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I don't think you understand the meaning of above or below average.
The thread title "Is this March going very hot everywhere?" the assumption of the thread is to ask about global warming. Without a belief in global warming, the question would be more like "How is March where you live?" it also doesn't help that this is the 3rd iteration of a March warm thread on this forum, and it appears every month has at least a 3 year history of "Is this (insert month here) hot, warm or substitute other word for warming.
In some areas March is hot, in some areas it is cold, in some years March is hotter than average, in other years it is lower than average, both globally and even by continent or region. The assumption that this is the hottest March will likely be proven true by our NOAA/NASA warmists, who have become very rich preaching the religion of global warming while collecting a government and private (book, speech, what not) incomes and benefits. Eventually NOAA will get back to weather, and maybe if they research with the scientific method instead of the political method, climate change. NASA should be returned to space exploration, and understanding other planets. The only NOAA / NASA interface that makes sense long term is getting NOAA satellites launched.
I've never really thought of Binghamton, New York as being located in upstate New York, to at least me....I can't speak for everyone else, but at least in my opinion, Binghamton, New York seems to be more like Central New York- I have always thought that cities such as Buffalo and Rochester as being in upstate New York, but Binghamton? Not So Much
I've never really thought of Binghamton, New York as being located in upstate New York, to at least me....I can't speak for everyone else, but at least in my opinion, Binghamton, New York seems to be more like Central New York- I have always thought that cities such as Buffalo and Rochester as being in upstate New York, but Binghamton? Not So Much
He's from NYC, so I would guess everything north of Yonkers is upstate.
He's from NYC, so I would guess everything north of Yonkers is upstate.
Lol how do you know that? You must have been looking at the memes
Climactically though, I would say that everything north/west of the Appalachians is Upstate. Upstate New York tends to be much colder, much cloudier, much snowier than the areas east the Appalachians
No, it is cold, cold, cold in the Pacific Northwest. I hate, hate, hate La Nina with all of the passion I can muster.
I don't know what part you live in, but this past week in Seattle area hasn't been so bad, there have been a lot more sun breaks and often times I only need a t-shirt or light jacket to go outside. At SeaTac the average high so far this month has been 51F and the normal high for March is 53.7F so not to far behind, and the month is still not over, however I will agree that the first half of the month wasn't so nice, and there haven't been any warm spells either, our max temp was only 58F when the normal max temp is 66F.
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