This is why cold is better. You can easily beat the cold with more layers. Can’t beat the heat though.
AlbanianGeorge on
The low temperature threshold seems extremely low – a day with a high of 21 degrees isn’t an indoor day?
wesblog on
Should be: Highs < 50F or Highs > 100F
It is silly to consider 25 degrees an outdoor day but not 96 degrees.
okopchak on
Jesus southeast Alaska would require a new scale. Also reaffirms that Florida would never be for me.
ThCuts on
It’s definitely different for each person. My “indoor day” would be < 40 F, > 80 F.
teflon_don_knotts on
It seems the lower limit for temperature is a bit extreme. A day where the high is 20°F is pretty brutal.
FandomMenace on
Call me crazy, but I consider anything sub 40, or above 80 indoor days. If you don’t think 85 is hot, go cut your lawn in it.
Substantial_Dish3492 on
This is correct for the Southwest for the record
Pruzter on
I would put the indoor only high higher that 20 degrees… I do not want to hang out very long outside if it’s below 45. that should be the cut off for cold weather days. 95 is a good cut off at the high end.
EmotionalBaby9423 on
Define wind > 25mph – just daily max gust?
blahyawnblah on
Again this is way off for central Oregon. We’ll have weeks where it’s less than 20 degrees.
AsleepOrdinary on
I see a lot of these recently, OP could you tell us the source/how you did it so I can replicate with my own parameters?
breakers on
80-100 is a huge leap, anything under 90 is a great day outside
TXOgre09 on
Why is a dew point over 68 bad? Maybe over 80.
Bear_necessities96 on
That’s when people say “I moved to Florida for the good weather” I asked: “What good weather?”
Boose-Driver on
I know people are saying the low is too low but most schools in my area will have outside time as long as the temperatures are above 20. That’s the rule and I thought it was a crazy rule coming from the West Coast
airtask on
This is one of many reasons people pay more to live in LA and SF.
MikeExMachina on
Hey NM looking pretty good for once.
deezpretzels on
Those little red dots in Colorado are called powder days.
paisleybison on
Maybe I do not understand this graphic. I spent way more time outdoors in Florida than in New England. Maybe the point should not be “outdoors”?
20 Comments
This is why cold is better. You can easily beat the cold with more layers. Can’t beat the heat though.
The low temperature threshold seems extremely low – a day with a high of 21 degrees isn’t an indoor day?
Should be: Highs < 50F or Highs > 100F
It is silly to consider 25 degrees an outdoor day but not 96 degrees.
Jesus southeast Alaska would require a new scale. Also reaffirms that Florida would never be for me.
It’s definitely different for each person. My “indoor day” would be < 40 F, > 80 F.
It seems the lower limit for temperature is a bit extreme. A day where the high is 20°F is pretty brutal.
Call me crazy, but I consider anything sub 40, or above 80 indoor days. If you don’t think 85 is hot, go cut your lawn in it.
This is correct for the Southwest for the record
I would put the indoor only high higher that 20 degrees… I do not want to hang out very long outside if it’s below 45. that should be the cut off for cold weather days. 95 is a good cut off at the high end.
Define wind > 25mph – just daily max gust?
Again this is way off for central Oregon. We’ll have weeks where it’s less than 20 degrees.
I see a lot of these recently, OP could you tell us the source/how you did it so I can replicate with my own parameters?
80-100 is a huge leap, anything under 90 is a great day outside
Why is a dew point over 68 bad? Maybe over 80.
That’s when people say “I moved to Florida for the good weather” I asked: “What good weather?”
I know people are saying the low is too low but most schools in my area will have outside time as long as the temperatures are above 20. That’s the rule and I thought it was a crazy rule coming from the West Coast
This is one of many reasons people pay more to live in LA and SF.
Hey NM looking pretty good for once.
Those little red dots in Colorado are called powder days.
Maybe I do not understand this graphic. I spent way more time outdoors in Florida than in New England. Maybe the point should not be “outdoors”?