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Post by Lommaren on Mar 25, 2018 7:45:18 GMT -5
Had to also throw in this jewel that I found today E+ bordering on a standard E; epic summers, but indoor heating better work in winter...
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Post by Deleted on Mar 25, 2018 7:46:53 GMT -5
Shit, F- for unsurvivable winters.
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Post by knot on Mar 25, 2018 8:05:33 GMT -5
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Post by jgtheone on Mar 25, 2018 8:31:18 GMT -5
E+, shithouse unlivable winters but summers bring it up from the F. Possibility of some real heat there.
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Post by Steelernation on Mar 25, 2018 11:21:52 GMT -5
E. Winter way too cold, summer too wet and cool.
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 25, 2018 14:14:07 GMT -5
alex992 , sari , thoughts? Maybe cold without more than a few inches of snow drags it down quite a bit? In the case of Sari, winters are probably way too cold anyway!
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Post by alex992 on Mar 25, 2018 17:27:24 GMT -5
Good seasonal range, but it warms up a bit too quickly by my standards during February-March. Summers are too cool, but shoulder seasons are good. Far too dry in winter (and overall) and sunshine hours are a couple of notches too high. I'd give it a C+.
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Post by Mörön on Mar 25, 2018 20:03:34 GMT -5
It was pretty damn warm there yesterday, around 12C. Looks like they'll be around 5-12C for highs the next few days, and then get colder with some snow around April 1st. Anyway, it's a C- for me as those winters are too dry. Irkutsk is a far superior climate, at least in that region: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irkutsk#Climate
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Post by chesternz on Mar 26, 2018 1:34:26 GMT -5
F+ for being fairly sunny and having something of a summer.
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Post by Iwantsnow on Mar 26, 2018 21:59:47 GMT -5
Check out Blagoveshchensk too. Similar winters but a little warmer and wetter in July. Also it has seen a tornado. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blagoveshchensk#ClimateEdit: Chita is a C-, good summers but December through February is too cold.
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Post by boombo on Mar 28, 2018 16:55:13 GMT -5
E+, respectable verging on decent for the whole of April-September, rest of the year unlivable. All that cold yet hardly any snow, what's the point? It's not as if it's even that amazingly sunny in the winter either.
One good thing about southern Siberian climates is the quick warm-up compared to the likes of Yakutsk etc further north, March may be cold but I'll bet it still feels like spring considering it's 17C warmer than a couple of months earlier, even Jan-Feb is noticeable progress.
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Post by Iwantsnow on Mar 28, 2018 17:14:26 GMT -5
Yakutsk warms up even faster, but it's so cold in the winter that a warm-up doesn't mean much. March is 18C warmer than January but the average is still -20C. Chita is already at -9C with some days above freezing in March.
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Post by Lommaren on Mar 28, 2018 17:39:32 GMT -5
E+, respectable verging on decent for the whole of April-September, rest of the year unlivable. All that cold yet hardly any snow, what's the point? It's not as if it's even that amazingly sunny in the winter either. One good thing about southern Siberian climates is the quick warm-up compared to the likes of Yakutsk etc further north, March may be cold but I'll bet it still feels like spring considering it's 17C warmer than a couple of months earlier, even Jan-Feb is noticeable progress. Considering it's at 52°N sunshine percentage for January actually squeezes over 50 %, so that's way more than anything around in Northern Europe, but instead gloominess from the Gulf Stream is of course key to the mild temps so damned if you do, damned if you don't For its latitude it's amazingly sunny year round.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 29, 2018 5:42:30 GMT -5
F
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