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Old 05-01-2017, 11:34 AM
 
Location: Ipswich,England
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Hyesan i think is quite high up which would explain their low readings .
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Old 05-01-2017, 11:42 AM
 
Location: Ipswich,England
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Wakkanai and St Johns Nf are two locations (and i'm sure there are even better examples) which get a terrible warmth/sun ratio for latitude .

St Johns Nf, a literally mean, mean 5 degrees and 1633 hours at 47' is disturbing


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Jo...d_and_Labrador
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Old 05-01-2017, 11:52 AM
 
Location: Ipswich,England
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wakkanai,_Hokkaido

of the two , Wakanai gets my vote - further south - 1482 / and crucially an 9.4 average max and 1062 rain .

that sucks
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Old 05-01-2017, 11:56 AM
 
Location: Ipswich,England
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Just to underline how good the Swedish climate is per latitude , Stockholm at 59' beats it in every single department .Sun/dryness /warmth ...even min temps



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockholm
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Old 05-01-2017, 03:21 PM
 
Location: Ipswich,England
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Warszawa View Post
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isles_of_Scilly#Climate

Soon to be the northernmost place with 10C highs in the coldest month. I think if you calculate 85-15 normals, it should be there. I was pretty sure that La Rochelle in France was the current northernmost place like that but looking at Wiki it says not. I clearly remember that it was last time I checked, maybe someone was ****ing around with the Wiki data


It's a close run thing between a few of the islands around there off the Vendre coast and yet it could be Scilly ahead of the game . As it is , it looks like you have to go right down to Bordeaux - that just nudges it
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Old 05-01-2017, 03:26 PM
B87
 
Location: Surrey/London
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TorshavnSunHolidays View Post
I'm impressed with that Spences bridge 50N . Pity it doesn't have the sunshine totals - but i would guess around the 2,000 mark ? It must have the highest max average for that latitude in North Am . 15.7 .

That average beats London
It loses out with the lows though; London and Portsmouth are the warmest places in the world above 50N.

Are there any oceanic climates outside of Europe, that are as dry as SE England or East Anglia?
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Old 05-01-2017, 03:31 PM
 
Location: Ipswich,England
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Quote:
Originally Posted by grega94 View Post
Walla Walla, WA being at 46°3′54″N is the northernmost Csa (mediteranean) climate, though the winters are much colder than your typical Csa climate

Pasco, WA being at 46°14′19″N is probably the northernmost place that has the coldest daily mean above 0C and the hottest avg high above 34C

Pasco average max is 19.4c at 46' i didn't think there was anywhere that warm so far up - i am quite astounded at that .
La Rochelle in Francais at 46 is 16.8 ,Lyon is 17.3
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Old 05-01-2017, 03:44 PM
 
Location: Ipswich,England
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Quote:
Originally Posted by B87 View Post
It loses out with the lows though; London and Portsmouth are the warmest places in the world above 50N.

Are there any oceanic climates outside of Europe, that are as dry as SE England or East Anglia?
___________

B87 - yeah i accept it loses out on the lows - but still impressive totals for a 2000hr sun reading . London and Pompey i have always suspected were the winners - Portsmouth esp because of the 1900 hrs .

On the rainfall side of things ,the only one i can think of off hand is Dundein ,NZ

114 /736 similar to parts of southern Eng ,it's Max averages are very East anglian (except Dunedin's max temps are more 'temperate/oceanic ' and sun totals identical to south east England/London 1600 - 1700 .

a pretty close fit .

But no where yet i have found the low rain levels in East Anglia of 535mm /105 days . It's something i have pondered on before
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Old 05-01-2017, 03:49 PM
B87
 
Location: Surrey/London
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Maybe Melbourne and the surrounding area if you consider that a Cfb climate? It's wetter than pretty much all of East Anglia, but has almost identical rainfall to London.

The driest place in the UK is St Osyth in Essex, with 507 mm.
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Old 05-01-2017, 03:55 PM
 
Location: 64'N Umeå, Sweden - The least bad Dfc
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Quote:
Originally Posted by B87 View Post
It loses out with the lows though; London and Portsmouth are the warmest places in the world above 50N.

Are there any oceanic climates outside of Europe, that are as dry as SE England or East Anglia?
There's Victoria B.C, and Sequim especially (406mm), but they're Csb, but there are probably Cfb ones as well Kelowna, BC is also Cfb with -3'C threshold. Then there's Patagonia of course which is like 100-300mm all throughout (except in the mountains), but has some combinations of temps and precipitation which don't make them semi-arid. And then there's southern South Africa that technically is Csb and Cfb with around 500-600mm. Then there's southern Australia like Melbourne. Asia, I don't know but pretty much all continents have those climates.
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