mitchell River National Park has a tropical savanna climate (Aw) with warm temperatures present year round. The wet season typically runs from November through March and is very rainy. The following climate data is for Mitchell Plateau.
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Post by Ethereal on May 29, 2022 21:03:43 GMT -5
Mitchel QLD for being not as pervasively hot as the WA one and not as cold as the midwest US one.
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Post by melonside421 on May 29, 2022 21:57:07 GMT -5
Doesn't it seem dumb to rate a climate in which you can't live in, so the NC one is automatically disqualified. I am tied in between the SD one and the QLD one, both are equally good imo, but the QLD one is more naturally possible to grow many things, so maybe that's the one? But I also like more distinct seasons and snow too, so idk for sure. Tough one tbh.
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Post by greysrigging on May 30, 2022 0:23:17 GMT -5
Doesn't it seem dumb to rate a climate in which you can't live in, so the NC one is automatically disqualified. I am tied in between the SD one and the QLD one, both are equally good imo, but the QLD one is more naturally possible to grow many things, so maybe that's the one? But I also like more distinct seasons and snow too, so idk for sure. Tough one tbh. Ahh, the question is not about whether you can live there ( can't live at Mitchell Plateau either, its part of a National Park ) The question is 'best climate ?'. Cant see any ambiguity here at all....
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Post by Steelernation on May 30, 2022 0:30:26 GMT -5
South Dakota
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Post by Cheeseman on May 30, 2022 6:30:57 GMT -5
Mitchell, QLD
The two Aussie ones are easily the two best - and I think this one wins for not having as extreme of a washout/hyper-arid pattern, even despite the colder winters.
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on May 30, 2022 7:35:34 GMT -5
NC
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Post by Deleted on May 30, 2022 17:25:22 GMT -5
For me, the QLD one wins, as even though the differences between summer and winter are greater than ideal, and that the amount of precipitation is too low, it isn't dominated by heat or cold.
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Post by Benfxmth on May 30, 2022 17:26:22 GMT -5
Mitchell, QLD
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Post by desiccatedi85 on May 30, 2022 19:23:59 GMT -5
Mitchell, Queensland. Not all that amazing but it's the only subtropical one of the bunch.
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Post by Shaheen Hassan on May 31, 2022 5:16:07 GMT -5
Mitchell Plateau, Western Australia.
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Post by chesternz on Jun 1, 2022 4:24:04 GMT -5
WA. Great climate, like Darwin but with cooler nights.
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Post by jetshnl on Jun 1, 2022 12:18:26 GMT -5
WA climate.
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Post by CRISPR on Feb 17, 2024 21:58:35 GMT -5
Queensland, a decent C+ climate.
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