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Post by grega94 on Oct 28, 2017 16:40:20 GMT -5
So a lot of people claim that Sochi is Russia's best climate (since it's the warmest) but honestly it's a bit too wet for me. And if you go further north it gets drier, however it also gets colder too. So where is the best compromise between being dry and warm. Though if you prefer something else feel free to vote for whatever you want. I'm also including Crimea and Georgia too. From north to south Kerch: 11.3C (52.3F) / 457mm (17.99in) Feodosia: 12.3C (54.1F) / 499mm (19.65in) Anapa: 12.4C (54.3F) / 560mm (22.05in) Novorossiysk: 13.4C (56.1F) / 833.1mm (32.799in) Gelendzhik: 13.2C (55.8F) / 443.7mm (17.469in) Yalta: 13.2C (55.8F) / 613mm (24.13in) Tuapse: 14.0C (57.2F) / 1,333mm (52.48in) Sochi: 14.2C (57.6F) / 1,703mm (67.05in) Alder: 15.6C (60.1F) / N.A Sukhumi: 13.6C (56.45F) / 1,506mm (59.28in) Batumi: 14.2C (57.55F) / 2,392mm (94.17in)
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Post by Steelernation on Oct 28, 2017 18:24:07 GMT -5
Feodosia is the best from the listβB- for me.
Kerch, Anapa, Gelendhzik, and Yalta are all okβC/C+ climates.
The rest suck.
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Post by Lommaren on Oct 28, 2017 18:27:38 GMT -5
Gelendzhik (B-/C+) is the classiest of that bunch
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Post by Cadeau on Oct 28, 2017 21:19:57 GMT -5
Gelendzhik for having the coolest summer averages & distributed precipitation year-round even though it's on the drier end of my preference.
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Post by jgtheone on Oct 28, 2017 22:25:17 GMT -5
Novorossiysk
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Post by Beercules on Oct 28, 2017 22:32:04 GMT -5
Probably Sochi. I call BS on that Adler one, those lows can't be right and there is no legit source.
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Post by grega94 on Oct 30, 2017 14:26:15 GMT -5
I voted for Tuapse, It's the sunniest of the bunch and only slightly colder than Sochi, plus its summer has a noticeable drying tend in summer as opposed to Sochi which stays consistently wet.
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