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Post by grega94 on Nov 1, 2017 13:05:04 GMT -5
why would Melbourne be considered "" looks completely fine just looking at the data, it does seem to get a huge shifts in temp range so I guess it's an unstable climate, never been there so can't really say.
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Post by boombo on Nov 1, 2017 13:13:52 GMT -5
Santa Maria for me. Melbourne has more of a sense of a distinct summer and winter at least, they might get some days where you don't know what the season is but in Santa Maria you've just had an October followed by September as your two months with the warmest average highs, and that's just plain
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Post by Mörön on Nov 1, 2017 22:32:50 GMT -5
Melbourne is shit because it can be 45C one day and 16C and windy/rainy the next in midcrummer...but Santa Maria is just bullshit over a longer period of time.
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Post by Beercules on Nov 2, 2017 20:18:38 GMT -5
Santa Maria is the more of the two.
Melbourne's crummers are just Heathrow with a few hot days thrown in.
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Post by jgtheone on Nov 2, 2017 21:57:42 GMT -5
easily santa maria, not even a contest. I've seen some of the weatherboxes
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Post by Lommaren on Nov 3, 2017 9:37:48 GMT -5
Of course Santa Maria for October being the month with the highest max mean temps, which doesn't even make sense! Having said that, both these climates are midgets compared to Eureka
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Post by boombo on Nov 4, 2017 12:51:57 GMT -5
Examples: 2007 has to be your most year in history for somewhere at 35N having July as the month with its coldest absolute max temp even if 2012 runs it close How much experience do you have of other climates? What do these chilly 21C sunny midsummer days with that strong 35N sun feel like, is there a much bigger difference between shade/sun temps than what you get elsewhere?
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Post by boombo on Nov 4, 2017 13:00:09 GMT -5
2007 has to be your most year in history for somewhere at 35N having July as the month with its coldest absolute max temp even if 2012 runs it close How much experience do you have of other climates? What do these chilly 21C sunny midsummer days with that strong 35N sun feel like, is there a much bigger difference between shade/sun temps than what you get elsewhere? Being in the shade can be quite chilly at times during Spring on a cool day. But if it's the sea breeze that's keeping you cool in the summer, if you can shelter yourself from that does it still feel really hot in direct sun even in low 20s C shade temps? I'm struggling to imagine what a 21C day with an 75+ degree sun angle can feel like.
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Post by deneb78 on Nov 8, 2017 12:03:04 GMT -5
Both climates look great compared to where I live but I prefer Santa Maria's climate.
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