British Couple Reacts to 5 U.S. States With Way Colder Winters than Britain
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- Опубліковано 17 січ 2023
- British Couple Reacts to 5 U.S. States With Way Colder Winters than Britain
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Minnesotan here. The snowiest states in the U.S. are east coast states who experience "lake effect" snow which happens when frigid air blowing over a large, warmer body of water (the great lakes) causes a massive snowstorm thanks to the lake’s moisture. So while Minnesota is a very snowy state in the winter, thanks to it's location, it does not get lake effect snow. We do border Lake Superior but it is the coldest lake out of the great lakes, and is to the east of the state so the wind carries snow away from it.
It is also too cold to snow much of the winter in many parts of Minnesota
You would expect that to be true but interestingly enough the five snowiest states are Vermont, Maine, New Hampshire, Colorado and then Alaska. The lake affect snow states like New York and Michigan are for a little bit further down the list. So it seems that mountainous terrain beats lake affect when you look at total snow amounts.
Don't forget Nor'easters.
@@pjschmid2251 He said east coast states.... vermont Maine and new Hampshire are east coast states lol. And I think he's talking about the worst snows not the most annually
Minnesota here also...Duluth, and we get piles of lake effect snow. I'm guessing you're from the cities...
My best friend’s family is from central Wisconsin. He told me of the time he looked outside and it was snowing. His uncle’s response was “Great, it’s warmed up!” When I asked what he meant I was informed that it can get too cold to snow. Decided I loved living in the mid-Atlantic
The colder the air the more it squeezes the moisture out, why when we were below zero F for a couple weeks in december the dew points were like in the mid teens, very dry air.
The bigger the flakes the warmer it is
Oh, it can snow at those temperatures, but it's a different kind of snow, a thin dry powder, and you generally don't get that much of it at a time. There *is* a place on the planet where it does literally get too cold to snow, but it's in Antarctica. (It's called the Dry Valleys.)
Ah from my neck of the woods. This warm weather is ghastly.
Right. When I lived in Interior Alaska, the intense cold temperatures came under high pressure and clear skies. It has to cloud over to snow, and the overcast will generally raise temperatures as well. At 50-60 below zero we had clear skies with ice fog. Horizonal visibility in ice fog can be very low while if you look straight up, you can see stars. If it clouded over to snow, the clouds themselves insulated the ground, reduced heat loss. We didn't expect to see snow until it warmed up to -20 or -25, and even then it would be small, dry flakes.
I grew up in Illinois (just outside of Chicago) in the mid to late 1960's. I recall going to school on some winter mornings where it hurt to breathe because the air was so cold. Sometimes, nose hairs would freeze and breathing thru the nose was like a wind blowing through stalactites in a cave.
Ron is right on! I grew up IN north Chicago. You can’t really understand wind chill until you actually go out in a very cold winter storm. My childhood annoyance going from 1st grade to 12th grade we Never had ONE snow day off!!! Chicago was so well equipped to deal with snow that all the main streets were continually being cleared! And the worse blizzard I experienced in school, 67” in 3 days,🌨💨 happened during our 2 week Christmas break 😡! The only way to find your car parked on the street was to look for an antenna sticking out of the snow! Left home at 18 and have been below the mason dixon line ever since 🌴🥥🍉🥑🍹🚣♂️🏍⛵️😉
Grew up visiting family in Chicagoland and now living in the city, the breathing in the cold is legit the worst. The wind makes it so much worse too
There's a city called Hell in Michigan. and it freezes over every year.
I'm in Wisconsin, we have cold winters, but our summers are nice and warm. Between 70-90°F (21-32°C) is normal summer weather. It's a beautiful state especially along Lake Michigan. Our dairy products are unparalleled, not to mention our beer, brats (bratwurst), and cranberries! Don't let the cold weather deter you.
Wisconsin ❄️🍺🌭🧀
I'm from Mississippi but I've been living in Sheboygan for work the past couple of months and the locals tell me this winter is actually quite mild. And it's still usually below freezing
@@jarrettlowery2802 Yeah this has been the mildest winter (so far) that I can ever remember. It may have set some records. Very unusually "warm" temps, not nearly as much snow. You really lucked out. Lol
This Alaskan approves this message. Long winters but intense summers.
@@avatar997 I would love to live in Alaska! Only thing stopping me is the cost of living there and lack of available homes.
I grew up in Alaska and went to school in Fairbanks. I lived about 5 miles northwest of Fairbanks and we went to school in weather that was as low as -55 F. when the weather got as low as -60 F we didn't go to school because the buses couldn't run when it was that cold. The lowest temp I ever experienced in Alaska was with wind chill -100 F. I stayed indoors.
Fairbanks reminds me only of Ice Road Truckers, how cold it is to truck from there or anywhere delivering equipment of stuff, would be brutal, especially if anything happens to trucks, and they have to repair or chain up
Are you a turtle?
@@maddievlogs438 Ah yes, circulating heaters, battery blankets. My dad fixed mine up so that I also had paddle heaters on my oil pan and transmission as well as a trickle charger on my battery. My car always started unless some jerk unplugged it during the night.
My dad was stationed in Fairbanks when I was in the 4th and 5th grades. We had to walk to school 😆.
waiting for the school buses in the winter was terrible and you got weather like that every year
Dont move to California it is horrendous there, great weather but awful living situation and crazy natural disasters. If I were you I would go someplace like Tennessee or some where similar, not too hot not too cold.
Mainer here. One thing you will learn here is that Maine weather is random as it can be sunny one day and pouring another. We have had it snow on the 4th of July on summer as well. It was postponed for 2 days for the snow to go away.
its gonna be a cold one this weekend! BBBRRRRR!! forecast is showing -9 not counting the 50 mph windgusts.... "you dont like the weather, just wait a minute."
I grew up in northern Wisconsin and they didn't call off school unless it got below - 35F, Also we went snowmobiling once when it was -40 F.Yeah we were crazy. When it got that cold you could hear tree trunks exploding from the sap inside freezing,sounds like rifles firing.
I'm not sure if you follow Jonna Jinton on here, but she lives in northern Sweden and records life in the middle of winter there. You will here trees "exploding" and then she records the ice snapping and making weird noises. It kind of sounds like whales which is really cool.
When I was 17 my boss at Mcdonalds picked me up on his snowmobile for my shift. Considering it was a blizzard and roads were closed not sure how he thought customers would get there and who risks their life for a Big Mac? Obviously he brought me home two hours later.
I used to live in Anchorage, Alaska. It's not so much how cold the winter gets, but how long the winter is. It starts in September when the snow starts sprinkling the tops of the hills (called "termination dust") and the snow doesn't go away until late May. The old joke is that Alaska has four seasons: June, July, August and WINTER! If you want somewhere to stay in America with similar weather to the UK, go to Seattle.
My cousin was stationed at Elmendorf AFB for a while and he said the winters in Anchorage where alot nicer then where we grew up in Northern Minnesota, I went to visit him and loved it, the Bed and Breakfast place that hosted us had the best jam I've ever had, Salmon Berry Jam it was so good.
As a Minnesota resident, its not ever too cold really to snow. It depends on the moisture in the air. That being said, Minnesota is a very dry air state through the winters. As the air gets warmer we tend to have more moisture in the air so you'll see heavier snow falls in late February and early March. Sometimes, well get a heavy snowfall from huge cold fronts that bring heavy moist air from Canada.
You just explained how it was too cold to snow…..’as the air gets warmer….’
Dry winter air, gotta love static electricity!
I’m here in Colorado and we’re definitely not one of the coldest states but we can see some very cold temperatures and it’s just common knowledge that when it gets too cold, they will not snow. I’m not sure exactly what that point is but most of the time, if your Below Zero, there won’t be any kind of snowfall at all.
I gotta figure the dry winters are largely because of the position of the Jet Stream. We get to live with the fun of having no oceans to moderate our weather, but still having no relief between us and the Arctic to the north and the Gulf to the south to inhibit the weather from those places coming here, so the Jet Stream will form this boundary where there's cold, dry Arctic air to the north and hot, humid Gulf air to the south. During the summer months, the Jet Stream tends to pass through Minnesota (very often near Duluth), but during the winter it's usually down in like Arkansas and Tennessee.
From Wisconsin (we still have a home there) but currently living in Florida. We just got back from the holidays up there. Our daughters boyfriend joined us for a week. He's from the Philipinnes and furthest north he'd been prior was Memphis, TN. While he was up he was fortunate enough to experience -51F wind chill. It was great.
I'm from Georgia. Over Christmas weekend it dropped down to 2 degrees Fahrenheit, wind chill was -13 degrees Fahrenheit. My well froze. I love cold weather, but if it's going to be that cold we deserve snow! ❄️ 😃
Up here they'd be like "just add an extra layer or two and we can still go play a round of golf" 🤣🤣
@@TheLwaller09 where is 'up here'?
@Nonya Dambusness I've lived in Ohio, PA and Michigan lol. Currently Ohio.
I'm jealous. I've lived my entire life in Georgia, first 18 years near Savannah, since then the foothills of the blue Ridge mountains area. I would love to get real snow! A friend recently moved to Montana. I so wish I could have moved too.
Yea today Eastern PA is getting a low of 9 today and I have a swim meet so I’m gonna be an ice cube
My coldest day in Montreal Canada was - 31.7 c or - 25.06 f we skated that day and had hot chocolate after we played in the snow. Dressed warm several layers of clothing.
I've lived in Wisconsin for the last 20 yrs and I love it here. I lived in Chicago a few years and the weather is beyond cold with that cold wind blowing off Lake Michigan ! Omg The summer time is great ! We have more festivals like Chocolate fest Strawberry fest Summer Fest were it's star infested for 2 weeks of great music! I love Wisconsin !
So do I.
Okey dokey, shuuuure
@@debbylou5729 lol I guess it's a required taste !! I love the snow !
don't forget Lake Michigan runs up the whole western Wisconsin
I'm from Wyoming and the coldest temperature ever measured was on February 9, 1933 at Yellowstone Park. The temperature was -66 F or -54 C. The current temperature outside right now is -9 C and it is expected to drop to -14 C tonight.
Good one for camping
I live in Buford...on a mountaintop...and we have constant wind...
I was born in So Cal...and I lived there for my first 60 years... Moved to Nevada...1/2 hour from Lake Tahoe...and lived there for 13 years... Both places had VERY hot summers... We had central air conditioning...
Now, at almost 77 years-old, I live in a home where we get snowed in... Big adjustment, but I do love it here!! So beautiful... No air pollution, no water pollution, no noise pollution...and no light pollution... The nighttime sky is breathtaking!!
PS... I was in Scotland in May 1999, and it was much colder than I expected...
Lander represent.
Just start a beef with an encroaching conglomerate, start the war, focus the cameras and wait for the boom. You could even adapt it into a snowy sitcom.
We visited Wyoming last year when we were heading to Yellowstone but, flooding. We ended up in The Grand Tetons, one of the most beautiful detours of our lives. We stayed in Jackson Hole, such a treasure. I can’t wait to get to Yellowstone though. It’ll happen!
Being an Alaskan, from Fairbanks, I went out on a walk on a nice day. I think it was -71 F. Normal coat. I was fine. Dude from Florida damn near froze
5:41 Tardigrades are microscopic organisms that are known to brave the wildest of extremes. They’ve survived in ice, but also in boiling water for extended periods. Moreover, they can stop breathing for long periods and they have even traveled to outer space, surviving without an astronaut's suit.
Or aka Water Bears!
Due to the "Continental climate", separated from the ocean on the east by the Appalachian Mountains and the west by the Rocky Mountains, some places are very cold in the winter AND very hot in the summer.
I live in the southern portion of Wisconsin. I've been known to go out to get the mail barefoot in the snow, and once had to go out in the snow in my nightgown (Don't ask). The cold isn't that bad if you layer your clothing and don't stay out too long. I've always thought it's easier to keep warm than it is to stay cool in the incredibly hot and humid summers we get.
UPS drivers are still in shorts at that temperature
I have lived in Fairbanks and Phoenix. I agree. (I have also ran barefoot across the ice in my nightie--I can dig it.)
Somewhere in my house there's a photo of my mom shoveling Minnesota snow in shorts, tennies and a sleeveless blouse. I wonder where it is...
@@anchorskid The time I mentioned being out in my nightgown in the snow was when my late mother was in the backyard feeding the birds and fell down in two feet of snow. She couldn't get up again. I had to go out and help her up. I was not only in my nightgown but barefoot as well.
@@katwithattitude5062 Glad you were there to help.
Clear skies create colder temps. The heat escapes. Think of a desert at night. So you are usually very snowy or very cold, until getting to the tundra in Siberia, Canada, and Alaska
Always wanted to live in a state colder than my own, in particular Minnesota. Love the cold and snow. Most people can’t wait to retire and head south. Not sure what they like about sweating.
Probably the same thing they hate about freezing your fingers...temperature extremes suck...
I used to live in North Dakota. I remember about 3 weeks when it didn't get about -30 Fahrenheit. The coldest that I ever experienced was -45 with a wind chill of -98. Although you do acclimate to it somewhat, it is literally painfully cold. Any exposed shin instantly starts to sting. It's hard to breathe without a scarf over your face. If you don't plug your car in to keep the oil warm, you won't be able to start it. The ground disappears in early November, and you don't see it again until April. You learn how to cope with it, but it isn't easy.
In Fairbanks, during the cold spells (-30 to -50 below for weeks), you just lived your life like you were on the moon. You put on heavy protective garments before venturing outside and travelled from one indoor, heated location to another in a pre-heated vehicle. You spent all your time indoors. Outdoor activities were limited to reacting to emergencies--clearing out chimney problems, rescuing stuck or disabled vehicles. And let's face it--after the temps fall below about -45 below, the actual temperature is academic: it all feels about the same. :)
I’m guessing the engine block was being heated. I lived in Montana, and yes you win…we had some rolling hills to slow the wind, and we had a block heater we plugged in. I probably broke the cord 5 or t times before I remembered to ‘unplug the car’. People really can’t imagine it being so cold that it would crack an engine block
@DebbyLou...I suppose if you forget to put in antifreeze, that may be of some concern...
How's does a block heater keep your coolant in the radiator from freezing?
Moved to North Dakota just under a year ago in a small town on the Canadian border. Can definitely vouch for the cold. Surprising how 32 degrees can feel downright pleasant when it happens
I'm on the panhandle of Florida, today it was 76, but, a few weeks ago we got down to 19. That was during that artic blast the pretty much screwed everybody. As for what she was trying to say, I have no idea, whatever it was, she didn't say it well.
I live in Santa Monica California USA and it's always beautiful here even in the winter time you can drive up into the LA mountains if you want to see the snow or you can stay where I live and see the beach maybe a little chilly but it's still
Nashville, TN - considered to be South in the US. This summer we hit 101°F, or 38 Celsius. Christmas day was -1°F or -17 Celsius. The UK just doesn't experience wild temperature swings.
I think people underestimate how cold even non-Northern states can get. For instance, I live in NE Texas and it's not unusual for winters to get below freezing in the dead o winter. It's actually been a pretty warm winter(it's 66° right now) but around Christmas, during the cold spell that hit pretty much the whole country, it actually dipped to something like 20, 25° before even factoring in wind chill.
Same over here in Florida. ⛄️🌴
Wait a minute you have a Cubs logo on your avatar so you must know that 20 - 25° is nothing. Yeah it’s cold for Texas but in general it’s just winter (no biggie).
@@pjschmid2251 Yeah, I know, I lived in the Chicagoland area for 3 or 4 years when I was little. I know it's relatively warm(I actually think it got even colder than that, now that I think about it) but my general point was that Texas gets colder than its reputation as a desert state(that is really only West Texas) would indicate.
It was around 12 F here in Dallas about mid December 2022. It definitely gets very cold here in Texas during the winter at times.
@@thegingergyrl455 Yeah, only live a couple hours east of you and it got really cold then. I definitely undersold it a little bit.
All the temperatures he stated were WITHOUT wind chill. Oddly enough, just 6 days after that record cold of -60°F (-51°C), the temperature was +48°F (+9°C) a total temperature change of 108°F (60°C).During the summers, the temperature can get into the 90°F range (32°C). But Minnesota's record high temperature was 115°F (46°C) on July 29, 1917. That's a total possible temperature change of 175°F (97°C).
That is a BIG potential annual change.
I grew up in Northern Minnesota and yeah it's cold for sure. How does one do it? You just do because you have to. Life goes on and you roll with it. I no longer live in Minnesota, I'm in central Florida. Personally I'd rather be cold than hot. You can wear more clothes when it's cold.
From Wisconsin, living in Florida. I always follow that up with "but you can only get so naked".
@@Smedley61 so do i!!
There's only so much you can take off in Summer before you start breaking laws & scaring people!
MN here as well. I used to say you can always add more layers but once you’re naked it’s still just hot.
@@patriciaabatemarco3834, but there's only so much you can take off in the heat before you start breaking laws & scaring people!
We get those cold temperatures in northern states from cold air dropping down from Canada. If you think those temps are cold you can only imagine what the temps are in Canadian provinces such as western Ontario, Manitoba and the other western provinces.
right now as I watch this, it is 31 F and expecting 3 to 5 inches of snow tonight
I used to live in Old Orchard Beach Maine on the south coast and even there it would get far below freezing. One time I was at a stop sign and I looked across the road and there were people standing on the sidewalk at a pizza place that had that had outside windows to order and they were ordering pizza. Unusual well it was February and 11 degrees F
I know this says 5 states but I think 45 states could potentially be colder than parts of the UK. I'm willing to bet even the northern parts of Florida get colder than the south of England at some parts of the winter. I've seen 20 F (-7 C) and freezing rain when I visited northern Florida in January.
California low desert & mountains both northern & southern, Nevada low desert & higher elevations in Arizona all get seasonal snow. Even without moisture Nevada has freezing deserts.
I live in Arkansas and it was just down to about 5 degrees F with wind chill down to -4 F.
Pensacola FL is also known as LA- Lower Alabama, just saying.
@@cac9089 76 in Tampa Florida currently,, just saying.
@@davidcosta2244 most the south at the moment is mild.
Years ago I was in Pennsylvania visiting relatives in the Winter. They were having record breaking temperatures there. It was so cold you had to cover all skin before going out. It was so cold that when I stepped on the rubber mat in the car it shattered like glass. Never want to experience that again.
I lived in Pennsylvania when in the 90's we had snow drifts blocking access to the driveway that went from the building across the sidewalk to the neighbors' shrubs over waist high, I had this (junky, of a joke) snow thrower on a stick, you had to go 6 inches at a time super wide, the weather was so cold you had to keep going in to warm up... I was employed by a public utility that expected us to show up, luckily the chain of phone calls reached us saying our office would be closed, and we had id's that said we were allowed to pass during public emergencies as our jobs were essential.. yeah.. people are snowed in and going to call in and b* about long distance calls on their phone bills isn't essential...
Recently we were running low on dry cat food, Thursday before Christmas the store showed stock finally and before the snow got worse we drove the 70 miles and got a couple of month's supply, the wind chill was -40° wind chill, and I got frostbite and still don't feel right in my fingers, there were at least a dozen 18 wheelers wrecked, half or so jackknifed, so Christmas day, my fingers still bugged me, the after-hours triage recommended I go to the ER for having red fingertips, so we drive 45 miles away to my covered hospital where the doctor says it'll take time, you'll be fine, sorry you had to come so far, 3 minutes visit and he was gone.. we counted about 10 cars mostly all totalled by today's standards aside and way off the road, subsequent trips most of the cars were still there.
So best advice hibernate at home, inside, in bad weather in Iowa. And for God's sake stay off I-80, the only thing that slows people down on it is FOG.. they drive like a white out blizzard is nothing.
Fun bizarre factoid: the top 3 snowiest locations in the USA are in Washington, Oregon, and California. But statewide snow is either very light or rare in those states.
It all has to do with precipitation, elevation, and temperatures.
Right now, though, Utah ski resorts have the most snow in the country.
I live in Wisconsin and have all my 67 years. The winter temperatures may seem cold now, but it is nothing like it was even in the 60s and 70s. I love the winter as it is so beautiful. And yes, it can be too cold to snow.
I heard someone say that were from Minnesota and their ancestry was Scandinavian. She said they came to America and just kept going until they ran into a place that was just as cold and miserable as the one they left
😊😅😂
As a Minnesotan with Scandinavian ancestry, can confirm this is accurate💀😂😂
@@thorkagemob1297 😂😂😂
Or they were just escaping the crop famines back home like the rest of our ancestors were..
@@codymoe4986 idk. My ancestors came in the early 1600’s. No famines I’m aware of. The point still stands. In the late 1800’s the Scandinavian migration began because of consecutive wet and dry years. So, WHY would they go past ALL of that GREAT farmland and stop in Minnesota? Inquiring minds and all that
I got 10ft, deep of snow drifts in my front yard. Here in N.E. South Dakota. With a low tonight of 7* above zero F. Wind chill minus -12 below.
It technically can't get too cold to snow. It's literally the same as rain as it's also precipitation, just frozen. Hail is rain that freezes on the way down, and snow is when it's so cold [in the clouds] that instead of water forming, it's ice crystals. It's all about the moisture in the clouds/storms. Drier areas tend to get less snow/rain, just as wetter areas get more snow/rain. That's all it is. Some people might say that warmth is what causes clouds to form and precipitate, but pressure does this also.
I'm in Virginia. Christmas weekend was -19c (-2f) at its coldest point, and that was warm compared to some other places
The lowest temperature recorded in my home state of Nort Dakota was -60F (-51C) in February 1936. The highest wa 121F (49C) in July of the same year. Tonight we're expecting a balmy 13F (-10.5C).
Take it from me, it feels that much colder when your are NOT used to it. I had a Irish friend who came to visit some people in Chicago in February LOL! I think it broke them.
If I understand what Millie was saying, every person's temperature limits are different (and each person's limits can change over time). In my own experience as a Californian, below 10°F/-12°C it doesn't seem any colder, only more intense. Likewise above 105°F/40°C it doesn't seem any hotter, only more intense. (In my childhood in the 1960's in Northern California, we had a day or two each year with a mid-afternoon high of 122°F/50°C ... we loved it.) P.S. Millie, you two would be quite comfortable at 25°C/77°F in Southern California, because the humidity is reasonably low - unlike the humid Midwest where Lawrence is - so come on down!
The weather in the midwest sucks in winter AND summer. Winter is frigid as we all know, but the summers are hotter than the UK and disgustingly humid to boot. The only respite we get is in spring and autumn. :(
@3:18 We had a blizzard come through a couple weeks ago. It got down to -28 Fahrenheit with the wind chill. You definitely feel the difference between -28F and 32F. (0 Celsius) Once you step outside the cold feels like it goes through your soul and instantly into your bones.
Yea, my sister lives in North Dakota; she said when it gets up to freezing ( 32F 0C ) everyone is outside doing stuff!! She says it’s because everything below that feels so cold, so freezing feels warm
12:45 It's never too cold to snow. It's true in many areas that the weather systems which are capable of bringing precipitation tend to raise the temperature, but it's a mistake to think that it's ever too cold to snow.
You can also still get snow well into the 40's (Fahrenheit), though it's unusual. It's a question of layered temperatures.
Here in NJ, I've seen snow in temperatures ranging from about 10F to about 40F. It's normally between 25F and 35F, however. In places like Siberia and Antarctica, temperatures are routinely well below zero with a whole lot of snow.
Yellowstone in the Winter time is beautiful.
Minnesota here also, oI was born in the 1950's , when I was a child I remember playing outside when it was -20 degrees and a 20 degree windchill so basically -40 . We used to go skiing and ice skating, we also built snow forts in the huge snow piles. We all learned how to layer our clothes to stay warm. My coldest winter ever was -40 with a windchill of -40 that was a day they closed all the schools and we stayed inside.
It usually snow when it's 3 degrees above zero or warmer, it generally doesn't snow when it below zero but it does happen.
Interesting thing about Fairbanks is it will hit those low temperatures mentioned in the video during the winter. But it will also break 100 F in the summer.
Growing up in Wisconsin, I was always told that it could get too cold to snow, basically the cold sucking the moisture out of the air. Also limited moisture fuel coming from the west. Michigan would most likely get more snow because it's on the eastern side of Lake Michigan and has Lake Huron to the north. Those lakes would also keep Michigan slightly warmer in the winter time.
grew up in Wisconsin but live in Alaska now and it and does get to cold to snow for 2 or 3 months of our winter. it generally starts snowing in october and then stops snowing until January or February and then we get so much snow we run out of places to put it.
Holy crap - that was a complicated conversation starting @2:39. I do understand the climatization effect, which is how you adapt to your local elements, and when travelling experiencing something totally different.
For example - I'm in NH and temps vary from below freezing to 32 degrees F during the winter, with the exception of this year where it is toasty. There have been certain winters when below freezing was the normal for over a month with cutting winds. Then - People think that 90 degrees F is very hot, and especially with humidity. I've travelled and found that Japan during the summer in Tokyo was unbearable based on 100 percent humidity! I would walk to work for 3 blocks and be absolutely soaked to the skin. I would carry an extra shirt to change into when arriving at the office.
I'm from Michigan originally, living in Colorado for the past 3 years. I love the cold. Not all Michiganders love the cold though. Over Christmas when we had the cold snap in Colorado, it got down to -22F at night and I was out running in it. Shorts, sweatshirt, and a beanie and I loved every minute of it.
Running around in shorts in the middle of winter, is a very Coloradan thing to do.
@@kathleenmccrory9883 It would seem like it, but the funny thing about Colorado is there aren't any Coloradans here (like myself). 🤣
@@mark.kaiser There's a few. Lol. But you're right. My neighbor was out shoveling snow today in his cargo shorts and a hoodie, not sure where he's from though.
I'm in Northern Minnesota. What gets us is the "wind chill". We have periodic -20°F days (or weeks) throughout the winter, but the wind chill turns that into anything from -25°F to -50°F. Very cold. It's a good thing I'm of Scandinavian descent, lol.
wind makes a huge difference
Hello from Wisconsin. Just got done shoveling 6” of snow today. I love both summer temps and winter. Spent 4 years in the Army in Kansas. Way too hot. I always tell people that cold temps are easier to handle than hot. You can always put more clothes on to get warm, but you can only take off so much unless you want to get arrested.
I've lived in the metro area of Milwaukee, Wisconsin since 1981 when my parents and I moved here
when I was one and a half. I like the cold. Fall and Winter are my favorite seasons.
Summers are too hot and humid for me so I stay inside most of the time. I think Laurence
would like summers here since he liked temps in the 80's. I hope he comes here for Summerfest
sometime. For me low 30's is warm for the winter. I'll go outside to get my mail with my winter jacked unzipped.
I don't live in Sawyer County but sometime in the late 90's maybe in 97 or 98 when I was in high school,
I had a day off from school because of the cold temperatures and that's the only time it happened.
During the last snowstorm of the Midwest, my area didn't get any snow since it was too cold to snow.
It was very windy though and we were advised to stay home and off the roads so I did. Think it was 40 to 60 mph winds.
We had drifting snow but that's it.
Born and raised in North Dakota. What gets you isn't so much the temps on their own but the wind chill. Summer can reach higher than 100 F.
I’m from NJ and now live in PEnnsylvania. I love snow… tubing, snowboarding, skiing. It’s when the temperature dips down 10 degrees Fahrenheit and below that I’m not a fan of, then it freezes and makes travel dangerous. When it starts warming up to 40s I am too hot in my coat.
North Dakota here. I'm actually a transplant, but I've lived here longer than everywhere else combined. I'll never forget the day I left to move here. (Feb 1, 96). The weather channel reported a temperature of -52F (-47C) with a wind chill of -102F (-74C). My first January here, we didn't get up to 0F for the entire month. When it finally got above 0F (single digits 5-9 F) We were walking around in T shirts because it was "so warm".
I grew up down South in northern Georgia. I personally saw teens and signal digits in the Winter growing up, but the coldest temperature on record is -17F. I now live in the north east and work at a ski resort on the tallest mountain in the area. We get some nasty cold weather up here, but it’s nothing compared to parts of New England. Also, yes it is very possible to be too cold for snow; that’s why Antartica is considered a desert. A desert is any land mass that gets less then 10 inches of precipitation a year, it doesn’t matter if that’s due to cold or to heat. Sadly most people think of deserts as hot, dry places; in reality they can also be cold, dry places as well.
The Artic air flow dips down around eastern Montana, I'm in western Montana. North Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin really get hammered. That last freeze we had I got to -43 F and my furnace stopped working. We went two days into it with no heat. Repair couldn't come out for a week. Then it dawned on me the thermostat may be out. Yep, that was it.
My entire childhood was spent growing up in Minnesota, Wisconsin and North Dakota. I recall going skiing when it was -30 F or -35 C. It was fun...
Simple solution for tourists:
Visit the south in the winter and the north in the summer. And don’t get that switched round or you’ll be sorry.
Btw, you're probably thinking about southern California, not the whole state in general. California is super diverse when it comes to climate. I much prefer the cold. As a person in south Florida, being hot and humid for 10 months of the year is horrible. When you're cold, you can put more clothes on. When its super hot, there's nothing you can do. I love Maine.
14:24 That's Not with the Wind Chill. LOL
*
15:50 North Dakota is 'ALWAYS' Windy. So 'ADD' the heavy wind WITH the Temp..... it's unbearable! My daughter lived in Minot ND when her husband was in the Air Force and I'm SO glad she does not live there anymore LOL.
Hey guys, I'm from southern Minnesota, and it's usually about 10 degrees warmer here than northern Minnesota which is about 3-400 miles north of here, so that makes sense. That being said, it not only GETS cold, but usually stays that way for a week or more at a time. Usually, it's the last week of Jan - the first week/10 days of Feb. During those "cold snaps" as we call them, the Hi temps for the day will not get any warmer than about -25C, with the lows sinking down to below -30C. As you guys stated, at that point, it IS literally TOO COLD to snow.
Here in southern MN, we average about 80-90 inches of snowfall each winter. Whie that sounds like a lot, it's far from the snowiest. We have no mountains...there are parts of California...a moderately comfortable state weatherwise. We think of CA based on the regions in the south and Central...San Diego, LA, and San Francisco...but there are parts of northern CA in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, where they will get 50-60 inches of snow in a single day's blizzard. The same with states like Utah, Colorado, Idaho, Montana...and the Western portion of New York State, around Buffalo...which suffers what is called Lake effect snow. The moisture that accumulates as the pressure systems swing down from Canada across the 5 great lakes picking up power and moisture and then unloading great amounts of snow once the great
bodies of water stop. Buffalo will often get a handful of blizzards a year with snowfalls over 20" each, as well as their normal other smaller winter storms.
Now you also asked about the high temps in the summer in Wisconsin. "if it's that cold in the winter, how cold is the summer?"
Well, I'm in Minnesota, just to the west of WI. and here, as I said, our winter temps can reach -30C before windchill....but the summers get quite warm. The end of May-July the temps get up to 30C. The latter part of July into late August/early September it will get up over 35C during the day, with humidity above 70% or more. And as insufferable as the cold gets in the winter for that few weeks, so too is the heat and humidity in the summer. Temps pushing 100F or 36-37C during the day, and only cooling off to 25C at night with little to no break in the humidity. Air conditioning is a much-appreciated convenience, and in many cases is almost a necessity.
Lol I grew up in Chicago IL, and I can wear shorts in 40 degree weather.. I live in St Louis now and I get told all the time how can you stand this cold... I just say " this isnt cold " .. Thought it was funny when me and my brother went to florida and it was like 60 degrees F, and people are wearing full coats and stuff and we are in shorts and a t-shirt.
To add to your conversation on getting Acclimated to the temperature… as a Wisconsinite, I’d rather endure a Freezing Winter here rather than Burn alive in a Southern Cal, Texas, or Florida Summer
I spent most my life in Minne-snow-ta. It is a beautiful state, even in Winter. The large flake snow falls are absolutely the BEST. The large flakes absorb sound making for a VERY quiet peaceful experience. Cold? It's relative. 50 degrees in Autumn (cold) is different than 50 degrees in Spring (shorts and T-shirt weather because of built up tolerance).
North Dakotan here (moved to Bismarck 8 years ago). Sometimes it is so cold here (Google our temperatures since Thanksgiving), that your nose hair freezes.
I live in Fairbanks, I have seen it drop to -60F (-51C). During the Summer it can get up to 85F (29C). Also during these extremes during the Winter the sun barely rises, and during the Summer it seemingly never sets.
Lived in Lincoln, NE for many, many, many years.
The record cold and wind chill; Cold: -36ºf (-38ºc), Wind Chill: -83ºf (-64ºc). Yeah, it can get rather cold in the midwest.
Don’t forget Iowa. This winter has been mild. But we still got down to -22 F (-30 C). Even colder when you factor in the windchill!
Maine here! I can tell you that we get more snow, then freezing Temps. Snow acts like a type of installation and as we get snow the slightly high our Temps are. We get more below 0 Temps when we don't have snow yet. Also, Michigan, Minnesota, New York and Wisconsin, has part of thier states effected by what's call the lake effect from the great lakes, which can cause colder temperatures and more snow in some places more then others.
We lived in AK for two yrs in the 1980s in a tiny town about 100 miles from Fairbanks. It got down to -55F a few times while we were there. We went out in it to go shopping, etc but only for a few minutes at a time. My feet were getting numb just walking from our car into the grocery store, which took less than 90 seconds. It was almost always windy where we were too, so it felt even colder. Summers were fantastic though!
You wanna catch the Packers, or the Bucks, or even the Brewers...
Lowest recorded temp, in the lower 48 was -70° F in the 90s in Montana. Just before Christmas last month it was -71° there. Here, in Eastern Washington state it was only -4°. Sadly the temps since then sky rocketed to spring levels and have remained too damn high since.
I prefer cold. 0° F is a good temp
North Dakota resident here! That's our winter, but the summer gets plenty hot! We have several days every year that go over 100°F (38°C). That's the real problem. Most years it goes over 100° and below -20° - that range is SO big!
Minnesota was 71 degrees F (21 C) on April 3, 1982, and within 24 hours became 7 (-14). On November 11, 1940, the temperature was 52 degrees F (11 C) at 11 am and 0F (-18C) by 5 pm. A lot of people died that day.
From northeast iowa here. When it gets to -30F or colder it’s miserable outside. The cold literally hurts lol
While watching this I kept thinking of how my desert city of St George, Utah, has a very noticeably increased population during the coldest winter months. We call these people “snow birds” and every year they migrate down (usually in a large trailer or RV) from states like Idaho and Montana. Of course, there have been mornings when I’ve gone to work were it is at or near 0 C, but it gets warmer during the day and we don’t have the snow.
I was in high school during the great Minnesota average record of -60 F degrees. School allowed us to arrive 2 hours late that day; and we had to wear two layers of pants and jackets hats and mittens all through the day just to stay somewhat warm!
In Alaska sometimes it gets so cold that they have to let the ground thaw out before they bury people.This means that bodies have to be stored through long cold winters.
Coldest temperature in my state was -50F (-45.5C). Where I live the coldest temperature was -34F or -36.7C. A "snow day" where you get out of school had to get more than 10 inches of snow. It was snowed on every day of the year (not in the same year, of course). Record high in the summer is 101F or 38C. But it's a dry heat. Very low humidity. I live at 5800 ft (1768M) above sea level in the mountains. Tornadoes are rare, but we got one in 1985.
Here in Colorado we have a name that cannot tolerate 0.0 C or 32 F. We refer to them as "weather wimps"
I once heard that in -40 weather, if you spit, before it hits the pavement it freezes to bits of ice. I'll have to try it out this winter.
I live in Lassen County in California we got down to 9°F or -12.7°C this morning. It was nice 🥰😍 Very icy walk to work though 😊
530 here love lessen
I live in Eau Claire WI, West Central Wisconsin. Winters here are interesting . So far this year we have had some sub zero F readings, a week of above freezing weather now coming to an end with about nine inches of snow in the forecast, Never a dull moment here,
It is generally colder when it's clear, as the clouds aren't holding the warmth in. So, it doesn't snow much when it's really cold.
I lived in Fairbanks, AK for 3 winters in the 1960s. The coldest it got was -62F but every winter we would have a period of about a week where the high for the day wouldn't reach -50F. That's why I now live in the Florida panhandle where most years we get 4 or 5 nights that drop below freezing but it gets up well above freezing in the day and most winter days are lows in the 40s or 50s and highs in the 60s or 70s. Today (18Jan) it was 75. I can't imagine you thinking 25C is hot. I don't even think about going to the beach until it's at least 30C/86F.
I remember reading an article about school children going out to play at 30 below zero (F) in Norway, which would never happen in the US. Their motto is "There is no bad weather, only bad clothes." I'm miserable at 10F. And I can be miserable at 50F if it's windy/humid. Colorado probably averages a low of around 20ish F in the coldest times on the plains. The mountains are another story. But when it is 104F in the summer you can take a drive to the mountains where it is in the 70s.
My dad lived in Fairbanks for 1 winter, and he would always say (with joy) that when it got below -50 degrees F, he wouldn't have to go to work
The UK gets a special gift of warmer weather from Mexico & the southern US called the Gulf Stream. This keeps your weather much warmer than it's northern latitude would indicate. You're welcome. LOL!! Getting used to the weather? I don't think you ever get used to the extreme weather. I lived in extremely hot most of my life. Never go used to it. Lived in very cold too & never got used to it. Lack of snow (I'm guessing) is the storms have dumped most of their snow in the front range mountains? Not a lot left.
In 1993, I traveled from Sicily to Philadelphia in November. Shorts in Sicily to winter clothes in Philly
You should do a reaction video to several ice road trucking videos in Alaska and Canada. They build roads over frozen rivers and lakes and take massive loads across them to places that can only be accessed this way. In fact we had a show called Iceroad Truckers that followed the adventures of these drivers. In Alaska, in the winter they call 0°F having a heatwave. But one other thing to remember about Alaska is they don't get a lot of daylight and sun in the winter.
Swamp cooler was what I was trying to think of for air conditioning unit.
The great thing about California, especially in Los Angeles County is that we get snow in our mountains, so you can snow board during the morning and drive an hour or two and then go surfing in the evening. You can visit the cold and snow during the winter or decide to just stay on a sunny palm tree lined beach or do both
I live in South Texas. When it is frozen up north, I am wearing shorts and chanklas! It was 78 degrees farenheit today.
From Minnesota The lowest temp ever of 60°f was without windchill. There have been instances when the windchill temp were -80° -90° and even -100° that would be -62 -65 and -73 for you.