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Post by Cadeau on Apr 1, 2018 18:55:36 GMT -5
Located 15km northwest of the city hall. The downtown weather station is only a few one-tenth of a degree warmer and slightly smaller diurnal range due to the UHI.
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Post by knot on Apr 7, 2018 21:57:39 GMT -5
Ideal inland climateโquite different to its maritime counterpart, I'd say!
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Post by lab276 on Apr 8, 2018 6:36:47 GMT -5
Increased diurnals, increased record highs and slightly more rainfall and sunshine now. I know it's a dream climate and all and not expected to be realistic, but how is somewhere that averages 18C highs and 9C lows in winter going to get any snow at all? Or is that from a previous iteration and you just forgot to get rid of it?
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Post by Lommaren on Apr 8, 2018 7:48:30 GMT -5
I know it's a dream climate and all and not expected to be realistic, but how is somewhere that averages 18C highs and 9C lows in winter going to get any snow at all? Or is that from a previous iteration and you just forgot to get rid of it? Nah, it's from north-easterly low-pressure system. The average coldest night of the year is expected to fall to about -0.4ยฐC, with most winter nights being around 12-13ยฐC. When temps fall beneath freezing the mediterranean background pattern can still bring some light snowfall, usually in the form of morning sleet.
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Post by Deleted on Apr 8, 2018 7:56:53 GMT -5
This one is about as "four season" as any of New Florida's climates get. One of the coolest cities overall, with an inland lowland location (which is a bit sheltered) in North West North New Florida. Apparently it still classifies as "humid subtropical" by the Koppen system, but I consider it temperate.
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Post by sari on Apr 9, 2018 20:54:46 GMT -5
This one is about as "four season" as any of New Florida's climates get. One of the coolest cities overall, with an inland lowland location (which is a bit sheltered) in North West North New Florida. Apparently it still classifies as "humid subtropical" by the Koppen system, but I consider it temperate. Move to Bowling Green or Paducah.
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Post by Crunch41 on Apr 14, 2018 23:17:32 GMT -5
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Post by sari on Apr 14, 2018 23:20:20 GMT -5
What's your favorite real-life climate? This looks a bit like Japan maybe.
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Post by jgtheone on Apr 14, 2018 23:25:08 GMT -5
This one is about as "four season" as any of New Florida's climates get. One of the coolest cities overall, with an inland lowland location (which is a bit sheltered) in North West North New Florida. Apparently it still classifies as "humid subtropical" by the Koppen system, but I consider it temperate. I like this one a lot.
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Post by Crunch41 on Apr 15, 2018 22:09:24 GMT -5
sari I don't know of anywhere in Japan with winters that cold. Asahikawa is close but it gets way too much snow. My climate is a colder version of Madison, Wisconsin but with a few small changes. The main ones are a drier spring and less seasonal lag. I made a few years of fake climate data and it came out like this. It's very close to north central Wisconsin's climate. wrcc.dri.edu/cgi-bin/cliMAIN.pl?wi5516 (46N) Minocqua is scenic tourist place, perfect if you like lakes and trees. Minocqua could use some hills or mountains though. There's other parts of the world with similar climates, Russia has the closest ones I've found outside of the US or Canada. The russian climates are further north so the spring and fall is colder. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kazan#Climate (56N)
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Post by Deleted on Apr 16, 2018 7:10:08 GMT -5
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Post by Deleted on Apr 16, 2018 7:36:25 GMT -5
I am working on this city now - it is 159 miles south of Eastmann, but at an elevation of 800 meters so somewhat cooler. Due to its further south latitude, it has less seasonal variation than Eastmann. The winters are drier but the summers are very prone to thunderstorms, which occur on 93 days per year.
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Post by Giorbanguly on Apr 16, 2018 12:55:55 GMT -5
UPDATED JACARANDOPOLIS - A few minor changes. Made the winters cooler but sunnier. Made the summers a bit cloudier. Updated summertime humidity to be a bit more realistic What real world climate does this remind you of?
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Post by Deleted on Apr 16, 2018 13:09:10 GMT -5
Could be somewhere between Atlanta and Tallahassee.
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Post by Giorbanguly on Apr 16, 2018 14:07:02 GMT -5
A climate in the different part of the city. To the southwest of the Jacarandopolis station, more inland, and on the east side of a relatively tall mountain range. Much higher record highs in the spring because of Foehn winds and an inland location, average highs are warmer outside of winter, while average lows are cooler. Asianfoodeaux is still a really densely populated part of the city, so it gets UHI, though not as much as the other station
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Post by Steelernation on Apr 16, 2018 14:48:07 GMT -5
UPDATED JACARANDOPOLIS - A few minor changes. Made the winters cooler but sunnier. Made the summers a bit cloudier. Updated summertime humidity to be a bit more realistic What real world climate does this remind you of? Buenos Aires seems pretty similar. Most of central Argentina does too except with more unstable winters. BTW, Asianfoodeaux is a cringe-worthy name IMO.
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Post by Giorbanguly on Apr 16, 2018 14:49:47 GMT -5
UPDATED JACARANDOPOLIS - A few minor changes. Made the winters cooler but sunnier. Made the summers a bit cloudier. Updated summertime humidity to be a bit more realistic What real world climate does this remind you of? Buenos Aires seems pretty similar. Most of central Argentina does too except with more unstable winters. BTW, Asianfoodeaux is a cringe-worthy name IMO. Lol. I might change it something else, since I've started taking it more seriously And yeah, I actually based these climates off Argentina and Australia, someone commented that it even looked a lot like Sydney?
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Post by Steelernation on Apr 16, 2018 15:02:16 GMT -5
Lol. I might change it something else, since I've started taking it more seriously And yeah, I actually based these climates off Argentina and Australia, someone commented that it even looked a lot like Sydney? Western Sydney seems pretty close, east Sydney is too cool in summer. Heres my updated dream climate. Same averages, slightly more snow, more extreme records *July record high should be 114 (45.5 C).
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Post by Giorbanguly on Apr 16, 2018 15:05:38 GMT -5
^ Looks really dry. I thought you liked more precipitation?
Looks like a climate in the Rockies region, or Central Asia
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Post by Steelernation on Apr 16, 2018 15:17:33 GMT -5
^ Looks really dry. I thought you liked more precipitation? Looks like a climate in the Rockies region, or Central Asia I like snow and thunderstorms but hate any other precipitation. Thereโs still a good amount of T-storms because almost all precipitation outside of winter falls as them. I wouldnโt mind a higher total, but I donโt want too many rain days and I donโt want enough rainfall to support a forest. Based on the central high plains with slightly drier summers.
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