Adelaide Climate
Adelaide Climate
Hi!
I am from Melbourne and I am thinking of moving to Adelaide.
My reason for wanting to move is the weather. People say Melbourne has 4 seasons in one day when this isn't really true. The way I experience it is 5 months of oppressive overcast weather in end of Autumn/winter/start of spring then normal weather for the rest of the year.
I don't mind the cold, but I am looking for a place that has more blue skies and sunny days in winter. Does Adelaide have a propensity to be overcast for months at a time in winter?
Honest answers would be really appreciated because I really don't want to move to another city that has similar weather as Melbourne. I know Perth and Sydney have sunnier winters but Sydney is too expensive and Perth is too isolated. I also like the 'laid back' feel Adelaide is supposed to have, it sounds more like my home town Brisbane.
Thanks in advance for your advice!
I am from Melbourne and I am thinking of moving to Adelaide.
My reason for wanting to move is the weather. People say Melbourne has 4 seasons in one day when this isn't really true. The way I experience it is 5 months of oppressive overcast weather in end of Autumn/winter/start of spring then normal weather for the rest of the year.
I don't mind the cold, but I am looking for a place that has more blue skies and sunny days in winter. Does Adelaide have a propensity to be overcast for months at a time in winter?
Honest answers would be really appreciated because I really don't want to move to another city that has similar weather as Melbourne. I know Perth and Sydney have sunnier winters but Sydney is too expensive and Perth is too isolated. I also like the 'laid back' feel Adelaide is supposed to have, it sounds more like my home town Brisbane.
Thanks in advance for your advice!
- monotonehell
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Re: Adelaide Climate
Our winters can be cold and rainy, but don't go on for too long. Our summers are hot with patches of 40 degree weather, they don't go on for too long. Mostly Adelaide's weather is quite pleasant, with patches of cold (but not too cold) and hot.
There are overcast periods centring around July for a few months.
It's not Los Angeles, but on average, much nicer than Melbourne's weather.
There are overcast periods centring around July for a few months.
It's not Los Angeles, but on average, much nicer than Melbourne's weather.
Exit on the right in the direction of travel.
Re: Adelaide Climate
Adelaide has a mediterranean climate with hot dry summers and cool wet winters.
Adelaide's winters are our wettest months of the year. The weather at this time of year is similar to Melbourne's although not as cold, windy and constantly cloudy. We do get some sunshine in winter. However the Adelaide Hills are colder, wetter and more cloudy at this time of year than the plains (CBD and majority of suburbs). Winter in Adelaide is more short lived than Melbourne. We almost go straight from winter to summer and from summer to winter these days. Spring and Autumn aren't like they used to be.
For me the key is the summer months. Our summers are hot and dry. This is very different to Sydney and Brisbane. Both have humid summers with a fair bit of rain and cloud. I lived up in SEQ for a while and realised I don't like that weather in summer and the constantly sunny weather in winter.
In Adelaide it's day after day of hot dry and mostly sunny weather. The heat can get a bit oppressive in summer. Even Melbourne gets more rain and some humid weather in summer compared to Adelaide.
Adelaide's climate is very similar to Perth but without the isolation you are looking to avoid.
Adelaide's winters are our wettest months of the year. The weather at this time of year is similar to Melbourne's although not as cold, windy and constantly cloudy. We do get some sunshine in winter. However the Adelaide Hills are colder, wetter and more cloudy at this time of year than the plains (CBD and majority of suburbs). Winter in Adelaide is more short lived than Melbourne. We almost go straight from winter to summer and from summer to winter these days. Spring and Autumn aren't like they used to be.
For me the key is the summer months. Our summers are hot and dry. This is very different to Sydney and Brisbane. Both have humid summers with a fair bit of rain and cloud. I lived up in SEQ for a while and realised I don't like that weather in summer and the constantly sunny weather in winter.
In Adelaide it's day after day of hot dry and mostly sunny weather. The heat can get a bit oppressive in summer. Even Melbourne gets more rain and some humid weather in summer compared to Adelaide.
Adelaide's climate is very similar to Perth but without the isolation you are looking to avoid.
Re: Adelaide Climate
Hi Habitat3 and welcome to the S-A forum.
Others have already outlined the features of our Mediterranean climate.
Winters are not as long and gloomy as Melbourne and by August, we have some nice sunny periods.
It can get very hot with some heatwaves (high 30s, low 40s) especially Jan-March but the inevitable cool change brings relief and, as others have said, our heat is a 'dry heat' rather than the high humidity (and its draining impact) experienced in other cities. This is a critical factor and ameliorates, to some degree, the high temperatures we can experience.
We have great beaches along our metropolitan coastline and beyond - great for summer months and fabulous wine regions in close proximity to the city.
Others have already outlined the features of our Mediterranean climate.
Winters are not as long and gloomy as Melbourne and by August, we have some nice sunny periods.
It can get very hot with some heatwaves (high 30s, low 40s) especially Jan-March but the inevitable cool change brings relief and, as others have said, our heat is a 'dry heat' rather than the high humidity (and its draining impact) experienced in other cities. This is a critical factor and ameliorates, to some degree, the high temperatures we can experience.
We have great beaches along our metropolitan coastline and beyond - great for summer months and fabulous wine regions in close proximity to the city.
Re: Adelaide Climate
Mate by all means move to Adelaide . But If you have the flexibility to move somewhere just because the weather is "nice", sunny and not overcast emmmmm why'd you move out of Brisbane in the first place
Re: Adelaide Climate
Adelaide has more sunny days the Brisbane for startersserca wrote:Mate by all means move to Adelaide . But If you have the flexibility to move somewhere just because the weather is "nice", sunny and not overcast emmmmm why'd you move out of Brisbane in the first place
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Re: Adelaide Climate
And fewer oppressive hot humid days, and fewer sudden downpours during summer. (EDIT: Thank you Maximus)Waewick wrote:Adelaide has more sunny days the Brisbane for startersserca wrote:Mate by all means move to Adelaide . But If you have the flexibility to move somewhere just because the weather is "nice", sunny and not overcast emmmmm why'd you move out of Brisbane in the first place
Exit on the right in the direction of travel.
- Maximus
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Re: Adelaide Climate
Downpours that are less sudden, or fewer downpours that are sudden...?monotonehell wrote:And less oppressive hot humid days, and less sudden downpours during summer.
It's = it is; its = everything else.
You're = you are; your = belongs to.
Than = comparative ("bigger than"); then = next.
You're = you are; your = belongs to.
Than = comparative ("bigger than"); then = next.
- monotonehell
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Re: Adelaide Climate
FEWER! I meant fewer of course.Maximus wrote:Downpours that are less sudden, or fewer downpours that are sudden...?monotonehell wrote:And less oppressive hot humid days, and less sudden downpours during summer.
Thank you, Sir. The self flagellation will being immediately.
Exit on the right in the direction of travel.
- SAR526
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Re:Spelling and Grammar.
Greetings and felicitations Maximus. It's good to read that someone other than myself knows the difference between quantity and number. I had thought that I was the last bastion of conformity with the use of 'fewer' for things that can be counted. As for 'lead' instead of 'led' for the past tense of 'lead'...........!Downpours that are less sudden, or fewer downpours that are sudden...?
Your little lesson in the correct use of 'its'...'it's' etc.is also a very good idea. I think that if people pronounced 'you're' as 'yoor' and 'your' as 'yor' as they should, the confusion in spelling and meaning would be greatly lessened.
Back in the benighted 1930s when I was learning these things, every child had a book with daily written and oral exercises which were the first things tackled (with a spelling test of the ten words learned overnight) each morning. We couldn't pass from one grade to another without passing an examination which tested our knowledge.
Every subject had a text book which began at alpha and ended in omega, starting in Grade 4 and ending in Grade 7 with the Qualifying Certificate, set and marked in Adelaide, without which graduation from Primary school to further education was impossible.
The Chinese and others still follow such a formal and rigorous system. I wonder if we will ever follow their examples?
“The mind of a bigot is like the pupil of the eye. The more light you shine on it, the more it will contract.”
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“Man's mind, once stretched by a new idea, never regains its original dimensions."
- Maximus
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Re: Adelaide Climate
Thank you for your kind words, SAR. To be fair, I have absolutely no doubt that Mono also knows the difference between less and fewer, but he (it? ) was just having a bad moment. Of course, Mono could have easily just run with my suggestion that the downpours are less sudden and no one else would have been any the wiser. Mind you, I don't think that the downpours in Adelaide during summer are sudden to any degree -- more like extremely well telegraphed thanks to the changing of the winds and marked drop in temperature!SAR526 wrote:Greetings and felicitations Maximus. It's good to read that someone other than myself knows the difference between quantity and number.
Anyway, should you wish to vent further about the sad decline of our English language, may I kindly direct you to the 'officious grammar thread', which Mono insists doesn't need a capital 'o' -- a point on which I disagree. Nevertheless, I digress.
Top of the morning to you!
It's = it is; its = everything else.
You're = you are; your = belongs to.
Than = comparative ("bigger than"); then = next.
You're = you are; your = belongs to.
Than = comparative ("bigger than"); then = next.
Re: Adelaide Climate
We Australians will in general never speak proper english ...... cos were not English we are glorified bogans and will shorten any word to eliminate the syllables unless we wanna call our m8 Rob - Robbo for instance
Can't really compare to the Chinese characters (Hanzi) or even Japanese (Kanji) that has millions of combinations of characters forming their language
Being a climate thread gotta say what sensational weather it is today
Can't really compare to the Chinese characters (Hanzi) or even Japanese (Kanji) that has millions of combinations of characters forming their language
Being a climate thread gotta say what sensational weather it is today
Adelaide Climate
I recon we have comparatively great weather. How many times I have watched Kevin McCloud's grand designs, to see some poor UK home builder up to their boot tops in mud, living on site in a caravan with a frozen dunny, unable to deliver supplies with out borrowing a farm tractor or demolishing a new brickwork that froze overnight.
Have they also just got lazy builders? One episode I think it took two masons 6 month to build a chimney and another a team of lime plasterers lived on site for months just plastering.
As if the cold wet weather doesn't slow things up enough I have yet to see a Grand Design's builder with a nail gun or docking saw. (Unless they were German)
And then despite all that UK rain, frost, ice, fog, sleet, hail and snow they have the most peculiar roofing systems guarantied to leak. I am glad we just stick pitched roofs with tiles or iron, as apposed to - shingles, straw, river reads, flat, ply, chip board, felt, bitumen, wielded rubber, vinyl, geranium cuttings, grass, moss, gravel and pebbles.
Anyway I wonder if anyone has calculated the comparative productivity advantage us Adelaide folks have with decent weather, simple roofs, power tools and sharper tradesmen when it comes to home building. And also the comparative leak-ability of dopy systems compared to the good old Aussie roof!
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Have they also just got lazy builders? One episode I think it took two masons 6 month to build a chimney and another a team of lime plasterers lived on site for months just plastering.
As if the cold wet weather doesn't slow things up enough I have yet to see a Grand Design's builder with a nail gun or docking saw. (Unless they were German)
And then despite all that UK rain, frost, ice, fog, sleet, hail and snow they have the most peculiar roofing systems guarantied to leak. I am glad we just stick pitched roofs with tiles or iron, as apposed to - shingles, straw, river reads, flat, ply, chip board, felt, bitumen, wielded rubber, vinyl, geranium cuttings, grass, moss, gravel and pebbles.
Anyway I wonder if anyone has calculated the comparative productivity advantage us Adelaide folks have with decent weather, simple roofs, power tools and sharper tradesmen when it comes to home building. And also the comparative leak-ability of dopy systems compared to the good old Aussie roof!
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Re: Adelaide Climate
PLLLEEEASEEEE people! Adelaide's winters are NOT cold by any stretch. You should try spending winters in Eastern Canada or Europe, now that is cold. Adelaide is actually warmer than most places in Florida as well.
So far in Adelaide during winter I have not felt the need for the heater or fire, all I do is rug up. It cuts costs too But maybe that's because I'm used to very cold, snowy winters where we are lucky to see a day reach anything above 10 degrees.
Nope, I'd say Adelaide is pretty consistently warm year 'round.
Personally, I hate the summers in Adelaid - way toooo dry and hot. It feels oppressive. 40 degrees and sunshine ain't nothing to brag about either, those kind of temperatures are ridiculous and I'd be concerned if every summer reached that kind of extreme.
So far in Adelaide during winter I have not felt the need for the heater or fire, all I do is rug up. It cuts costs too But maybe that's because I'm used to very cold, snowy winters where we are lucky to see a day reach anything above 10 degrees.
Nope, I'd say Adelaide is pretty consistently warm year 'round.
Personally, I hate the summers in Adelaid - way toooo dry and hot. It feels oppressive. 40 degrees and sunshine ain't nothing to brag about either, those kind of temperatures are ridiculous and I'd be concerned if every summer reached that kind of extreme.
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