You know I've lived all over the country: Oregon, Florida, Ohio, Boston, LA, SF. Canada too. Only Ohio has four classic distinct seasons.
Montreal and Ottawa had four pretty distinct seasons--just winter was longer than advertised. As far as I can remember Detroit did a fairly good impersonation of four.
Fall means outside without sweating and no forest fires, here.
Fall rocks.
Besides San Francisco, I've only lived in Chicago, Minneapolis and several Wisconsin cities. So for me, "classic" distinct seasons is the norm.
Fall means outside without sweating and no forest fires, here. Fall rocks.
Wrod.
We've having October weather in November, which gives us a longer fall than usual, but it also means we have serious winter weather in March. Winter has started later and lasted later for a few years now, which makes spring pretty much a time of "I hope the buds on the plants don't freeze" and "well, the last snow drifts will at least melt quickly in May."
I grew up mostly in South Carolina and I remember distinct seasons, mild though they may have been compared to, say, Minnesota. I miss autumn and winter. Autumn is my favorite season.
Missouri has very distinct seasons. It can get insanely hot and humid in summer and bitterly cold in winter, but fall and spring are great and fairly long. Explains why the roads are crap though.
I Pfft your Pfft.
Here's hoping the place downstairs has the soup I want. I really do not want to have to walk for lunch.
I do think it's funny that what the US thinks of as "normal" annual weather is pretty much the central midwest, isn't it?