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Old 06-30-2015, 10:03 AM
 
Location: Houston
940 posts, read 1,897,692 times
Reputation: 1490

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Thing is if you want to live where there are seasons you can live where there are challenging summers like Houston, challenging winters like Minneapolis or somewhere in the middle, like TN, where as a kid I used to really get pumped at the dramatic season changes. Crisp autumn nights accenting Friday football games is not featured where I am now, and spring doesn't really come in at once; instead it come in fits and starts beginning in Jan/Feb. It ain't the same here. Some winters the post oaks on my property don't lose their leaves until the new ones come in. Middle TN is a great balance of the seasons.
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Old 06-30-2015, 12:11 PM
 
Location: Apex, NC
1,370 posts, read 1,062,144 times
Reputation: 1791
Quote:
Originally Posted by groovamos View Post
Thing is if you want to live where there are seasons you can live where there are challenging summers like Houston, challenging winters like Minneapolis or somewhere in the middle, like TN, where as a kid I used to really get pumped at the dramatic season changes. Crisp autumn nights accenting Friday football games is not featured where I am now, and spring doesn't really come in at once; instead it come in fits and starts beginning in Jan/Feb. It ain't the same here. Some winters the post oaks on my property don't lose their leaves until the new ones come in. Middle TN is a great balance of the seasons.
I guess it's all about perspective! We're actually considering relocating from St. Louis, and one of the small pluses for Nashville is the winters aren't quite as bad as STL and the summers aren't quite as bad. Win-win.
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Old 07-01-2015, 08:08 PM
 
Location: Chattanooga
125 posts, read 144,890 times
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Nashville has 44 days a year on average where the temperature is above 90 degrees. Most of those days may feel muggy. That means the other 321 days are quite tolerable.
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