Climate Battle: Places with similar mean temp to Ulladulla
Sept 28, 2024 6:27:18 GMT -5
Mörön, Benfxmth, and 2 more like this
Post by CRISPR on Sept 28, 2024 6:27:18 GMT -5
Let’s go on a world tour again, to 25 locations in both hemispheres! Like Donar, Benfxmth, cawfeefan and candle; only places with an annual mean temp ± 0.3ºC of Ulladulla’s (17.0ºC) will be included. Choose your top 3 favourite climates!
We start our journey in Ulladulla, NSW with its subtropical-influenced oceanic climate.
Then we hike over the Snowy Mountains and Riverina region to the semi-arid, highly variable little town of Renmark, SA.
We travel many days overland with little human contact to Bunbury, WA on the west coast; with a winter-precipitation peak.
We sail across the Southern Sea for many days to Cape Town, South Africa; which offers a more maritime climate, but still with a similar rainfall pattern.
Riding the trade winds westward we hike inland to the elevated Caxias do Sul; with summer rain returning.
We yet again climb to over 1000 m (3281 ft) to Salta; good to avoid winters with wet, warm nights.
We briefly trek northwest to Cochabamba, where our oxygen starts to run low. Let’s bundle up for the high diurnal ranges during the long dry season.
Back in the Land of Silver, we arrive at Mendoza, xeric with hot summers and cool winters.
Summiting Mt Aconcagua, we reach the Martian-like landscapes around Antofagasta; with room-like temps and trace rainfall year-round.
We hop across the Southern pond back to Gosford, complete with a rainy autumn and summer heatwaves.
We now fly above the equator to the Insular Tokyo island of Kōzu-shima. It is drenched in rain for months- whether cold or hot.
We enter the giant metropolis of Shanghai as we feel the urban island heat effect- warming up its four seasons.
We climb over 1600 m (5249 ft) to Baoshan to escape the summer heat and winter cold; with distinct foggy and sunny periods.
We still are up in a plateau: but a much drier and more continental one, as Tehran welcomes us with desiccation in summer and chill in winter.
We enter the Turkish town of Siirt; with a semi-continental mediterranean climate with toasty, dry summers and cool, wet winters.
We traverse across the Aegean to Thessaloniki, as a cross-road between mediterranean and cold-semi arid climates.
We go up the Adriatic to Podgorica, a wet, continental-influenced Mediterranean climate.
After hiking through the mountainous Apennine peninsula, Toulon greets us with a near-stereotypical French climate kissed by the summer sun.
We travel down into Iberia to arrive at Jaén, relatively dry and hot in summer.
We hop on several avions to Myrtle Beach, SC a coastal, windswept subtropical climate.
We exit west to Fort Smith, AR; a highly unstable subtropical climate due to combined tropical and polar influences.
We head down south to Puebla, a pleasant subtropical highland climate with cool nights and plenty of sunshine.
We head back northwest as we notice the landscape rapidly drying out nearby Lawton OK; good for people who prefer a drier, more variable Fort Smith.
We briefly enter into the Mexican border city of Ciudad Juárez- dry and continental but with a little summer monsoon.
And we end our trip surfing on Playas de Rosarito; a comfort wanker’s paradise #2.
IMO, I pick Gosford for having the best temps whilst still having adequate precipitation during its drier season. Honourable mentions to Montevideo (not sunny enough), my hometown (a little too maritime) and Puebla (too lengthy of a dry season)
We start our journey in Ulladulla, NSW with its subtropical-influenced oceanic climate.
Then we hike over the Snowy Mountains and Riverina region to the semi-arid, highly variable little town of Renmark, SA.
We travel many days overland with little human contact to Bunbury, WA on the west coast; with a winter-precipitation peak.
We sail across the Southern Sea for many days to Cape Town, South Africa; which offers a more maritime climate, but still with a similar rainfall pattern.
Riding the trade winds westward we hike inland to the elevated Caxias do Sul; with summer rain returning.
We yet again climb to over 1000 m (3281 ft) to Salta; good to avoid winters with wet, warm nights.
We briefly trek northwest to Cochabamba, where our oxygen starts to run low. Let’s bundle up for the high diurnal ranges during the long dry season.
Back in the Land of Silver, we arrive at Mendoza, xeric with hot summers and cool winters.
Summiting Mt Aconcagua, we reach the Martian-like landscapes around Antofagasta; with room-like temps and trace rainfall year-round.
We hop across the Southern pond back to Gosford, complete with a rainy autumn and summer heatwaves.
We now fly above the equator to the Insular Tokyo island of Kōzu-shima. It is drenched in rain for months- whether cold or hot.
We enter the giant metropolis of Shanghai as we feel the urban island heat effect- warming up its four seasons.
We climb over 1600 m (5249 ft) to Baoshan to escape the summer heat and winter cold; with distinct foggy and sunny periods.
We still are up in a plateau: but a much drier and more continental one, as Tehran welcomes us with desiccation in summer and chill in winter.
We enter the Turkish town of Siirt; with a semi-continental mediterranean climate with toasty, dry summers and cool, wet winters.
We traverse across the Aegean to Thessaloniki, as a cross-road between mediterranean and cold-semi arid climates.
We go up the Adriatic to Podgorica, a wet, continental-influenced Mediterranean climate.
After hiking through the mountainous Apennine peninsula, Toulon greets us with a near-stereotypical French climate kissed by the summer sun.
We travel down into Iberia to arrive at Jaén, relatively dry and hot in summer.
We hop on several avions to Myrtle Beach, SC a coastal, windswept subtropical climate.
We exit west to Fort Smith, AR; a highly unstable subtropical climate due to combined tropical and polar influences.
We head down south to Puebla, a pleasant subtropical highland climate with cool nights and plenty of sunshine.
We head back northwest as we notice the landscape rapidly drying out nearby Lawton OK; good for people who prefer a drier, more variable Fort Smith.
We briefly enter into the Mexican border city of Ciudad Juárez- dry and continental but with a little summer monsoon.
And we end our trip surfing on Playas de Rosarito; a comfort wanker’s paradise #2.
IMO, I pick Gosford for having the best temps whilst still having adequate precipitation during its drier season. Honourable mentions to Montevideo (not sunny enough), my hometown (a little too maritime) and Puebla (too lengthy of a dry season)