no no no no - hot summers, cold winters. it's not a moderate climate at all there. |
| Miami |
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OP, would you rather skew colder than that? Or warmer than that?
Because cities in Florida/the south will be in that range plus a lot warmer days. Cities in places like Boston and Philadelphia will be in that range plus a lot colder days |
What? Have you never heard of a New England winter? There are MANY days in the single digits let alone lowe than 50. |
Yes it is. A colder winter for, shorter and warmer by the coast but moderate the rest of the year. |
Pretty rare to see 50 degrees in Miami |
Did you too miss the 80 degree upper limit? OP is looking for temperate. Not humid and 90 |
And the question is what are the locations that DON’t go out of range? |
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If there existed this place, wouldn't you think everyone would be talking about it?
It's too hot above 80 degrees anywhere S of NC and I would actually suggest that it's hotter than 80 anywhere in NC. Unless you are exactly on the coast but then I'm pretty sure you may get days that are below 50. 50 degrees is pretty warm yet. You'd have to go S in the winter to a place that's much hotter than 80 anytime other than Fall if you're cut off is 50. Maybe 35 or 40-80 degrees can get you to the coasts of N states on Eastern Shore/coast. I'm just saying on any given Sept day like now, we are ranging 50-80 in a day so for 4 seasons, you cannot possibly believe that anywhere except CA (heavenly areas on earth) range this most of the year! The issue with staying on the coasts of course is sea level rise is getting higher and with global warming comes a lot of change from traditional weather patterns. |
| OP - your question is better asked for cities that are less hot and humid OR less freezing. There's no in between - we're going to get extremes. You go to upstate NY/Boston - gonna be freezing at least 4 months of the year. You go to Carolinas or stay around DMV, gonna be sweating same time frame. |
"The rest of the year" is really doing a lot of work here! I grew up in Rhode Island and go back to visit every year. It is a long, cold, dark, COLD winter. And everyone talks about these glorious New England summers and somehow every time I'm home visiting it's an unusual spell of broiling hot and humid weather. And I am coming from Florida, so it's not like I can't deal with heat! But it's not some balmy paradise. Yeah fall is really nice - best season of the year. Go there for those three months. Spring doesn't really exist anymore. My point is that you do not move to RI or Connecticut if what you're searching for is a nice mild climate. |
True, but it's 70 to 80 in November, December, January, February. Four months. I suppose the same might be true in upstate new york May to September. |
| ^^ I meant 50 to 80 in upstate NY |
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I'd take a look at Greenville, South Carolina. Just checked and their Jan temps average in the 50s. June, July, Aug might get hotter than you want - but at least the thing I am looking at says it's a high of 90, and a low in the 70s - so that probably means you'll mostly get days in the 80s. Which seems pretty reasonable for a mild climate the rest of the year.
We stopped through Greenville a couple of years ago and really liked it. Like enough that we started looking up house listings. I know some people who live there and really love it. |
I think OP is referring to temps OUTDOORS. |