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People that say nyc is similiar to toronto climate are halirious. Nyc lays is subtropical contenial zone, while toronto in humid contenial zone , its big difference. Its almost like comparing new york city to alaska.
Anyway, toronto's climate is extremely unpredicble in all 4 seasons and it does get really cold and windy
People that say nyc is similiar to toronto climate are halirious. Nyc lays is subtropical contenial zone, while toronto in humid contenial zone , its big difference. Its almost like comparing new york city to alaska.
Anyway, toronto's climate is extremely unpredicble in all 4 seasons and it does get really cold and windy
Subtropical continental zone! This made me chuckle lol
My strongest memory is the consistent daily -20 with windchill all the way from Dec/Jan to the first week of May...I'm not sure if living in the downtown core near countless high rises and low-rises exasperated the windchill effect.
My strongest memory is the consistent daily -20 with windchill all the way from Dec/Jan to the first week of May...I'm not sure if living in the downtown core near countless high rises and low-rises exasperated the windchill effect.
The temps in Toronto arent anywhere near -20F from Dec through May even with windchill factored in., they may experience an extreme cold snap where -20F may be achieved but its certainly not the norm and it certainly doesnt last more than a few days..
The temps in Toronto arent anywhere near -20F from Dec through May even with windchill factored in., they may experience an extreme cold snap where -20F may be achieved but its certainly not the norm and it certainly doesnt last more than a few days..
he was probably talking about -20C. -20F is -29C, which probably never happened in Toronto.
Even -20C is rare (without windchill). Coldest temperature are normally -15C during night/before dawn. Average low is -7C downtown. It simply can't possible be -20C for a prolonged period of time. We are not Winnipeg.
Subtropical continental zone! This made me chuckle lol
New York City is a subtropical climate. The average temperature in the coldest month, January.. is > 0C. Just because it snows doesn't mean it isn't a subtropical climate. 10C temps are not uncommon at all in NYC winters. Snow covering the ground for extended periods is actually rare.
I live in Buffalo. Toronto is a tad colder but less snow. I personally don't think winters in either are bad at all. If you can't handle the 3 months of semi-cold weather, you need to grow a pair.
New York City is a subtropical climate. The average temperature in the coldest month, January.. is > 0C. Just because it snows doesn't mean it isn't a subtropical climate. 10C temps are not uncommon at all in NYC winters. Snow covering the ground for extended periods is actually rare.
I live in Buffalo. Toronto is a tad colder but less snow. I personally don't think winters in either are bad at all. If you can't handle the 3 months of semi-cold weather, you need to grow a pair.
Subtropical for NYC seems a bit silly, there are tedious long debates in the
weather forum about it.
All stems from Koppen's climate classification system (from back in 1899 !!)
With coldest month average temp above -3C threshold (later modified to above 0C)
All I know is Paris, London, Vancouver are all milder than NYC in January,
and most people living in those cities would have a tough time thinking of NYC as being
subtropical.
Personally I consider cities like Buenos Aires, New Orleans, or Sydney to be subtropical.
IMO NYC doesn't quite fit subtropical designation, hey but that's just me
There is nothing silly about NYC being subtropical. It averages over 50% sunshine in its cloudiest month, it has abundant precipitation, and its warmest month is above freezing.
NYC is a stark contrast in climate from Buffalo, and certainly from Toronto. They are not similar at all. NYC is subtropical, Toronto is continental.
There is nothing silly about NYC being subtropical. It averages over 50% sunshine in its cloudiest month, it has abundant precipitation, and its warmest month is above freezing.
NYC is a stark contrast in climate from Buffalo, and certainly from Toronto. They are not similar at all. NYC is subtropical, Toronto is continental.
Manhattan (-2.8/3.5C) on average is only 4C warmer than downtown Toronto (-6.7/-0.7C) in January and about 2C warmer in July (28.9 vs 26.5C). Being close to the ocean, NYC has 50 inches of precipitation, versus 34 inches in Toronto. They are different but hardly in stark contrast.
New York does have a lot more sunshine than Toronto (2530 vs 2066) but this is not due to the subtropical vs continental difference. Medicine Hat AB is continental has has over 2500 hours of sunshine every year as well.
New York does have a lot more sunshine than Toronto (2530 vs 2066) but this is not due to the subtropical vs continental difference. Medicine Hat AB is continental has has over 2500 hours of sunshine every year as well.
Canada measures 'bright sunshine' using the CampbellāStokes method. You would have to add anywhere from 250 to 400 hours to the Toronto figure to compare it with NYC. In general, Toronto is cloudier during the winter and sunnier during the summer. NYC has a more evenly distributed percent of possible sunshine.
Also, Pearson airport is sunnier on average than downtown Toronto because of its proximity to lake Ontario.
Many people find it surprising that Buffalo has the sunniest summer of any major city in the northeast US.
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