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Post by Giorbanguly on Aug 24, 2023 8:25:43 GMT -5
Which season has the best vibe in your opinion?
I always liked the autumn vibe. Falling leaves, hoodies, pumpkin spice lattes, Rosh Hashanah, Thanksgiving with your family...plus autumn always felt very social to me, maybe because it's the start of a new semester.
Spring is second best because of Easter, and of course the blooming flowers and cherry blossoms. I also find spring to be a very social time, seems like everyone wants to go out and do stuff while the weather is nice. My birthday is also during spring which doesn't hurt.
I have mixed feelings about the summer vibe. I love Hawaiian shirts and fruity drinks. On the other hand, summer vibe revolves too much around beaches and parties, which aren't really my thing. Also East Asia has the "gloomy rainy vibe" for the latter part of summer, so it's not exactly a fun time.
As for the season with the worst vibe, it's probably winter. Even my temperature preferences aside, winter feels very boring and bland after New Years Day. Also back in the US, February was dominated by Valentine's Day and the Super Bowl discussions, which are probably the two lamest events the entire year.
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Post by tommyFL on Aug 24, 2023 8:49:18 GMT -5
Summer for the lush vegetation and feeling like the air is alive. The most uplifting season.
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Post by Benfxmth on Aug 24, 2023 8:50:45 GMT -5
Summer by far, and not just for the warm/hot temps. Lush vegetation, bright/long days, cold drinks/ice cream are at their most flavorful at that time of year...lol.
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Post by AJ1013 on Aug 24, 2023 9:00:11 GMT -5
Winter. Highest concentration of holidays, best weather.
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Post by Met.Data on Aug 24, 2023 9:41:30 GMT -5
Gotta be autumn.
Undoubtedly one of the best-known first lines in English poetry, “Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness” was written by John Keats on this day nearly 200 years ago in his ode To Autumn.
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Post by desiccatedi85 on Aug 24, 2023 10:21:06 GMT -5
Spring easily. It is the season of growth, lengthening days, and comfort. Optimism is in the air in spring. Baseball season begins and basketball heads to the playoffs. Spring is also 9 months away from the worst season, that is winter.
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Post by alex992 on Aug 24, 2023 13:02:23 GMT -5
Late fall and winter. I love the holidays, cold, snow, and cozy feeling that time of year.
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Post by rozenn on Aug 24, 2023 15:12:50 GMT -5
Summer if I'm in a house, late Autumn/early winter if I'm in an apartment.
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Post by Shaheen Hassan on Aug 24, 2023 15:52:38 GMT -5
Late Autumn.
No +40°C temps, no extreme humidity, no cold gusty winds, and the rainiest time of the year. If the season is wetter than normal the desert can temporarily turn green.
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Post by Steelernation on Aug 24, 2023 19:46:07 GMT -5
Interesting question as it differs from which season is my favorite of which has the best weather. Also depends on location.
December as the Christmas season is just amazing. Lights, trees, decorations, Christmas music, and an overall festive mood. Not much beats a dark evening with light snow falling drinking mulled cider listening to Christmas music in a fully decorated house. And to top it off, every Sunday, you can awake to the NFL on CBS and sit in bed with some nice pizza watching the greatest sport ever while it’s cloudy and cozy outside.
In Fort Collins the abundant sunshine and lack of snow ruins the mood a bit but it’s still easily December.
January and February don’t have the same vibe though and May or July would probably get the 2nd spot.
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Post by 🖕🏿Mörön🖕🏿 on Aug 24, 2023 20:41:24 GMT -5
Early summer and mid-winter.
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Post by fairweatherfan on Aug 24, 2023 21:08:29 GMT -5
Spring because of rebirth, renewal, and resurrection. It also has two of my most favorite holidays: Chinese New Year celebrates the arrival of spring, and Easter is the most important Christian holiday.
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Post by desiccatedi85 on Aug 24, 2023 23:41:33 GMT -5
Spring because of rebirth, renewal, and resurrection. It also has two of my most favorite holidays: Chinese New Year celebrates the arrival of spring, and Easter is the most important Christian holiday. That's interesting about Chinese New Year, considering it occurs in meteorological winter, February but sometimes January even.
Lots of other cultures have new year celebrations in the spring also. Persians celebrate their new year, Nowruz, on the spring equinox, and Hindus celebrate in March or April.
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Post by Ethereal on Aug 25, 2023 3:16:35 GMT -5
Spring. Flowers bloom abundantly, longer days loom, smell of warmth in the air, pleasant weather and more sunshine (at least here).
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Post by fairweatherfan on Aug 25, 2023 11:04:00 GMT -5
Spring because of rebirth, renewal, and resurrection. It also has two of my most favorite holidays: Chinese New Year celebrates the arrival of spring, and Easter is the most important Christian holiday. That's interesting about Chinese New Year, considering it occurs in meteorological winter, February but sometimes January even.
Lots of other cultures have new year celebrations in the spring also. Persians celebrate their new year, Nowruz, on the spring equinox, and Hindus celebrate in March or April.
Chinese New Year is actually called Spring festival in Chinese
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Post by desiccatedi85 on Aug 25, 2023 23:50:24 GMT -5
That's interesting about Chinese New Year, considering it occurs in meteorological winter, February but sometimes January even.
Lots of other cultures have new year celebrations in the spring also. Persians celebrate their new year, Nowruz, on the spring equinox, and Hindus celebrate in March or April.
Chinese New Year is actually called Spring festival in Chinese That is interesting. Why is Chinese New Year, a spring festival, celebrated in winter though?
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Post by cawfeefan on Aug 26, 2023 0:38:08 GMT -5
Chinese New Year is actually called Spring festival in Chinese That is interesting. Why is Chinese New Year, a spring festival, celebrated in winter though? Chinese New Year is celebrated on the day of the second new moon after the winter solstice, which would make it sometime in January or February. China has their own traditional way of defining seasons and they consider that day the start of spring.
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Post by greysrigging on Aug 26, 2023 1:57:39 GMT -5
Many people just assume the 'dry season' has the "vibe"... yeah well, endless sunny days, shitloads of festivals, the V8 Supercars motorsports, the Darwin Cup Carnival, some AFL and NRL games, the Mindal Beach Markets, the shitloads of interstate and overseas tourists including Eurotrash backpackers with questionable morals ( the best type ), no chance for 4 to 5 months of having a party or a wedding or a BBQ or a camping and fishing trip washed out by rain.... But for locals, the 'wet season' has the deffo vibe.... the anticipation of the first storms, the garden and bush coming out of its slumber, the tourists have all fucked off down south or overseas, the rains begin to renew life in the parched savanna plains, the rivers run, the fish are on the bite, the mud crabs are on, ya garden water bill is neglible, there is a cracking thunderstorm every other night... it's truely paradise !!
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Post by Speagles84 on Aug 31, 2023 9:14:21 GMT -5
Summer by far, and not just for the warm/hot temps. Lush vegetation, bright/long days, cold drinks/ ice cream are at their most flavorful at that time of year...lol. How exactly does ice creams flavor vary throughout the time of year? Does it grow on a bush or tree that I don't know about?
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Post by Benfxmth on Aug 31, 2023 9:15:18 GMT -5
Summer by far, and not just for the warm/hot temps. Lush vegetation, bright/long days, cold drinks/ ice cream are at their most flavorful at that time of year...lol. How exactly does ice creams flavor vary throughout the time of year? Does it grow on a bush or tree that I don't know about? Not really change in flavor per se, it's just more appetizing when it's warm/hot to me
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