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Oh yeah and the Bronx too. |
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The southern and eastern suburbs of the Bay are definitely more Sun Belt-y. SF, Oakland, and Berkeley are not. OC and IE are very Sunbelt-y too. |
I don't think anything in Coastal CA can be construed as sunbelt anymore. 1950, yes. Today, no. Way to expensive.
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^^Bingo
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In the west Climate is primarily a function of Elevation and proximity to the Ocean.
You can be in thick pine forest from desert within in an hour drive from Vegas, ABQ, Phoenix, Tucson, LA, Reno San Diego, Salt lake etc. Parts of these cities MSA/CSA's couldn't be more different climatically. Within the Los Angeles area you can have temps inland nearing 100 degrees with 60 and cloudy on the coast and lows in the mountains in the 40's and 50's I wouldnt rely on climate necessarily as a good gauge More the post-ww2 suburban sprawl is what characterizes these places more than anything |
That's fine, picking landscapes many miles away from San Francisco. I can do the same with LA and the mountain towns/ski resorts:
Idyllwild https://ap.rdcpix.com/807080024/0988...0_h770_q80.jpg Lake Arrowhead https://www.pinerose.com/wp-content/...ad-Village.jpg Big Bear Lake https://www.tripsavvy.com/thmb/JbvNF...004ff36dbf.jpg And then Morgan Hill: https://www.google.com/maps/@37.1447...2!8i6656?hl=en Santa Clara: https://www.google.com/maps/@37.3803...2!8i6656?hl=en Cupertino: https://www.google.com/maps/@37.3256...4!8i8192?hl=en It all looks like California to me. |
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Number of sunny days are not much different than Los Angeles/Long Beach coastal areas. |
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https://i.postimg.cc/FKkpVwV7/bb-simba7.jpg Big Bear Lake is our little secret. Let them keep thinking it's a barren desert out here. The bay might be a little greener and it has the low elevation, coastal redwood forests going for it. But LA is surrounded by high country all around. You can drive right on up to higher ground and get lifted :yes: |
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That's also why SF has the coldest summer high temperatures of any major city in the US. Average highs in summer months don't crack 70 degrees in any month. |
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A lot of you guys are some full on purists with specific requirements that are extremely limiting.
“Real, urban cities” or whatever the hell your standard might be also exists in the Sunbelt. Cities that aren’t doing so well economically are part of the Sunbelt. Cities that sprawl are a part of the Sunbelt Cities that don’t sprawl as much anymore are also part of the Sunbelt. The Sunbelt, to me, are the southernmost regions of the country that people have been attracted to for the past 150 years or so (being even more pronounced in the past 50 years) because of various reasons connected to the weather of the region. It’s more “sunny” in the Sunbelt than anywhere else in the country above it. That led to people and businesses that favor that type of weather year-around to come down here, especially when the air conditioner made it possible to endure that weather rather than having to endure the cold. Almost every state in the Sunbelt has grown, more or less, for that reason alone compared to the Northern parts of the country. The NE and Midwest have culture, urban amenities, etc. The South and the Southwest (which are pretty much the Sunbelt) has a little bit of those things too, not to the same extent, but they do have them if people care to look for it. The main difference is the climate, which previously contributed to the Sunbelt not developing to the same extent as the rest of the country in the beginning. |
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