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Discussion: "'Tis the Season" to benefit humansReported This is a featured thread

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redcomrad
redcomrad
20. RE: "'Tis the Season" to benefit humans
May 4 2012, 1:42 AM EDT | Post edited: May 4 2012, 1:42 AM EDT
I live on the coastal part of southern California so it has pretty mild weather never gets too cold or hot but is generally kinda semi arid raining little. when you go inland it becomes semi arid/arid which can be advantageous since not many people would care to live in a desert then that means i would have little chance of infection and less likely to be attacked by raiders. also im good with multiple weather types as long as i got my denim jacket im comfortable in weather ranging from the low 40s to up in the 100s Fahrenheit before ill complain. Do you find this valuable?    
nissassa
nissassa
21. RE: "'Tis the Season" to benefit humans
May 10 2012, 2:25 AM EDT | Post edited: May 10 2012, 2:25 AM EDT
i now reside in upstate new york i travel alot from brooklyn to albany being i have family downstate .. here we have all 4 seasons .. winter here should be able to slow down these cannibals for a while.. Do you find this valuable?    
Kevin_R
Kevin_R
22. RE: "'Tis the Season" to benefit humans
May 10 2012, 10:38 PM EDT | Post edited: May 10 2012, 10:38 PM EDT
Northern New Jersey here. We just came off a really weird winter -- a monster nor'easter just before Halloween, when the leaves were still on the trees, but barring a dusting in January and the usual frost, absolutely no snow whatsoever for the rest of the winter. It was more common to get rain, and not the freezing variety either. To give an example, it was 50 degrees Fahrenheit on New Year's... in the middle of the night, when I was setting off fireworks.

Normally, though, we get at least two or three big snowstorms in a given year, with at least one of them dumping more than 18 inches on us. Summers are often in the 80s and 90s, with a few triple-digit days. Precipitation is pretty constant all year. It's a basic temperate climate, where all the old weather-related adages apply -- "March goes in like a lion and out like a lamb", "April showers bring May flowers", etc.

Of course, in two months that won't be the case for me anymore, since I'll be moving to the Space Coast in Florida by the end of June, where the only seasons are "hurricane" and "snowbird". The temperature rarely goes below 50 even in the winter, and it's in summer mode from spring break to Thanksgiving.
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