Best climate for humans? (records, rainfall, locations, month)
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My perfect climate is cold winter and good fall , no summer , no heat.
Maybe we can change
Winters are cold, because in winter it can get bitingly cold (high humidity and drizzle) and in fall you can enjoy beautiful colors in the forest. And exactly: no summer, no heat (average daily high in July is 72 degrees... Fahrenheit).
If you also prefer little sunshine, western European climate is perfect for you. Otherwise, you could consider Anchorage, Alaska which has a fairly sunny climate (and really cold winters).
^^
I like that suggestion of Anchorage, the avg. high is 62 in July, and the cold in winter gets tempered by the ocean. The falls are beautiful as well
I somehow have found that when I look at a thermometer when I think that I feel no cold or hot it reads 83.7 F. And I mean 83.7 F! I turn off the fan directly on me at 87 F. Where is the ave temp. the most often closest to 83.7? I found a place see playaroca.com in Nicaragua that the temp. of the Pacific Ocean was almost always 82 F.
^^ I agree. Some inland places here in Vic and alot of the souther deserts such as the Nullarbour plain can have a 30C difference between day and night temps in summer.
That sounds like the kind of place where if a small but thick cloud blocks the sun for 10 minutes,
the air temp can plummet 10-15 C.
On some of our "arid" days (RH in the 20%'s) it feels like we can get a 4-7 C drop in temps in less than 1/2 hr just from a single puffy cloud.
*Normally we have enough humidity that a puffy cloud will only drop the temps 1-3 C.
That sounds like the kind of place where if a small but thick cloud blocks the sun for 10 minutes,
the air temp can plummet 10-15 C.
Cloud won't drop the temps that far, especially in 10 minutes but a cold front will.
Quote:
On some of our "arid" days (RH in the 20%'s) it feels like we can get a 4-7 C drop in temps in less than 1/2 hr just from a single puffy cloud.
*Normally we have enough humidity that a puffy cloud will only drop the temps 1-3 C.
That's sounds like a typical drop under thick cloud on a hot summer day here. The drop is less if its windy.
Dunno, I just prefer the way cold feels over heat. (Except extreme, painful cold). But it would probably be somewhere around room temp 24/7, with preference towards coolness as sweat causes dehydration.
For instance: Quito - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia seems good for humans. Rarely ever dips below freezing, and doesn't get hot much. Only issue is the UV rays.
This is a quite a livable climate for humans imo. It has cold winters with snow,rain and quite cloudy and warm but not hot short dry summers with occasional t'storms.
Last edited by Thunder98; 06-15-2015 at 04:40 PM..
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