I'm here in Omaha but have lived in South Dakota. I learned quickly to layer up and prepare for the worst. I always dressed for the possibility of my vehicle breaking down and I would possibly have to walk. I still dress for the worst in winter.
I live in Northern Maine. I can see Canada from here. I know cold for real. Couple years ago, we had an arctic blast. It was -45 with wind chill less than that. It literally froze my doors shut. I had ice inside my house where doors or windows were. It was insane. Furnace ran every 5 to 10 min, for over 24 hours. Then it ran every 15ish minutes. It was nuts.
A blizzard has an actual definition: A violent snowstorm with winds blowing at a minimum speed of 35 miles (56 kilometers) per hour and visibility of less than one-quarter mile (400 meters) for three hours.
The limited visibility due to blowing snow is the most important part of that definition. In a sufficiently _severe_ blizzard, you can't see your hand in front of your face.
And that's a minimum. They can be a lot worse. They worst I've experienced was wind up to 80 MPH and visibility was about 15 feet. We, and 45 others broke into a gas station in Crook, Colorado, and spent the night there. In the morning, the cows outside were frozen solid, standing up.
I was outside Heaney Hall on UMD campus shoveling my car the night they set the record low in Tower and Embarrass... it was much warmer in Duluth that evening, maybe -15 F with -30 windchill.
The Lake keeps Duluth (downtown anyway) warmer unless it's frozen. I'm on the Range & life went on as usual that day here. Like it does whatever the temp/wind chill is in winter. @@chouseification
@@OrondeBranch at least the mosquitos aren't out for most of the year 😂 I would rather have the cold temps & snow than hurricanes, earthquakes, etc. Actually, I live in the Iron Range & the few active Iron ore mines that surround my hometown blast weekly & I read that they are similar to a category 3 on the Richter scale & most locals don't even notice them unless it's completely quiet.
My great Uncle was a traveling preacher in Buffalo around 1900-1912 and he had to go between 2 churches in a one horse carriage. He did one church each week. Can you imagine traveling in that winter weather every year? Ironically, he died when he was run over by a carriage.
I grew up in Alaska and we still had to walk to the bus stop and go to school at -60 F and colder. There were no “snow days” and the school never closed. The only reprieve was if the school bus didn’t start due to cold. Now I live on the west coast in a wayyy warmer area and am so intolerant to cold, even if it is in the fifties like now. So cold right now, watching this video with 4 blankets on. Don’t know how we did it except no choice.
You must have suffered a freezing body experience at least once. It is a fact that people who have suffered frost bite, and other adverse cold experiences become less tolerant to cold thereafter. I did. I became overexposed during work aboard a Naval vessel in Maryland one winter. Before that, I handled cold just fine. In high school I freaked out friends when I took off my coat and walked to school in the snow in short sleeves. Cold became a real problem for me after being hospitalized the one time.
@@aTheoryofFlight it simply meant I had to behave differently with cold after that. What happened was, I had to be on deck, with waves washing up and drenching us. I had to remain on deck because visibility was very low, so I was eyes for the coxwain. I ended up so cold, I was barely conscious of my surroundings as I walked to the closest building, and collapsed. I was hospitalized where they worried my internal temperature threatened to start shutting down organ functions, but I survived, and was back to work a couple of days later. The good news is, every winter after, I invested in lots of really nice sweaters. 😄 Thanks for caring. ❤️
Bro, in America nobody tells you can't go outside just because its cold 😂 you have free will unless its some emergency situation where they need to clear roads ASAP. The risk is on you always
Alabama here. It is 64 degrees fahrenheit right now. Few nights ago our low was 27 degrees fahrenheit. Feels like bipolar weather to me. Southerners don't do cold weather well. But we also complain when it's 100 degrees and 99 percent humidity. Like an oven. Our Autumn/Fall weather is absolutely the best and most beautiful.
Good movie but none of takes place in Fargo. It’s all in Brainerd, Minnesota or the Twin Cities. I believe the two bad guys have a came from Fargo to Brainerd. It is based on a true story.
Yes, anything by the Coen brothers is genius, and “Fargo” is a classic. Very dark humor, interesting storyline, great acting. Gently pokes fun at the polite manners (covering murderous urges in a few) and extreme accents of those of us living in the Upper Midwest. A must-see for your movie reactions list 🙌💯
I'm in Eveleth & took my 2 year old to my parents house 2 miles away & went to work in Virginia as usual at Target. I looked at my old calendar to see if I noted anything different about the day a few years ago - I wrote that the record was set at -60°F but I didn't write down any wind chill or that I stayed home.
@jameshyde149 The video might have had a limit on what they call a city. International Falls has a population of just over 5000. (Says the boy from Souris, ND, pop. 37)
My father was from Indiana and was stationed in Warrington, England during WW2. I remember him saying that Indiana had much lower winter temperatures than Warrington but it felt much colder in Warrington than in Indiana. He said it was the dampness that made it feel colder.
What part of Indiana? There's actually a big difference between the northern and southern ends. I grew up in far southwest Indiana and going below 20 was rare. My first winter in Chicago was an "experience."
@MrEdwinhardesty yeah, it does. I'm in Springfield now and we have the same temps as Terre Haute. But it can be surprising the how 90 miles can make a difference
@@CortexNewsService, I'm sure it does make a difference. I remember my father saying that when he was a kid he would wake up with ice on his pillow from his breath in the morning. I guess the houses weren't well insulated back then in the 1920's. We need to be thankfull for our nice comfortable homes we have today.
Don't remember exactly how cold it was but it was running -30~something and had a windchill taking it colder. Jumped in my car to head home and the wonderful vinyl seats shattered! Little bits flew everywhere - I'd never seen anything like it. I've never bought another car with vinyl seats!
In 1965, we had a blizzard in Minneapolis, Minnesota on March 17th. A month later we had massive flooding and the Mississippi River went into our neighbors backyard. On May 6 we had several tornadoes that caused a lot of damage. It was a crazy year! I was 11 years old
The winter of 96-97 ND had 8 major blizzards, the last one blowing for 3 days. Snow piled 8 ft high on the berms. Then a month later it was people's belongings stacked along the streets after 90% of Grand Forks was evacuated due to flooding, and downtown caught fire. We still measure time in Before Flood and After Flood.
In northern Minnesota, in the mid '70s, day three of a 5-day blizzard my mother made me go out to take care of the chickens. The chicken coop was about 500 ft from the house. I filled a 5 gallon pail with scalding hot water from the bathtub and by the time I got to the chicken coop there was a quarter inch of ice on the top of the pail. I went in and all but one of the heat lamps had burned out I replaced them, I put down fresh straw, removed the frozen eggs (which we could use) and a few chickens that also died. The waterer had frozen and I thawed it out and filled it with the fresh water. I also put down some fresh feed. The temperature was -82° F wind-chill. There were some years that we had 15 foot tall snow drifts in the farm yard which was great for kids burrowing out snow forts.
The same blizzard hit the Chicago area. It was the funnest snow storm I remember from my childhood. We had snow that was 4-5 feet high (1 - 1 1/2 meters) and we had mazes dug into the snow we couldn't see over. It was like a hedge maze but with snow instead.
Here in Brookfield, WI (suburb in the metro area of Milwaukee) it's 40 F (5 C) right now. Pretty warm for this time of year. If it was 15 degrees higher, I'd be wearing shorts.
Green Bay, Wisconsin 31 °F, but the main point that wasn't brought up is that colder area's have way more indoor sports and Event Facilities to enjoy life all year round...
The reason you don't see more Alaska places on this list is because we have so few cities in Alaska. I have a friend who lived in the town of Galena, AK. One week it reached 80*F below zero and colder. They had to take the oil pan warmer from their car and put it in the home heating fuel tank because the fuel had turned to gel and wouldn't flow to the furnace.
@@shawnmiller4781 except that Duluth is right there at lake Superior and it does moderate the temps an amazing amount, but only in the downtown area which is down by the harbor. When you go up to by the airport, you're dealing with the same weather you get on the iron range. Lots of cold lots of fog lots of snow etc depending on where you are on the hillside in Duluth.
@@shawnmiller4781 yet I think you would actually be amazed standing in Duluth harbor in the middle of the winter and being very clearly surrounded by the obvious heat buffering effects of quadrillions of gallons of water right next to you. You don't need an active Gulf stream when you've got an inland ocean.
Rain that freezes into pellets as it falls is called sleet. Hail is precipitation that consists of globules of ice resulting from updrafts repeatedly being blown to tops of thunderstorms and freezing additional layers of water. Sleet occurs only in cold weather. Hail can occur in summer.
My first winter in Jackson Hole Wyoming was 1977-78. On New Year's Eve we woke up to our landlord calling to see if we were okay. We had a gas stove in our little 600 square foot cabin. There was frost on the interior walls of the bedroom but we were oblivious to what was happening to the rest of the people in the valley. It was minus 65 degrees fahrenheit outside and the power lines had gotten so cold that the cable TV and power lines pulled apart. People who were on ski vacation couldn't start their cars to drive to the airport for their flights. I put on my down ski jacket and walked outside. The air was still with ice crystals floating in the air. Then within a few weeks we were shoveling snow up to our waists and shoulders just to get from our car to our front door. For some reason there doesn't seem to be documentation of any of this but we lived through it and it was an incredible welcome to northwestern Wyoming. A great place to live back then that has changed with a warming climate and an influx of super wealthy people over the past half century.
Canadian here. This winter we have had a cold snap a week ago. We got over 1.3metres of snow over two days and it dropped to -30C overnight. You dress for it and move on. "Brisk out yesterday eh?" is all the comment you would get.
I'm in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan one year my dad, uncle & I drove new boats to Michigan & it was insane it gets cold here, but Michigan had like 4 feet of snow
I am in Northeastern Minnesota (an hour north of Duluth) & I always look at the temperature in Yellowknife to make me feel better about our temperature 😂
Grew up in Northern Minnesota, worked in Williston ND a few years back... currently live in Florida, but I'm looking to move away from the hurricane zone. Almost anywhere you go in the U.S. there is some sort of natural disaster, if it's not blizzards it's hurricanes or earthquakes or tornadoes. It's just what you have to prepare for in whatever area you live.
Yeah. And Fairbanks is an inland city, a few hundred miles from the ocean. All the cities listed are well away from any coast. The Great Lakes do moderate temperatures somewhat, but not nearly as much as the ocean.
It's not about the east side, just about the cities mostly being on or near the ocean. In the Northern Hemisphere, the warm currents come up the west side and turn east between 40 and 60 N latitude. Then as they go south along the east side, they slowly warm up, but because the water is far cooler than it was going up the west side, and thus moderates the daily high temps for the adjacent cities, it's known as a cold current. However, the direction of heat flow is still from south to north, even as the water is slowly moving south. Bottom line is that Alaska would be a little warmer than it is if the currents were counter-clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere, but they're still obviously far warmer than they would be if there _were_ no currents.
@@shawnmiller4781 Yeah .. was 51-55 I think ... remember little but had photos of my dad pulling a toboggan to the store with mom in .. I swear .. furs with fur trimmed hood. Another age altogether.
First 12 years of my life were in southeast South Dakota. I used to go out barefoot in shorts and t-shirt to cool off when it was -10°f with 3-4ft of snow on the ground. It usually took 30 min for me to want to come back in during that. I had been doing that starting at 3 years old. I still have no issues going out in sandals and shorts when temps are above 0°f. The coldest winter I remember had a wind chill of -72°f. (the KELO news station reported it as -43°f without wind chill, despite no record apparently having any evidence of it) Summers also got up over 100°f with 95% humidity with no precipitation most years. I am absolutely a cold-weather person. (had 3 instances of heat stroke, so I can't handle heat above 85°f for any significant length of time anymore)
You haven't lived until you can take a pot of boiling water, go outside and sling the water out of the pan and have the water freeze before it hits the ground. When you can do that, you know that layers won't matter.
Re: That thumbnail. You wouldn't see that snow like that around for much longer when it is 41 degrees out. You have to have feet of snow for it to stick around in high 30 F and 40 F weather especially when it is clear and sunny. Thank effing God too. We've enjoyed a warm winter the last few years. Cranked out the snowblower last week for the first time in a few years for little bit of snow we had.
45f (about 7c) and pouring rain here! I lived in Alaska most of my life. It's cold, but it's a dry cold. I'll take it over the cold in North Dakota or the Great Lakes region.
Here in Michigan it is currently a very nice day with a temperature of 39F (+4C). However, just last Sunday (22nd) we had a more typical December day with a high of 22F (-5C) and a low of 16F (-9C) with a wind chill of 8F (-13).
It is currently 51F and cloudy in my part of Texas. The coldest I've ever dealt with was when I was living in eastern Colorado, it got down to -23F with a -39F windchill.
As a person who lives in Canada 🍁, the thing that you don’t realize is that when you go outside, and you DO go outside in -40 if you need to, you only have to wait for your limbs to go numb, and then it’s sort of tolerable. It’s going back INSIDE that can be the problem when your limbs start to defrost! 😂
I’m just north of Tampa, Florida. Our high today was 78F (26C). But we deserve these nice winters since about 8-9 months of the year are miserably hot and humid.
35 year Wisconsin Native here, last winter we hit -50F with the wind chill. The day before yesterday we were at -5F , but right now it’s super nice and warm out at 40F. Was able to wear shorts today
it's 70f here in SW Florida at 10:30pm and feeling a little chilly. I grew up in upstate NY where we had a lot of snow and cold winters. When I was brought home from the hospital as a baby it was -14F.
Fargo, North Dakota. I had to stop because it's my city in the thumbnail. 33°F/1°C Dec 26 3:30 Pm All 'cities' in North and South Dakota are transportation hubs. Heck, even in Blizzards and floods, life goes on. But I worked feeding college kids or grocery stores. We also hit 100°F regularly in summer. The majority of the population of Alaska have warmer winters than Minnesota/North Dakota. Winds off the ocean keep the weather a bit more stable.
When you're a Euro and youre desperately fishing for content. This is old news, and you're realizing that without USA content, your watches sink. But we hate the USA is the Euro slogan.
I've lived in Grand Forks, ND most of my life. Today's not so bad, 35F, but a few weeks ago we had several days with highs below zero. Facebook reminded me that in 2009 we had a blizzard that started Christmas Eve and lasted through Boxing Day, dumping over 25" ig snow. I had to push with all my might to open the door. Of course in summer we have many days over 90F, so it balances out.
😂 And here’s me, a Michigander, thinking “I really should get some work done out in the barn while it’s so warm.” It’s 37F/2.7C, and unusually warm for this time of year. The coldest 27 December I can remember was when it was -10F/-23C. The windchill was somewhere around -25F, and we’d gotten 14 inches/31cm of snow the night before. I had to scrounge up an incandescent bulb for my work light and put it in the engine compartment of my car so it would start the next morning.
I think your family should give it a go sometime. Book a stay during the season at a ski resort. Rent a cabin, and hit the slopes for a ski lesson. Cold has its own kind of charm when you do it right. Make snow angels. Hope for a wet snow, so you can make a snowman ⛄. All the outdoor adventure is rewarded with a nice cup of cocoa ☕ next to a crackling fireplace. 🔥🧱 Forget the gas fakes, burning some logs has its own ambience. 🪵🔥🧱 By the way, tiny marshmallows are fine, but my favorite cocoa is to hang one of the tiny candy canes on the edge of the cup, so the long end reaches down into the drink. OMG, yum!
9pm 12/26 12F / -11C in Troy, NY - just another day in winter! PS James if you really want a shock react to the snowiest cities in America, #1 will probably shock you
Today in Milwaukee Wisconsin it’s 45 degrees, I love the cold so I won’t wear a jacket. When I was in high school back in the 80’s we had -50 degrees below zero.
13:15 Sault Ste Marie gets a lot of Lake Effect snow. Lake Superior doesn't usually freeze completely, so Lake Effect snow affects all of the shoreline communities. When the lake isn't covered in ice, it helps keep those same communities warmer than the communities that are farther inland.
It's 25 degrees right now on Long Island . It got down to 9 about a week ago , but it's supposed to hit 60 in the next several days .Around Thanksgiving this year the Buffalo , NY area had a real blizzard that dumped 40-50 inches of snow there .
There's days in January where Duluth doesn't get above zero. I live about 55 miles north of Duluth & we can have long periods without reaching zero. Lots of times, we can be well below zero (think -30°F & colder) the whole month of January. Duluth is on a hill, so if Lake Superior isn't frozen, they can get lots of lake effect snow & the open water keeps the shoreline communities warmer than on top of the hill & farther away like my hometown.
14:29 in northern Minnesota, we can easily have a 50+ temperature swing in 24 hours during the cold part of winter. -40°F for a low to above zero highs during daylight hours isn't uncommon, especially when you factor in wind chill. You can survive most of the exteme temperatures if you know what you are doing & have access to shelter. Bigger cities have things like skywalk systems & tunnels so you can get around the schools, hospitals, city centers, etc easier.
These temperatures are why an inventor in Grand Forks, ND invented a device to keep the engines of vehicles warm, so they can be started on these cold days. There was a time when people would ask about cords hanging out the front of the grille, and people responded that we tie our cars down because they are so wild. These cold temps are nothing compared to having 2 feet of fresh snow and winds over 40mph added in. I sometimes wonder if we live here just to say we can handle being out in these temperatures. People must remember that we can go for weeks without getting above zero F and months without getting above freezing.
I live in Chicago we prepare for the heat and the cold you prepare for it year-round. The hottest places death valley and the coldest places are in Alaska.
Here in Rhode Island, near the ocean, the temperature at 3:30 PM is a seasonal 38 F (3 C). But it's not unpleasant because it's sunny and dry with little wind. Two weeks ago, we had heavy wind and rain at this temperature, which felt much colder. Last weekend we had a low of 8 F (minus 13 C), fortunately without wind. People are allowed to go outdoors in the extreme cold, although there might be a warning. Several times in my twenties I skied in windchills of minus 50 to 60 F (minus 45.6 to minus 51.1). I'm now too old to do that again voluntarily.
Not so bad right now at 05:35 north of Atlanta in Georgia. It's 43F / 6C. Last day of relative warmth before rain comes before the January cold (lows about 24F /-4C).
In Chicago, it isn't the cold. It's the wind... I remember several days with a wind chill below -20 °F. Luckily, I live in California. 54 degrees F atm (12 degrees C).
The high here today is 10 degrees Celsius. I live in a relatively warm part of the US. We get snow that sticks maybe twice a year. Ice storms are a bigger problem during the winter because fallen tree limbs can take out the power for several days if it's widespread.
Ice storms are bad because falling tree branches don’t just take out a few major power lines. Instead, they take out the power lines of individual houses, for lots and lots of houses. Larger shared power lines generally have better maintenance with pruning of nearby tree limbs, but not so much for individual houses.
Here we are in Jacksonville, FL and it's actually cold today (for us) and the high was 15c, rainy and overcast. However, by the weekend we'll be sunny and close to 23c. Winter in north FL is mild but can get a bit chilly at night.
Yes, you should watch the movie "Fargo", which oddly only briefly takes place in that city and the rest of it is mostly in Brainerd, Minnesota and surrounding areas. The movie was famous for its attempt to reproduce the Minnesota accent (which forms part of the humor since other Americans laugh at our accent), and in some cases they got it right (Yah shoor, ya betcha dey did!).
im in oklahoma its dec 27 6:12 am 38f outside now not too bad..i used to live in colorado i remember a couple of months growing up below zero in the winters there
I had a friend who was in the US Marine reserves . The unit went to Alaska for cold weather training but had to relocate to Minnesota to complete the training.
Also remember if you add in wind speed to those cold temperatures the “real feel” temperature feels colder. So 7F can feel like -30f depending on the wind speed.
December, 27th, about 12:30am. Right now in western Connecticut it’s 20ºf (-6.7ºc), not too bad for this time of the year. Lowest temp I’ve ever been out in was -32ºf (-35.6ºc) and lowest windchill was -83ºf (-63.9ºc). That was a bad night.
The movie "Fargo" takes place mostly in Minnesota. It's a quirky dark comedy, worth checking out for the actor's dedication to getting the regional accent just right. Recommended.
I live just outside of Fairbanks now and have for about 10 years. It’s a toasty 5 degrees F right now. I grew up in the Midwest and I maintain that the Midwest feels colder. It’s never windy in the winter here and it’s so dry it doesn’t feel quite as bad.
I live in Aberdeen, SD. I say if it's above 0F, it's not cold yet. One winter I started my car to warm it up. As I tried to get out of my car, the metal door handle broke off in my hand it was so cold outside.
It's 3 C right now where I live in Minnesota. About an hour South of Duluth and Lake Superior. Next week the temp will drop into the -10 c range during the day and -16 C at night. I've personally seen the temp go down to -40 where both temperature scales meet.
I live in a small town in Missouri called Milan. This week the high temperature will be 51F/11C and the low will be 12F/-11C. The coldest temperature I have ever been in was -25F, that was in Park City, Utah in 1987 or 1988.
Here in Colorado I just saw for temps for the next few days. They say we will get close to 60 degrees down in Denver on Sat. But the upcoming week it'll be close to where your at now.
It's 44F (6.67C) here in northern Georgia, which is pretty seasonal for this time of year. In the summer, it can get up to 106F (41.1C), and the record low here is -5F (-20.6C)... and we're at LAT 33.76N (versus 51.5N for London)... so we get some pretty wild temperature swings.
I live in Southern Minnesota and I think the coldest temperature I’ve ever experienced is 30 below (Fahrenheit). At that level you just pray your car starts so you can go about your day because life goes on! Things rarely get canceled because of this so you just gotta layer the hell up!! (And I mean really layer up-multiple sweaters, a shirt underneath and obviously a really thick winter jacket)
I grew up in St. Paul, MN. We say, "No such thing as bad weather---just inadequate clothing!
I'm here in Omaha but have lived in South Dakota. I learned quickly to layer up and prepare for the worst. I always dressed for the possibility of my vehicle breaking down and I would possibly have to walk. I still dress for the worst in winter.
In winter you can always add layers. In summer you can only take off so much.
When you hear a tree explode when sap freezes ,you know it is cold.
In the south when those ice storms hit trees cracking, popping, falling, transformers blowing up. It sounds eerie.
I live in Northern Maine. I can see Canada from here. I know cold for real. Couple years ago, we had an arctic blast. It was -45 with wind chill less than that. It literally froze my doors shut. I had ice inside my house where doors or windows were. It was insane. Furnace ran every 5 to 10 min, for over 24 hours. Then it ran every 15ish minutes. It was nuts.
A blizzard has an actual definition: A violent snowstorm with winds blowing at a minimum speed of 35 miles (56 kilometers) per hour and visibility of less than one-quarter mile (400 meters) for three hours.
I've been through several of them. They're extremely common in the midwest, and lake effect region.
The limited visibility due to blowing snow is the most important part of that definition. In a sufficiently _severe_ blizzard, you can't see your hand in front of your face.
And that's a minimum. They can be a lot worse. They worst I've experienced was wind up to 80 MPH and visibility was about 15 feet. We, and 45 others broke into a gas station in Crook, Colorado, and spent the night there. In the morning, the cows outside were frozen solid, standing up.
We get blizzards meeting that definition here in Northern Nevada. It's not like Las Vegas for most of our state.
Duluth, MN, 34f ... Unseasonably warm for this time of year... Any day now, we are going back down to -30f...
I was outside Heaney Hall on UMD campus shoveling my car the night they set the record low in Tower and Embarrass... it was much warmer in Duluth that evening, maybe -15 F with -30 windchill.
Yeah, up at 40 in Omaha, it's shorts weather lmfao
The Lake keeps Duluth (downtown anyway) warmer unless it's frozen. I'm on the Range & life went on as usual that day here. Like it does whatever the temp/wind chill is in winter. @@chouseification
Yeah you guys are not human I swear. It gets cold in Detroit and Chicago but ummm….MN is DIFFERENT 😂
@@OrondeBranch at least the mosquitos aren't out for most of the year 😂 I would rather have the cold temps & snow than hurricanes, earthquakes, etc. Actually, I live in the Iron Range & the few active Iron ore mines that surround my hometown blast weekly & I read that they are similar to a category 3 on the Richter scale & most locals don't even notice them unless it's completely quiet.
Though not as cold as other places, Buffalo NY gets an average of 92 inches of snow every year because it's position on one of the great lakes.
I was shocked when I learned that Toronto gets less snow than Buffalo.
Last time I checked Buffalo, NY is placed between Lake Erie and Lake Ontario. It gets hit with lake effect snow from TWO of the Great Lakes.
My great Uncle was a traveling preacher in Buffalo around 1900-1912 and he had to go between 2 churches in a one horse carriage. He did one church each week. Can you imagine traveling in that winter weather every year? Ironically, he died when he was run over by a carriage.
@@tejida815 Toronto is on the NORTH side of Lake Erie and doesn't actually border on Lake Huron.
@ I see. It’s just that, in Philadelphia to me, Toronto means 🥶 and ❄️ . 😉 MidAtlantic misconception.
-10 F is quite balmy when you're cross country skiing in the woods, you actually sweat and have to reduce layers.
It's 38 F right now, but that's pretty warm for Western PA in the mountains right now.
I grew up in Alaska and we still had to walk to the bus stop and go to school at -60 F and colder. There were no “snow days” and the school never closed. The only reprieve was if the school bus didn’t start due to cold. Now I live on the west coast in a wayyy warmer area and am so intolerant to cold, even if it is in the fifties like now. So cold right now, watching this video with 4 blankets on. Don’t know how we did it except no choice.
in the 50's and you're cold? and your Alaskan. I am waaaaay down in Key West and even 50's is shorts weather and I am a native conch.
@ Yeah, I think I might be sick :( don’t understand why I have this reaction to cold now.
You must have suffered a freezing body experience at least once. It is a fact that people who have suffered frost bite, and other adverse cold experiences become less tolerant to cold thereafter. I did. I became overexposed during work aboard a Naval vessel in Maryland one winter. Before that, I handled cold just fine. In high school I freaked out friends when I took off my coat and walked to school in the snow in short sleeves.
Cold became a real problem for me after being hospitalized the one time.
@@JoPerry-by3wd I’m so sorry you experienced that :( I didn’t know about how that could affect someone. I hope you are ok.
@@aTheoryofFlight it simply meant I had to behave differently with cold after that. What happened was, I had to be on deck, with waves washing up and drenching us. I had to remain on deck because visibility was very low, so I was eyes for the coxwain.
I ended up so cold, I was barely conscious of my surroundings as I walked to the closest building, and collapsed. I was hospitalized where they worried my internal temperature threatened to start shutting down organ functions, but I survived, and was back to work a couple of days later.
The good news is, every winter after, I invested in lots of really nice sweaters. 😄
Thanks for caring. ❤️
Bro, in America nobody tells you can't go outside just because its cold 😂 you have free will unless its some emergency situation where they need to clear roads ASAP. The risk is on you always
Alabama here. It is 64 degrees fahrenheit right now. Few nights ago our low was 27 degrees fahrenheit. Feels like bipolar weather to me. Southerners don't do cold weather well. But we also complain when it's 100 degrees and 99 percent humidity. Like an oven. Our Autumn/Fall weather is absolutely the best and most beautiful.
In Winter, International Falls, Minnesota is the coldest city in the contiguous U.S. to get recognition on most TV weather maps.
The movie "Fargo" is a hoot. It's about murder, but you'll laugh anyway. And the accents!
Good movie but none of takes place in Fargo. It’s all in Brainerd, Minnesota or the Twin Cities. I believe the two bad guys have a came from Fargo to Brainerd. It is based on a true story.
Yes, anything by the Coen brothers is genius, and “Fargo” is a classic. Very dark humor, interesting storyline, great acting. Gently pokes fun at the polite manners (covering murderous urges in a few) and extreme accents of those of us living in the Upper Midwest. A must-see for your movie reactions list 🙌💯
Yes, you absolutely need to watch the movie “Fargo”. The last big blizzard here in Chicagoland was in 2011. Cold winters/hot summers.
Definitely watch "Fargo" -based on true events.
I lived on the iron range in minnesota ,February 2 1996 in Tower Mn the record temp was broken with a low of-60°F.
I'm in Eveleth & took my 2 year old to my parents house 2 miles away & went to work in Virginia as usual at Target. I looked at my old calendar to see if I noted anything different about the day a few years ago - I wrote that the record was set at -60°F but I didn't write down any wind chill or that I stayed home.
Aurora here :)
I always thought International Falls was colder than Duluth. I live in Superior so I always watch the weather from Duluth TV stations.
@jameshyde149 The video might have had a limit on what they call a city. International Falls has a population of just over 5000. (Says the boy from Souris, ND, pop. 37)
@@hollyheikkinen4698 I was in Eveleth from 95-13
My father was from Indiana and was stationed in Warrington, England during WW2. I remember him saying that Indiana had much lower winter temperatures than Warrington but it felt much colder in Warrington than in Indiana. He said it was the dampness that made it feel colder.
What part of Indiana? There's actually a big difference between the northern and southern ends. I grew up in far southwest Indiana and going below 20 was rare. My first winter in Chicago was an "experience."
@@CortexNewsService, Terre Haute. It gets plenty cold there in the winter.
@MrEdwinhardesty yeah, it does. I'm in Springfield now and we have the same temps as Terre Haute. But it can be surprising the how 90 miles can make a difference
@@CortexNewsService, I'm sure it does make a difference. I remember my father saying that when he was a kid he would wake up with ice on his pillow from his breath in the morning. I guess the houses weren't well insulated back then in the 1920's. We need to be thankfull for our nice comfortable homes we have today.
Don't remember exactly how cold it was but it was running -30~something and had a windchill taking it colder. Jumped in my car to head home and the wonderful vinyl seats shattered! Little bits flew everywhere - I'd never seen anything like it. I've never bought another car with vinyl seats!
Vinyl seats are terrible in heat as well - crack and peel. Cloth is the best way to go IMO.
In 1965, we had a blizzard in Minneapolis, Minnesota on March 17th. A month later we had massive flooding and the Mississippi River went into our neighbors backyard. On May 6 we had several tornadoes that caused a lot of damage. It was a crazy year! I was 11 years old
I was 7 in 65 and I remember that winter very well. Everyone in the neighborhood was out digging out the street. We had huge drifts everywhere.
The winter of 96-97 ND had 8 major blizzards, the last one blowing for 3 days. Snow piled 8 ft high on the berms. Then a month later it was people's belongings stacked along the streets after 90% of Grand Forks was evacuated due to flooding, and downtown caught fire. We still measure time in Before Flood and After Flood.
In northern Minnesota, in the mid '70s, day three of a 5-day blizzard my mother made me go out to take care of the chickens. The chicken coop was about 500 ft from the house. I filled a 5 gallon pail with scalding hot water from the bathtub and by the time I got to the chicken coop there was a quarter inch of ice on the top of the pail. I went in and all but one of the heat lamps had burned out I replaced them, I put down fresh straw, removed the frozen eggs (which we could use) and a few chickens that also died. The waterer had frozen and I thawed it out and filled it with the fresh water. I also put down some fresh feed. The temperature was -82° F wind-chill. There were some years that we had 15 foot tall snow drifts in the farm yard which was great for kids burrowing out snow forts.
The same blizzard hit the Chicago area. It was the funnest snow storm I remember from my childhood. We had snow that was 4-5 feet high (1 - 1 1/2 meters) and we had mazes dug into the snow we couldn't see over. It was like a hedge maze but with snow instead.
That was probably 1977. We had 100 below wind chill for a while. Since then they have revised the windchill scale so we won't see that number again.
Here in Brookfield, WI (suburb in the metro area of Milwaukee)
it's 40 F (5 C) right now. Pretty warm for this time of year. If it was
15 degrees higher, I'd be wearing shorts.
I live in MN I bet there is coatless or and short pants people out now!
Ya know it. 35 degrees in the lower penninsula of Michigan during January and it is tee shirt and shorts. LUL
Brace yourself.
Ryan Hall y'all says you will be much colder pretty soon.
Come up to St. Germain. We'll go to the snowmobile bikini runs. Being cold is a state of mind
Nothing better than ice fishing😂 a big plus is no mosquitoes
Unfortunately mosquitos don't respond to threats or menace
Yah, no skeeters. But the beer freezes. Plus launching the boat is a stone cold bitch. 😁
Green Bay, Wisconsin 31 °F, but the main point that wasn't brought up is that colder area's have way more indoor sports and Event Facilities to enjoy life all year round...
But not Lambeau Field!😂 But we Cheeseheads wouldn’t have it any other way. Go Pack!
The reason you don't see more Alaska places on this list is because we have so few cities in Alaska.
I have a friend who lived in the town of Galena, AK. One week it reached 80*F below zero and colder. They had to take the oil pan warmer from their car and put it in the home heating fuel tank because the fuel had turned to gel and wouldn't flow to the furnace.
Notice that all these cold cities are located in the interior.
They don’t have water/oceans nearby to moderate temps
@@shawnmiller4781 except that Duluth is right there at lake Superior and it does moderate the temps an amazing amount, but only in the downtown area which is down by the harbor. When you go up to by the airport, you're dealing with the same weather you get on the iron range. Lots of cold lots of fog lots of snow etc depending on where you are on the hillside in Duluth.
@ You still don’t get warm water currents like the Gulf Stream and the Japanese current you get in the ocean
@@shawnmiller4781 yet I think you would actually be amazed standing in Duluth harbor in the middle of the winter and being very clearly surrounded by the obvious heat buffering effects of quadrillions of gallons of water right next to you. You don't need an active Gulf stream when you've got an inland ocean.
The Midwest is having a warm stretch currently, it's 48°F (9°C) in Chicago (4:30pm Dec. 26) and predicting 51°F(10.5°C) for Saturday the 28th.
Rain that freezes into pellets as it falls is called sleet. Hail is precipitation that consists of globules of ice resulting from updrafts repeatedly being blown to tops of thunderstorms and freezing additional layers of water. Sleet occurs only in cold weather. Hail can occur in summer.
Then you have graupel, essentially the winter version of hail.
My first winter in Jackson Hole Wyoming was 1977-78. On New Year's Eve we woke up to our landlord calling to see if we were okay. We had a gas stove in our little 600 square foot cabin. There was frost on the interior walls of the bedroom but we were oblivious to what was happening to the rest of the people in the valley. It was minus 65 degrees fahrenheit outside and the power lines had gotten so cold that the cable TV and power lines pulled apart. People who were on ski vacation couldn't start their cars to drive to the airport for their flights. I put on my down ski jacket and walked outside. The air was still with ice crystals floating in the air. Then within a few weeks we were shoveling snow up to our waists and shoulders just to get from our car to our front door. For some reason there doesn't seem to be documentation of any of this but we lived through it and it was an incredible welcome to northwestern Wyoming. A great place to live back then that has changed with a warming climate and an influx of super wealthy people over the past half century.
41F requires a turtleneck with a light sweater.
I was out today in a tshirt and a fleece that I didn't bother to zip. Oh, and Crocs. Mid 40s °F.
Canadian here. This winter we have had a cold snap a week ago. We got over 1.3metres of snow over two days and it dropped to -30C overnight. You dress for it and move on. "Brisk out yesterday eh?" is all the comment you would get.
I live in the "snowbelt" of northeast Ohio. One of 2 locations on the globe that have "lake effect" snow. We get several feet of snow a year.
I'm in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
one year my dad, uncle & I drove new boats to Michigan
& it was insane
it gets cold here, but Michigan had like 4 feet of snow
Canada says, "Hold my Molesons!"
I am in Northeastern Minnesota (an hour north of Duluth) & I always look at the temperature in Yellowknife to make me feel better about our temperature 😂
Grew up in Northern Minnesota, worked in Williston ND a few years back... currently live in Florida, but I'm looking to move away from the hurricane zone. Almost anywhere you go in the U.S. there is some sort of natural disaster, if it's not blizzards it's hurricanes or earthquakes or tornadoes. It's just what you have to prepare for in whatever area you live.
Need to move to maine then
Here in San Diego, California, we are having nights at 10°C / 50°F and days at 22°C / 70°F ... typical winter weather.
-47 degrees. Thumbnail missing the minus sign
I am a cold weather person, and so is my husband, but Not freezing.😅 sending ❤ from Southern CALIFORNIA. 🇺🇲
The reason for so few Alaska cities is that Alaska, like equally northerly British Isles and Scandinavia, is on the east side of an ocean.
Yeah. And Fairbanks is an inland city, a few hundred miles from the ocean. All the cities listed are well away from any coast. The Great Lakes do moderate temperatures somewhat, but not nearly as much as the ocean.
It's not about the east side, just about the cities mostly being on or near the ocean.
In the Northern Hemisphere, the warm currents come up the west side and turn east between 40 and 60 N latitude. Then as they go south along the east side, they slowly warm up, but because the water is far cooler than it was going up the west side, and thus moderates the daily high temps for the adjacent cities, it's known as a cold current. However, the direction of heat flow is still from south to north, even as the water is slowly moving south.
Bottom line is that Alaska would be a little warmer than it is if the currents were counter-clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere, but they're still obviously far warmer than they would be if there _were_ no currents.
Fargo was filmed in Bemiji MN
Definitely see the movie "Fargo", even though most of the movie is based in Minnesota.
Pretty much all of it
It was filmed in Bemiji
Huh. I lived in Fairbanks as a kid .. in the Territory of Alaska
Pre 1959 then
@@shawnmiller4781 Yeah .. was 51-55 I think ... remember little but had photos of my dad pulling a toboggan to the store with mom in .. I swear .. furs with fur trimmed hood. Another age altogether.
Right now dec.26 2024 at 2:00pm (cst) it is 33 degrees above zero Fahrenheit ( 0 .5 Celsius) in Stillwater Minnesota
I'm in Minneapolis so I know cold weather too😊
If you don't like the cold at this time of year, come to Australia and enjoy 47o Celsius
First 12 years of my life were in southeast South Dakota. I used to go out barefoot in shorts and t-shirt to cool off when it was -10°f with 3-4ft of snow on the ground. It usually took 30 min for me to want to come back in during that. I had been doing that starting at 3 years old. I still have no issues going out in sandals and shorts when temps are above 0°f.
The coldest winter I remember had a wind chill of -72°f. (the KELO news station reported it as -43°f without wind chill, despite no record apparently having any evidence of it)
Summers also got up over 100°f with 95% humidity with no precipitation most years.
I am absolutely a cold-weather person. (had 3 instances of heat stroke, so I can't handle heat above 85°f for any significant length of time anymore)
You haven't lived until you can take a pot of boiling water, go outside and sling the water out of the pan and have the water freeze before it hits the ground. When you can do that, you know that layers won't matter.
We often do that to impress visitors from the south in February
Re: That thumbnail. You wouldn't see that snow like that around for much longer when it is 41 degrees out. You have to have feet of snow for it to stick around in high 30 F and 40 F weather especially when it is clear and sunny. Thank effing God too. We've enjoyed a warm winter the last few years. Cranked out the snowblower last week for the first time in a few years for little bit of snow we had.
FROM South Dakota, 27 out right now
45f (about 7c) and pouring rain here!
I lived in Alaska most of my life. It's cold, but it's a dry cold. I'll take it over the cold in North Dakota or the Great Lakes region.
Great Lakes/East are WAY worse than North Dakota or here in Saskatchewan!
Here in Michigan it is currently a very nice day with a temperature of 39F (+4C). However, just last Sunday (22nd) we had a more typical December day with a high of 22F (-5C) and a low of 16F (-9C) with a wind chill of 8F (-13).
It is currently 51F and cloudy in my part of Texas. The coldest I've ever dealt with was when I was living in eastern Colorado, it got down to -23F with a -39F windchill.
Hence, the reason you are in Texas now. 😂❤
@@JoPerry-by3wd Exactly. Also rent.
Fargo is a really good movie. You ought to check it out James.
Here in the Willamette Valley is currently 53f. Which is pretty warm for this time of year. I
A very rainy 50 degrees fahrenheit in Southwest Washington State. 🌧
As a person who lives in Canada 🍁, the thing that you don’t realize is that when you go outside, and you DO go outside in -40 if you need to, you only have to wait for your limbs to go numb, and then it’s sort of tolerable. It’s going back INSIDE that can be the problem when your limbs start to defrost! 😂
I’m in Ft. Lauderdale Florida it’s a nice 76 degrees right now lol
I’m just north of Tampa, Florida. Our high today was 78F (26C). But we deserve these nice winters since about 8-9 months of the year are miserably hot and humid.
Right now in NW Utah, it is 40F/4.4C. It’s about average for temperatures at this date.
35 year Wisconsin Native here, last winter we hit -50F with the wind chill. The day before yesterday we were at -5F , but right now it’s super nice and warm out at 40F. Was able to wear shorts today
it's 70f here in SW Florida at 10:30pm and feeling a little chilly. I grew up in upstate NY where we had a lot of snow and cold winters. When I was brought home from the hospital as a baby it was -14F.
Raleigh NC 5:30 pm Dec 26, 8.3* c (47* f). Morning low, 1.6* c (35* f) A touch above average.
Fargo, North Dakota. I had to stop because it's my city in the thumbnail.
33°F/1°C Dec 26 3:30 Pm
All 'cities' in North and South Dakota are transportation hubs. Heck, even in Blizzards and floods, life goes on. But I worked feeding college kids or grocery stores.
We also hit 100°F regularly in summer.
The majority of the population of Alaska have warmer winters than Minnesota/North Dakota. Winds off the ocean keep the weather a bit more stable.
When you're a Euro and youre desperately fishing for content. This is old news, and you're realizing that without USA content, your watches sink. But we hate the USA is the Euro slogan.
I've lived in Grand Forks, ND most of my life. Today's not so bad, 35F, but a few weeks ago we had several days with highs below zero.
Facebook reminded me that in 2009 we had a blizzard that started Christmas Eve and lasted through Boxing Day, dumping over 25" ig snow. I had to push with all my might to open the door.
Of course in summer we have many days over 90F, so it balances out.
😂 And here’s me, a Michigander, thinking “I really should get some work done out in the barn while it’s so warm.” It’s 37F/2.7C, and unusually warm for this time of year.
The coldest 27 December I can remember was when it was -10F/-23C. The windchill was somewhere around -25F, and we’d gotten 14 inches/31cm of snow the night before. I had to scrounge up an incandescent bulb for my work light and put it in the engine compartment of my car so it would start the next morning.
I think your family should give it a go sometime. Book a stay during the season at a ski resort. Rent a cabin, and hit the slopes for a ski lesson.
Cold has its own kind of charm when you do it right. Make snow angels. Hope for a wet snow, so you can make a snowman ⛄. All the outdoor adventure is rewarded with a nice cup of cocoa ☕ next to a crackling fireplace.
🔥🧱 Forget the gas fakes, burning some logs has its own ambience. 🪵🔥🧱
By the way, tiny marshmallows are fine, but my favorite cocoa is to hang one of the tiny candy canes on the edge of the cup, so the long end reaches down into the drink. OMG, yum!
Fargo, ND here. Actually nice temperatures this week. Love your channel and hi to your mom. I'm glad she got a 2nd chance to make a BLT!
9pm 12/26 12F / -11C in Troy, NY - just another day in winter!
PS James if you really want a shock react to the snowiest cities in America, #1 will probably shock you
We were around 47F in central Illinois today. Warm compared to the 19 degrees on Christmas. I was in shirtsleeves to clean up my garage.
Today in Milwaukee Wisconsin it’s 45 degrees, I love the cold so I won’t wear a jacket. When I was in high school back in the 80’s we had -50 degrees below zero.
It is 54°F in Metropolis, Illinois where i live. Pretty warm for winter. Keep up the good work great video 👍👍👍
13:15 Sault Ste Marie gets a lot of Lake Effect snow. Lake Superior doesn't usually freeze completely, so Lake Effect snow affects all of the shoreline communities. When the lake isn't covered in ice, it helps keep those same communities warmer than the communities that are farther inland.
It's 25 degrees right now on Long Island . It got down to 9 about a week ago , but it's supposed to hit 60 in the next several days .Around Thanksgiving this year the Buffalo , NY area had a real blizzard that dumped 40-50 inches of snow there .
There's days in January where Duluth doesn't get above zero. I live about 55 miles north of Duluth & we can have long periods without reaching zero. Lots of times, we can be well below zero (think -30°F & colder) the whole month of January.
Duluth is on a hill, so if Lake Superior isn't frozen, they can get lots of lake effect snow & the open water keeps the shoreline communities warmer than on top of the hill & farther away like my hometown.
14:29 in northern Minnesota, we can easily have a 50+ temperature swing in 24 hours during the cold part of winter. -40°F for a low to above zero highs during daylight hours isn't uncommon, especially when you factor in wind chill. You can survive most of the exteme temperatures if you know what you are doing & have access to shelter. Bigger cities have things like skywalk systems & tunnels so you can get around the schools, hospitals, city centers, etc easier.
These temperatures are why an inventor in Grand Forks, ND invented a device to keep the engines of vehicles warm, so they can be started on these cold days. There was a time when people would ask about cords hanging out the front of the grille, and people responded that we tie our cars down because they are so wild.
These cold temps are nothing compared to having 2 feet of fresh snow and winds over 40mph added in.
I sometimes wonder if we live here just to say we can handle being out in these temperatures.
People must remember that we can go for weeks without getting above zero F and months without getting above freezing.
I live in Chicago we prepare for the heat and the cold you prepare for it year-round. The hottest places death valley and the coldest places are in Alaska.
25 degrees Fahrenheit is perfect weather for skating, sledding, and skiing! Not too warm and not too cold for winter sports. -4 Celsius
Here in Rhode Island, near the ocean, the temperature at 3:30 PM is a seasonal 38 F (3 C). But it's not unpleasant because it's sunny and dry with little wind. Two weeks ago, we had heavy wind and rain at this temperature, which felt much colder. Last weekend we had a low of 8 F (minus 13 C), fortunately without wind.
People are allowed to go outdoors in the extreme cold, although there might be a warning. Several times in my twenties I skied in windchills of minus 50 to 60 F (minus 45.6 to minus 51.1). I'm now too old to do that again voluntarily.
Not so bad right now at 05:35 north of Atlanta in Georgia. It's 43F / 6C. Last day of relative warmth before rain comes before the January cold (lows about 24F /-4C).
San Diego California it was 63 degrees on Christmas. Today is the day after Christmas and I'm wearing shorts and a t-shirt and sandals
In Chicago, it isn't the cold. It's the wind... I remember several days with a wind chill below -20 °F.
Luckily, I live in California. 54 degrees F atm (12 degrees C).
Fargo is a good movie with comedy and a bit of a darkside. you should watch it.
48°F/ 8°C and we got 4 inches of rain. I am wrapped up in my electric throw blanket. I got wet and cold, and now I can't seem to get warm.
The high here today is 10 degrees Celsius. I live in a relatively warm part of the US. We get snow that sticks maybe twice a year. Ice storms are a bigger problem during the winter because fallen tree limbs can take out the power for several days if it's widespread.
Ice storms are bad because falling tree branches don’t just take out a few major power lines. Instead, they take out the power lines of individual houses, for lots and lots of houses. Larger shared power lines generally have better maintenance with pruning of nearby tree limbs, but not so much for individual houses.
Here we are in Jacksonville, FL and it's actually cold today (for us) and the high was 15c, rainy and overcast. However, by the weekend we'll be sunny and close to 23c. Winter in north FL is mild but can get a bit chilly at night.
Yes, you should watch the movie "Fargo", which oddly only briefly takes place in that city and the rest of it is mostly in Brainerd, Minnesota and surrounding areas. The movie was famous for its attempt to reproduce the Minnesota accent (which forms part of the humor since other Americans laugh at our accent), and in some cases they got it right (Yah shoor, ya betcha dey did!).
We're in a warm up here in Ohio. Was 5 today from -7 on Sunday (converted to C for you), for my fellow Americans that is 40f up from 18f.
Here in Georgia, we’ve already had overnight temperatures around 25F which I saw was almost -4C. The high temps were around 45f.
Greetings from Superior Wisconsin just across a bridge from Duluth Minnesota. We are often referred to collectively as the twin ports.
im in oklahoma its dec 27 6:12 am 38f outside now not too bad..i used to live in colorado i remember a couple of months growing up below zero in the winters there
In 1982 it was 75°F on Christmas morning. New Years Eve it was -10°F or lower. SE Wisconsin.
I had a friend who was in the US Marine reserves . The unit went to Alaska for cold weather training but had to relocate to Minnesota to complete the training.
Also remember if you add in wind speed to those cold temperatures the “real feel” temperature feels colder. So 7F can feel like -30f depending on the wind speed.
December, 27th, about 12:30am. Right now in western Connecticut it’s 20ºf (-6.7ºc), not too bad for this time of the year.
Lowest temp I’ve ever been out in was -32ºf (-35.6ºc) and lowest windchill was -83ºf (-63.9ºc). That was a bad night.
The movie "Fargo" takes place mostly in Minnesota. It's a quirky dark comedy, worth checking out for the actor's dedication to getting the regional accent just right. Recommended.
I live just outside of Fairbanks now and have for about 10 years. It’s a toasty 5 degrees F right now. I grew up in the Midwest and I maintain that the Midwest feels colder. It’s never windy in the winter here and it’s so dry it doesn’t feel quite as bad.
I live in Aberdeen, SD. I say if it's above 0F, it's not cold yet. One winter I started my car to warm it up. As I tried to get out of my car, the metal door handle broke off in my hand it was so cold outside.
It's 3 C right now where I live in Minnesota. About an hour South of Duluth and Lake Superior.
Next week the temp will drop into the -10 c range during the day and -16 C at night.
I've personally seen the temp go down to -40 where both temperature scales meet.
I live in a small town in Missouri called Milan. This week the high temperature will be 51F/11C and the low will be 12F/-11C. The coldest temperature I have ever been in was -25F, that was in Park City, Utah in 1987 or 1988.
Its about 0 degrees C here today, but it has warmed up the past few days.
Here in Colorado I just saw for temps for the next few days. They say we will get close to 60 degrees down in Denver on Sat. But the upcoming week it'll be close to where your at now.
It's 44F (6.67C) here in northern Georgia, which is pretty seasonal for this time of year. In the summer, it can get up to 106F (41.1C), and the record low here is -5F (-20.6C)... and we're at LAT 33.76N (versus 51.5N for London)... so we get some pretty wild temperature swings.
I live in Southern Minnesota and I think the coldest temperature I’ve ever experienced is 30 below (Fahrenheit). At that level you just pray your car starts so you can go about your day because life goes on! Things rarely get canceled because of this so you just gotta layer the hell up!! (And I mean really layer up-multiple sweaters, a shirt underneath and obviously a really thick winter jacket)
I live in the rocky mountains. I have been in minus 38 with the winds howling.