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Post by Deleted on Oct 29, 2020 7:17:40 GMT -5
The best climates in the UK (London, Surrey, Hampshire, E/W Sussex) are C climates.
The closest A climates to me are Nice (1030km), Lisbon (1580km) and Tarifa (1650km).
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Post by edmountain on Oct 29, 2020 10:01:03 GMT -5
Ontario: No. Either slightly too hot in the summer or too cold in the winter for there to be A's. Toronto Centre Island, Kingston, and Tobermory are strong B's. Canada: If I were generous, Victoria, BC and Saanich, BC get A-. The temperature variance is low and they're rather dry, but they're less gloomy than other parts of coastal BC (Victoria is surprisingly sunnier than Toronto) and at least it's comfortable year round for a Canadian. Victoria has far and away the best climate in Canada... but it's still only a C+ or maybe a B- at a stretch. Its strong suit is its summers with pretty much wall-to-wall sun late June into September. This is offset though by the gloomy winters. Luckily, as you say, the temperatures do at least remain comfortable by Canadian standards.
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Post by Morningrise on Oct 29, 2020 23:06:23 GMT -5
Saskatchewan? No. Closest would be the extreme southwest corner of the province (Maple Creek/Cypress Hills area) which I would categorize as a B by my standards.
Canada? Yes. Southwestern Ontario, particularly the Windsor-Essex region is an A-grade climate by my books. I'd have to actually live there for a few years (something I'd actually like to do in the future) to see if it really lived up to my expectations as there are a couple aspects of it that I'm not 100% sure about - the winters seem like they might be a little too wet & windy for my liking and I might get tired of the summertime humidity after a while. But overall it looks great, at least on paper. Windsor with drier winters and a bit less humidity in the summer is more or less my dream climate.
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Post by srfoskey on Oct 30, 2020 19:23:00 GMT -5
Oklahoma No, the best climate is Bartlesville, which is just a B+ climate. USA Definitely, most of PA, OH, IN, and southern MI fall into the A category. Which part of PA? The warm side (Philadelphia, Harrisburg, Allentown, Lancaster), moderates (Pittsburgh, Scranton, Williamsport), or colder (Erie, Northern Tier, SW/SC Mountains)? All but the coldest parts.
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