Enjoy it while you can, it’s only going to get hotter in the years to come.
Define MFW.
My face when you don’t know what MFW stands for and instead of looking it up asked strangers on lemmy:
:|
You’re on the wrong northern hemisphere continent. Europe has been mild AF
Crying in the Swedish rain and 15 degrees Celsius
There’s been a lot of sun so far this summer though. At least up north. Good to have a little rain to stave off the forest fires. 😌👌💧
Gotta say I love Wisconsin in the summer. 64 right now, high of 80 today.
Winters are long and grey tho. But on the other hand, the only natural disasters we see are tornadoes.
You should try the pacific northwest. It gets up into the 90s a few days per year. Not really any natural disasters. Floods I suppose, but as long as you don’t buy a house in a flood plain (why do people build there?) you’ll be fine. No snow, if that’s your thing. Just a lot of rain in the fall/spring/winter.
I’m in Spokane currently and really like the climate, though I’m a weirdo who likes overcoming extreme cold and heat (cold more than heat), and I love the snow, driving in it included. I could honestly take colder and longer winters.
Not really any natural disasters.
We now have smoke season in the PNW. It gets really bad, and last for like a week or 2. I think since like 2018 we have been getting them. Then again, I live in Seattle, and Spokane is a lot further from the mountains.
In Spokane smoke season is just as bad if not worse, it’s a lot dryer here. I have family in the PNW so I visit frequently, and grew up there, so I’m aware of both climates and forest fire season. I’m not sure how mountains are relevant, but in Spokane we’re very close to large forests such as the Colville National Forest, and the Idaho Panhandle National Forest, in addition to forests further north, not to mention brush fires. One last year (called the Gray Fire) burnt down 259 structures and 10,085 acres, according to the fire’s Wikipedia page.
Tl;dr: I’m very aware of fire season, but I generally consider it a sad and unfortunate inconvenience, not a common natural disaster, though in instances like the Gray Fire, it does happen.
Same in Ohio.
To be honest, I find temperatures in the 80s to be perfectly fine. It’s the 2-3 weeks of 90+ that suck