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Post by Ethereal on Mar 14, 2024 7:56:13 GMT -5
It's a very stereotypical oceanic/temperate climate.
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Post by B87 on Mar 14, 2024 7:58:06 GMT -5
Of course not. Brisbane is subtropical
It can grow a few subtropical plants, but not as many as here (an oceanic climate).
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Post by jgtheone on Mar 14, 2024 8:05:17 GMT -5
Sub what ??....jeez bloke.... maybe experience a real subtropical climate... you know, without snow, ice, frost and shit.... lol See those purple flowering trees ? Called Jacaranda { from South America } that are planted all over the subtropical, warm temperate ocianic and Med world... if they wont grow, ya dont live in the warm subtropics.... There's Jacarandas in Melbourne. Literally on the street behind me. Melbourne confirmed subtropical. Haters in shambles.
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Post by greysrigging on Mar 14, 2024 15:50:19 GMT -5
Sub what ??....jeez bloke.... maybe experience a real subtropical climate... you know, without snow, ice, frost and shit.... lol See those purple flowering trees ? Called Jacaranda { from South America } that are planted all over the subtropical, warm temperate ocianic and Med world... if they wont grow, ya dont live in the warm subtropics.... There's Jacarandas in Melbourne. Literally on the street behind me. Melbourne confirmed subtropical. Haters in shambles. ^^And thats the point of using the Jacaranda as an indicator species of sub tropicallity.... they will grow in cooler climates.... so if they dont grow, let alone thrive, well sure as shit the climate is light years away from 'subtropical' ! Similar to using a tropical plant ( coconut ) as an indicator... coconuts will grow ( but not produce nuts ) in some subtropical locations.... note they dont grow in Sydney or Perth....
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Post by Cheeseman on Mar 14, 2024 22:15:41 GMT -5
Seattle would still fail the (extremely generous IMO) 6 C coldest month isotherm given that the Dec mean is slightly below that. It like Portland only has 7 months with mean temps above 10 C, so it fails the Trewartha test. I like to use the 10 C in the coldest month isotherm because that generally corresponds to the "winter coat/jacket" temperature threshold.Are you from Florida or what? Man up, princess! Even Benny's tougher than that, and he's a heat wanker from the South!
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Post by psychedamike24 on Mar 15, 2024 1:05:31 GMT -5
Seattle would still fail the (extremely generous IMO) 6 C coldest month isotherm given that the Dec mean is slightly below that. It like Portland only has 7 months with mean temps above 10 C, so it fails the Trewartha test. I like to use the 10 C in the coldest month isotherm because that generally corresponds to the "winter coat/jacket" temperature threshold.Are you from Florida or what? Man up, princess! Even Benny's tougher than that, and he's a heat wanker from the South! Hey Geodiode backed me up on the 10 C threshold I don't actually think a place that averages 15 C / 4 C in the coldest month requires a winter coat, but come on, that definitely isn't outdoor T-shirt weather... I always go out with at least a hoodie or sweater if it's under 15 C during the day. Present-day Seattle has average high temperatures under 10 C for at least 2 consecutive months, that's definitely (rain)coat weather during the winter months.
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emman
New Member
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Post by emman on Mar 16, 2024 16:54:57 GMT -5
Seattle would still fail the (extremely generous IMO) 6 C coldest month isotherm given that the Dec mean is slightly below that. It like Portland only has 7 months with mean temps above 10 C, so it fails the Trewartha test. I like to use the 10 C in the coldest month isotherm because that generally corresponds to the "winter coat/jacket" temperature threshold.Are you from Florida or what? Man up, princess! Even Benny's tougher than that, and he's a heat wanker from the South! This guy said palm trees won't grow in a place averaging below 10C so take what they say with a grain of salt.
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