do you mean a temperate climate? Well, Canada is so big, there are a few different climates. According to my research, a temperate climate is one with four seasons. Well, I can tell you that we definitely have springs, summers, falls and winters. In most provinces, the weather gets colder in October, and only starts to warm up in March or April. Usually, in the summer, the weather is around 20-30 Celcius degrees, plus the humidex. In winter, it's at least below -20, plus the wind chill. But, in the territories, in northen Quebec and in Labrador, the climate is very different because it's the tundra. That's a whole other story.
If you average out the year round temperature you could say so. But in the winter, except for the Vancouver area, it is a frigid, frozen arctic wasteland.
I grew up in Edmonton and have experienced -57 temperatures. That's why I live in LA now.
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A temperate what?
but the answer is probably no. Canada is so large, that the likelihood of it ALL being something (ei. "temperate") is very small.
PART of the country may be "temperate", but chances are, the whole country is not.
Hello,
do you mean a temperate climate? Well, Canada is so big, there are a few different climates. According to my research, a temperate climate is one with four seasons. Well, I can tell you that we definitely have springs, summers, falls and winters. In most provinces, the weather gets colder in October, and only starts to warm up in March or April. Usually, in the summer, the weather is around 20-30 Celcius degrees, plus the humidex. In winter, it's at least below -20, plus the wind chill. But, in the territories, in northen Quebec and in Labrador, the climate is very different because it's the tundra. That's a whole other story.
Hope I helped clear your little debate :)
If you average out the year round temperature you could say so. But in the winter, except for the Vancouver area, it is a frigid, frozen arctic wasteland.
I grew up in Edmonton and have experienced -57 temperatures. That's why I live in LA now.