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Albuquerque or Santa Fe, any high desert city in the western US at 5,000 ft elevation or above. It's rarely humid there, even at a temperatures higher than 32° C / 90° F you do not sweat. But you will fry your skin with the higher UV rays due to the thinner atmosphere and day after day of cloudless skies. You can't take a long hike without several liters of water because you are losing a lot of fluid without feeling "sweaty" at all.
You may not sweat at all at a beach in Los Angeles if the marine layer is there, it will usually be 60's/70's/ maybe the 80's at mid day. If it is hot, it will be dry heat and the water there is very cold so one quick dip and you'll cool off nicely.
In Miami it would depend on the time of year. Some days in winter are too cold for the beach, you'd need a sweater. Other days are nice. In the spring most days are dry and sunny. Summer and fall is usually hot and humid and the water is warm as well. If you stay in the water you're fine but out of the water you will usually sweat. Although the sea breeze feels fine and I'd rather be there than a deep South city with no beach
Well he's actually asking about cities that aren't sticky in summer, so winter is irrelevant. Miami is sticky everywhere in summer, yes even with "the sea breeze." The sea breeze is nice, but its still blowing over your sticky body
I'm talking about city proper here! Just be glad I didn't include Skellefteå just to p*ss you off
Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe90
Some inconsistency here. While Auckland and Hamilton certainly aren't renown for high dewpoints, they still get higher average summer dewpoints than many bigger cities you've omitted, such as Adelaide, Canberra, Melbourne, Perth, Santiago, Cape Town, Vienna, Budapest. Madrid, Athens and Paris.
I don't think they'll be too bad in summer. I just did anything that was below 25C and not inside the tropics (to avoid high sun angles/altitudes in places like Bogotá and La Paz for example where summers are anything but pleasant if arriving just like that.) I don't think I'd need an AC unit anytime in Auckland given it hardly ever gets above 30C for example
I don't think they'll be too bad in summer. I just did anything that was below 25C and not inside the tropics (to avoid high sun angles/altitudes in places like Bogotá and La Paz for example where summers are anything but pleasant if arriving just like that.) I don't think I'd need an AC unit anytime in Auckland given it hardly ever gets above 30C for example
It's still a stickier climate than those I mentioned, which is the point of the thread.
Anywhere in south central Mexico, e.g. Mexico City and its surrounds. Practically perfect weather, IMO. If it weren't for the smog, it would be ideal.
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