I remember being on holiday in Turkey, eating breakfast in shorts and T-shirt and watching a guy delivering water drums wearing a sweater that would have kept a Cornish fisherman warm.
lentil_cloud on
Warm heavily depends on the season. 15° after winter? Let me get my t-shirt. 15° after we already had 20+? Pullover. Also humidity and wind. That’s a weird graphic
Mekkroket on
I would say that it is 20 degrees in NL. For me, at least, that’s the mental threshold where I would want to go outside just because
Fun-Raisin2575 on
+25C in Souther Siberia right now, so…
tacobellgittcard on
As an American who doesn’t live near the ocean, it always blows my mind how moderate the climate is in a lot of Europe
YetAnotherInterneter on
Wow it is almost as if humidity impacts relative temperature
Far_Albatross_4337 on
when „warm“ means t-shirt in one place and parka in another
In Spain I have seen people wearing hoodies in 30c and puffa jackets in 28C. I don’t know either.
Sky-is-here on
I am from southern Spain and I can confirm. Heat here gets actually hot
Kandurux on
Don’t necessarily disagree with Denmark, but I’ve been to Latvia, and the same temperature feels warmer in Latvia.
CoffeeDefiant4247 on
I agree with Norway, you can have a balmy 12 degree day
soymilo_ on
Sevilla is wack
jonnieggg on
It’s also about levels of humidity
splashjlr on
Finland: yeah, 9 is pretty good, right?
llaminaria on
Siberia. Depends on whether it is 11°C in April (very warm and pleasant), or 11°C in September (freezing to your bones from losing the habit).
helcat on
I live in a touristy part of NYC and I’m always amused in the spring when the streets are crowded with people either in ski parkas or teeny crop tops.
gogopops on
Maybe in London it’s 17C but up here in Scotland I feel warm around 10C
history_buff_9971 on
Well, I’m in Scotland, and it was about 14 degrees today, but sunny, and I didn’t wear a jacket out, and I thought it was pleasantly warm.
fumblingvista on
I recall a year or two ago when Denmark declared a heat advisory. It was high of 22 for a couple days. Granted, the fire danger was quite high due to lack of rain. But still. 22.
ogginn90 on
Its 2° and snowing since sunday here in the north of Iceland…
cft4nh on
In southern Spain the summertime AC is set to 26 and the wintertime heat is set to 26, so this checks out.
existentialgoof on
I’m in the UK, and it depends on wind and sunshine. But I wouldn’t say that 17 degrees usually feels warm, unless it’s sunny with little wind. I’d say it probably starts feeling barely warmish around 21 degrees.
kubok98 on
Iceland with 7°C is insane, do you guys sit near a thermal spring all the time lol
500Rads on
17 in the UK is summer anything higher is a real moaning opportunity.
Hacon123 on
I‘ amazed by north countrys. I understand why, but it feels just so strange for me (south spaniard).
I walked the dogs today at 20° and I wore a hoodie because I felt a bit cold.
Big-Carpenter7921 on
I also say about 15°. Unfortunately I live in the Southeast US
TheBoraxKid1trblz on
Answering in spring versus autumn would yield different results
PercentageFree5537 on
seems like „warm“ is a moving target, just like my thermostat settings
Lord_Oziris on
Norwegian here, 13° is scorching.
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I remember being on holiday in Turkey, eating breakfast in shorts and T-shirt and watching a guy delivering water drums wearing a sweater that would have kept a Cornish fisherman warm.
Warm heavily depends on the season. 15° after winter? Let me get my t-shirt. 15° after we already had 20+? Pullover. Also humidity and wind. That’s a weird graphic
I would say that it is 20 degrees in NL. For me, at least, that’s the mental threshold where I would want to go outside just because
+25C in Souther Siberia right now, so…
As an American who doesn’t live near the ocean, it always blows my mind how moderate the climate is in a lot of Europe
Wow it is almost as if humidity impacts relative temperature
when „warm“ means t-shirt in one place and parka in another
Based on what? Definition of a „warm“ day [according to the Dutch meteorological service](https://www.knmi.nl/kennis-en-datacentrum/uitleg/warme-dagen%E2%80%AC) is 20C. No clue where the 18C is based on in the map.
In Spain I have seen people wearing hoodies in 30c and puffa jackets in 28C. I don’t know either.
I am from southern Spain and I can confirm. Heat here gets actually hot
Don’t necessarily disagree with Denmark, but I’ve been to Latvia, and the same temperature feels warmer in Latvia.
I agree with Norway, you can have a balmy 12 degree day
Sevilla is wack
It’s also about levels of humidity
Finland: yeah, 9 is pretty good, right?
Siberia. Depends on whether it is 11°C in April (very warm and pleasant), or 11°C in September (freezing to your bones from losing the habit).
I live in a touristy part of NYC and I’m always amused in the spring when the streets are crowded with people either in ski parkas or teeny crop tops.
Maybe in London it’s 17C but up here in Scotland I feel warm around 10C
Well, I’m in Scotland, and it was about 14 degrees today, but sunny, and I didn’t wear a jacket out, and I thought it was pleasantly warm.
I recall a year or two ago when Denmark declared a heat advisory. It was high of 22 for a couple days. Granted, the fire danger was quite high due to lack of rain. But still. 22.
Its 2° and snowing since sunday here in the north of Iceland…
In southern Spain the summertime AC is set to 26 and the wintertime heat is set to 26, so this checks out.
I’m in the UK, and it depends on wind and sunshine. But I wouldn’t say that 17 degrees usually feels warm, unless it’s sunny with little wind. I’d say it probably starts feeling barely warmish around 21 degrees.
Iceland with 7°C is insane, do you guys sit near a thermal spring all the time lol
17 in the UK is summer anything higher is a real moaning opportunity.
I‘ amazed by north countrys. I understand why, but it feels just so strange for me (south spaniard).
I walked the dogs today at 20° and I wore a hoodie because I felt a bit cold.
I also say about 15°. Unfortunately I live in the Southeast US
Answering in spring versus autumn would yield different results
seems like „warm“ is a moving target, just like my thermostat settings
Norwegian here, 13° is scorching.