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Post by Lommaren on Mar 1, 2018 14:55:00 GMT -5
Kylmyr (English: Coolermire) lies on the eastern side of a continent split by a sea in the middle. It's at 55°N and retains a subarctic climate courtesy of its inland position. As for me it's an E+. Winters are simply too long and severe to persevere through, even though summers are a thing of beauty although way too short.
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Post by alex992 on Mar 1, 2018 15:13:39 GMT -5
B+ quite good, but could use warmer and wetter summers. Also record highs are too low in every month. Everything else is on point though.
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 1, 2018 15:28:03 GMT -5
B+ quite good, but could use warmer and wetter summers. Also record highs are too low in every month. Everything else is on point though. Hehe man, I tried my best to exaggarate summer heat spikes in relation to its latitude I doubt it'd even be quasi-realistic to have a 45°C summer record at 55°N on a planet that is a copy of Earth...
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Post by alex992 on Mar 1, 2018 15:33:36 GMT -5
Yeah, you'd have to increase the axial tilt to get that.
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 1, 2018 15:36:26 GMT -5
Yeah, you'd have to increase the axial tilt to get that. That planet does tend to have a little stronger solar strength (although the UV is less dangerous due to a stronger magnetic shield) especially in shoulder seasons though, which helps warm temps a bit for the latitude. Had this climate been on Earth, I assume it might have been 2°C colder in winter due to it being quite far inland, and that's where the solar radiation really helps it out.
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Post by alex992 on Mar 1, 2018 15:39:47 GMT -5
Yeah, you'd have to increase the axial tilt to get that. That planet does tend to have a little stronger solar strength (although the UV is less dangerous due to a stronger magnetic shield) especially in shoulder seasons though, which helps warm temps a bit for the latitude. Had this climate been on Earth, I assume it might have been 2°C colder in winter due to it being quite far inland, and that's where the solar radiation really helps it out. To be honest on Earth, 55 N and far inland on the eastern side of a continent would have much colder winters than that....probably something like -18 C highs and -29 C lows or so. 45 C record high has occurred in Canada at 50 N, so at 55 N it wouldn't be TOO far-fetched...I wonder what the highest temp at that latitude is on Earth. Probably something like 42-43 C?
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Post by Steelernation on Mar 1, 2018 15:46:04 GMT -5
E. Those are the most disgusting springs ever. I complain about our slow springs but that place has a March average high fucking 5 F warmer than February and a record high of 17 C in April. April’s average high is almost closer to February than it is to me. Record highs are also way too low in every month.
Its not bad enough for an F but I’m tempted to give it one just for that March and April.
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Post by Mörön on Mar 1, 2018 15:55:15 GMT -5
B Would be A with shorter winters. Lommaren It's basically a colder/drier version of Fernie/Sparwood, which is my top area to move to. Despite how nice the climate in New Brunswick is and the fact it's on the east coast of a continent (which I generally prefer), the Elk River valley is far superior.
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Post by knot on Mar 2, 2018 5:27:33 GMT -5
D+, by inland standards. Nonexistant diurnals, boring summers and winters too fucken chilly. Gay climate...
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Post by Mörön on Mar 2, 2018 10:43:24 GMT -5
D+, by inland standards. Nonexistant diurnals, boring summers and winters too fucken chilly. Gay climate... But you like chilly winters mate...
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Post by knot on Mar 2, 2018 10:45:21 GMT -5
But you like chilly winters mate... Only in maritime climates kunt...
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Post by P London on Mar 2, 2018 11:06:39 GMT -5
But you like chilly winters mate... Only in maritime climates kunt... You have two criteria. Maritime and Inland - so you have two ideal climate classifications? Confused.com D---- for me...
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Post by knot on Mar 2, 2018 14:50:49 GMT -5
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Post by Beercules on Mar 2, 2018 20:47:31 GMT -5
E. very very shit.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 2, 2018 21:20:42 GMT -5
F. Crap.
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Post by sari on Mar 3, 2018 17:29:50 GMT -5
Too continental and dry and with far too much variation in sunshine, but that great snowfall distribution raises it to a B.
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Post by boombo on Mar 4, 2018 7:19:38 GMT -5
D- because May-August look decent enough. The shoulder seasons along bring it down at least a grade though
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Post by Palider on Mar 5, 2018 23:42:07 GMT -5
D.
Winters too cold. Annual snowfall too high. Summers too sunny.
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Post by Iwantsnow on Mar 11, 2018 12:24:04 GMT -5
A- Winter is about two months too long, but it has very good temperatures and snowfall. Summer is perfect. Spring and fall are too cold because of the long winter, so it would be an A if March-May and Sep-Nov were 10F/5C warmer.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 11, 2018 12:26:02 GMT -5
F-. Absolutely appalling.
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