@@Colby00haha great choices! Vancouver weather is fairly mild, but rainy ah
@arunrana78932 жыл бұрын
@@FrankHuynh Any city in Lower Mainland (BC) best place to live and tons & tons of activities and places to visit. But can't afford 1.3mil house so have to move to winnipeg or calgary. Have solid job opportunity in winnipeg but don't want to move there. Really confused! Ugh
@marsk96 Жыл бұрын
I prefer Calgary, or Edmonton.
@vanillaggl7 ай бұрын
Thank you. I am going to live in Canada in the next few months. so coming from a warm, hot country makes me stressed and scared from cold, harsh winters. I'll take your advice in consideration
@FrankHuynh7 ай бұрын
Best of luck!
@zackrose46442 жыл бұрын
Feels like I just had a lesson on the weather. Winnipeg winters are no joke. Recently it's been -45°C with the windchill 🥶
@FrankHuynh2 жыл бұрын
Hahaha I might not win kudo points talking about the weather 😝 -45 is rough!
@amychan999 Жыл бұрын
If you have a choice, good job and opportunity, etc. Would you rather live in a wamer city near the beach ⛱️?
@FrankHuynh Жыл бұрын
Good question. Not sure, it sounds good to be by the beach always but I kind of enjoy the 4 seasons. It's only when its like 8 months of year that its cold like winter in Winnipeg that I dislike lol.
@sportinguista092 жыл бұрын
Hey frank, which winters did you actually feel colder in toronto or Calgary?
@FrankHuynh2 жыл бұрын
Hi Jason - Oh easily Calgary felt colder/longer I would say. I remember ppl telling me there were years in the past where Calgary had snow in Sept 0.0 - more on rare side, but it happens!
@VoIcanoman2 жыл бұрын
I'm also a Winnipegger, born and raised (though I spent 7 years out in Montreal), and I don't actually mind the weather. Summers are gorgeous, and mosquitoes are a minor inconvenience, as they are generally only around in the crepuscular hours, just past sunset and before sunrise (maybe 4 hours per day). If you want to be outside then, just apply some _Off! Deep Woods._ As for our winters, the only issue I have is with their length...and that's actually improving due to climate change (one of the rare benefits thereof). Winter used to be a November to April (inclusive) event - literally half the year...~180 days. Now, I'd say winter begins, on average, around Remembrance Day and ends in mid-April most years, which drops it down to ~155 days. Permanent snowfall before Halloween used to be a real possibility; now, it's unheard-of. Nice fall weather (where the daily high is in the Celsius teens) used to end around the beginning of October, but now, these conditions are common right up until late October. So the length is gradually improving (although this year, with an anomalous La Niña hanging on for dear life,* our spring was rather terrible). As for the extreme cold, honestly, I don't mind it. I have a dog that needs walking, and there are VERY few days when I won't take him for a walk of at least 30 minutes (under 10 days each winter on average). Less extreme cold (temperatures in the -20s Celsius) isn't great, but you bundle up with a few layers of clothing (at least one of which should be wind-resistant) and cover any exposed flesh you can...and you're fine. I commute by bus, and so I am outside all the time in the winter - it's really not that bad (and Winnipeg's transit system sucks, requiring more outside time than you'd ideally like). I should also say that I prefer extreme cold to extreme heat - I would die if I lived in Australia or southeast Asia. You can always put more clothes on if it's very cold, but most places won't allow you to walk around naked due to brutal heat (not that it would help much). Properly prepared people can survive both extreme cold and extreme heat, but surviving extreme cold is a lot less...oppressive. Montreal summers were brutal when I lived there, high humidities and temperatures in the mid-30s Celsius...it was hard to exist without A/C. Some nights I couldn't sleep due to the heat. But in winter in Montreal (not as cold as Winnipeg, obviously), I sometimes had my window open, because building heating was too effective. Canadian cities are designed for extreme cold, so heat waves are by far the most deadly weather threat here. *La Niña doesn't usually have a large effect on Manitoba...it mainly makes winter a bit colder and a bit snowier. This year it made it moderately colder and a LOT snowier, as well as quite a bit longer. That's not something that we normally have to worry about.
@FrankHuynh2 жыл бұрын
lol!
@palyanytsia2 жыл бұрын
Something wrong with sound 😭
@FrankHuynh2 жыл бұрын
aw man i tried fixing it too! thanks for heads up
@ShadowRap-y5l Жыл бұрын
Toronto winter chart looks normal
@FrankHuynh Жыл бұрын
It's not too bad! Will actually experience 4 seasons pretty much
@chococatty2 жыл бұрын
personally I think Toronto is too hot as humid hot during the summer comparing to Vancouver at least~ and the mosquitos LMAO…
@FrankHuynh2 жыл бұрын
It does get quite humid out here! Go air condition lol
@edwardlin47802 жыл бұрын
Toronto weather is not the Bahamas
@FrankHuynh2 жыл бұрын
It's more like NYC THEN !
@acadianbb2 жыл бұрын
Halifax
@FrankHuynh2 жыл бұрын
Woohoo!
@shy38462 жыл бұрын
No good winters no matter which city in canada to be honest
@FrankHuynh2 жыл бұрын
hahah well it is canada end of day :P
@3xitthissid32 жыл бұрын
I think BC winters are pretty great. yes Vancouver is stereotyped as rain-heavy, but you see when it rains it's just regular rains and more often rain is during Autumn and Spring season - times when it _should_ be raining. Meanwhile in Toronto sometimes it feels like there's more rain in the summer than any other season (probably because you wouldn't expect so much rain in the summer), and when it rains it pours! It's thunderstorms and it feel more like a monsoon. Though seeing how hot summers get, the rain is a welcome bc it just relieves you of the heat and temporarily decreases temp. in the air. Rain in Victoria and Vancouver is really not that bad, esp if you're someone who enjoys rain. I'd pick rainy winters over snow anyday bc rainy winters are veery mild in temp.