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Post by Benfxmth on Jun 22, 2022 14:34:21 GMT -5
An inland standards vs. maritime standards climate battle. Which one do you prefer? Would you take the warmer lows for cooler highs, or vice versa?
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Post by Cheeseman on Jun 22, 2022 16:52:49 GMT -5
Fayetteville
Substantially more interesting. The oceanic moderation makes Cape Hatteras's summer mean maxima and record highs almost laughably pathetic for the latitude.
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Post by melonside421 on Jun 22, 2022 18:09:21 GMT -5
Cape Hatteras
Fayetteville is interesting in theory, but in practice, it is rather bad for my personal interests. However, average lows in July and August are fairly warm and possibly muggy, but not June as much.
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Post by alex992 on Jun 22, 2022 18:42:02 GMT -5
Fayetteville, more interesting. Both climates aren't good though.
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Post by desiccatedi85 on Jun 22, 2022 20:56:40 GMT -5
Fayetteville easily, for having less summer rain and lacking seasonal lag.
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Post by firebird1988 on Jun 23, 2022 0:05:10 GMT -5
Can't choose, Cape Hatteras is warmer in winter, but wetter. And even though Fayetteville is hotter in summer, it's just as humid as Cape Hatteras since both are on the Coastal Plain
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Jun 23, 2022 8:59:29 GMT -5
Cape Hatteras for better summers.
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Post by Benfxmth on Jun 23, 2022 9:09:15 GMT -5
Can't choose, Cape Hatteras is warmer in winter, but wetter. And even though Fayetteville is hotter in summer, it's just as humid as Cape Hatteras since both are on the Coastal Plain, what? A barrier island surrounded by water will almost always have higher mean dew points, than a location several tens of miles inland, even though the effect isn't that great due to plant transpiration. Look at:
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Post by firebird1988 on Jun 23, 2022 9:47:48 GMT -5
Can't choose, Cape Hatteras is warmer in winter, but wetter. And even though Fayetteville is hotter in summer, it's just as humid as Cape Hatteras since both are on the Coastal Plain, what? A barrier island surrounded by water will almost always have higher mean dew points, than a location several tens of miles inland, even though the effect isn't that great due to plant transpiration. Look at: Still both have low 70s dews, that difference is negligible, especially once dews are over 65°F
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Post by Steelernation on Jun 23, 2022 23:38:48 GMT -5
Hatteras—cooler for longer and probably more storms
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Post by Benfxmth on Jun 25, 2022 16:36:04 GMT -5
, what? A barrier island surrounded by water will almost always have higher mean dew points, than a location several tens of miles inland, even though the effect isn't that great due to plant transpiration. Look at: Still both have low 70s dews, that difference is negligible, especially once dews are over 65°F It's easier to get dry heat in Fayetteville than Cape Hatteras due to its inland location, though.
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Post by ilmc90 on Jun 25, 2022 19:57:35 GMT -5
Cape Hatteras for the slightly cooler summers and higher rainfall. More interesting in general.
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Post by Yahya Sinwar on Jun 26, 2022 16:18:18 GMT -5
Hatteras for the canes and the isolation
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Post by CRISPR on Feb 17, 2024 21:30:05 GMT -5
I guess Fayetteville- cooler lows and lower dews
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