Views : 90,438
Genre: Education
Date of upload: May 20, 2018 ^^
Rating : 4.857 (61/1,651 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2022-03-12T10:30:35.363582Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
I am from southern Brazil, state of Paraná, here we usually have a 0°c during winter nights and mornings, usually going to 8°c or even 12°c during the day. In summer, morning starts at 10°c or 12°c and goes to 25°c or 28°c, i have only seen it going up to 30°c or more just 5 times in 25 years. Its nice to have a bit of ice during winter and also nice to have a good temperature to go to a river in the summer. My city middle temperature for a year is 17°c.
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I'm from England (Oceanic), but I currently live in Japan, and I must say, the humid part of HUMID subtropical really stands out! XD But I do appreciate the milder autumn/winter (for me, it feels about one to two months behind). Also, the prefecture I live in is interesting, because the south, where I live, is Cfa, but the north is actually a Continental climate, so they get WAY more snow up there, the difference is kinda insane, haha
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Hello from subtropical North Carolina. I moved from the high dry climate of Denver, Colorado to the humid subtropical climate of North Carolina (NC) last year and there has definitely been an adjustment. I love how green it is in NC and the forests are positively gorgeous. From what little I have seen, winter can get cold, but not as cold, and it actually rains instead of snowing most of the time. However, the heat and humidity of summer take some getting used to. During the summer it never really feels cool at night or in the morning in NC because of the high humidity levels. It appears to get hotter during the day in Denver, but seems to cool down more at night and into the mornings, and that combined with the lower humidity levels give relief from the heat at least part of the day as a result. Both climates have their advantages and disadvantages and I have enjoyed NC so far.
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I live on the Gold Coast, Australia which has a pretty warm subtropical climate, the yearly average temp being 22c and rainfall about 1,000mm. The summers are quite hot & humid with torrential rain from the tropics (Jan/Feb), the winters are the driest and daily highs around 20c but the Spring and Autumn are amazing, quite dry with daily 25c. The ocean temp ranges from 21-26c.
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Wow, so here in NJ close to New York City is humid sub-tropical and very close to humid continental. Makes sense. We have days in the winter that looks like continental climate but only during an artic blast or cold front when temps can fall to the 10's F (-10 C) at night. We also experiece some winter days where the temps can go to the 50's or 60's F (10's C) but only during a high pressure in the Atlantic. But the average we have here is about upper 30's F to lower 40's F day; upper 20's to lower 30's night on average. We experience snow in the winter and sometimes snow storms; and rain all year round. We experience warm to hot summers. So thats becuase NYC is sub-tropical, near the border of continental. Nice.
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I'm from Venice, and our climate looks like this: the summers are bloody humid, so even if it is 25° it feels like 35°. Days are mostly sunny, though there are occasional brief storms and rainy days. The best time of the day is the evening when the temperature is around 21/22° and there's a nice cold breeze. The autumns are stupidly wet, with days mostly overcast and rainy or foggy. The worst part of the autumn is that you can wake up at 7.00 a.m.with the temperature at 5/10°, while at 3.00 p.m. it's almost at 20°, so you basically have to completely change your clothing based on the time of the day. The best days are the few sunny days, around midday and in the early afternoon, when you can still wear a t-shirt until early December because it's 15° outside. The Winters practically don't exist, as another commenter from Milan said. They're basically just long, drawn-out, colder and dryer autumns. In the morning the temperature is around 0°, but can go up to 15° in the early afternoon on the warmest (and usually foggiest) days. There is very little snowfall, maybe once a year, and it melts in two days anyway. The days are short too, so it's really the worst time of the year: you wake up with the freezing cold outside, it's raining and at midday you don't see or feel the sun in any way. Even if there are 10° the humidity sucks all of the warmth out of you. And even when you're done with school, you're still going to be depressed as it's already night outside and you find yourself wandering around town, slipping on the bridges and (not in 2020 obviously) having to push the bloody tourists around who come here to experience our famous Carnival. Spring is a little better. It's quite like autumn as it rains very often, but the days are longer and thereforw you can experience a lot more sunlight throughout the day, but even more than in autumn the clothes you wear in the morning can't be the same you wear in the afternoon, as on the most extreme days the temperature can go from 2/4° at 6 a.m. to 18/20° at 3.00 pm.
I don't really like the climate in my city. It's just the humidity, you know. If we had the same temperatures but it were dryer we would probably have a Mediterranean climate, while in Milan they would have a continental one, both better options than humid subtropical, in my opinion.
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@Geodiode
3 years ago
Hello all! I hope you enjoyed this presentation of the Humid Subtropical Climate - the most heavily populated of all climate zones. If you're one of the many people that live in these zones, say hi and tell us what you think of the weather there!
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